Traditional/Local Musical Instruments
Traditional/Local Musical Instruments
Cordophones (stringed instruments)
The sound from these instruments is produced by the vibration of the strings.
These may be classified into two groups:
Bowed stringed instruments:
For example: The kemençe (small violin played like a cello),
Kabak Kemane (ıklığ)
(three-stringed violin), violin etc.
Plucked stringed instruments:
For example: Ud (lute),
tambur (like a mandolin),
çeng (primitive harp),
tar,
kanun (like a zither),
santur (dulcimer),
kopuz (like a lute),
the bağlama
family (with three double strings and two necks) – meydan sazı (largest of the
saz family), court saz, bozuk (nine stringed lute), tambura, cura, üçtelli
(three-string), onikitelli (twelve-string), çarta, ırızva etc.
Aerophones (Wind instruments)
Instruments whose sound comes from the vibration of the air in or around
them.
For example: Zurna (like an oboe),
çifte,
mey (small oboe from eastern
Anatolia), kaval (flageolet),
sipsi (şile a boatswain’s pipe),
çığırtma (small
fife), tulum (bagpipe), harmonica, accordeon, mouth organ etc.
Membranophones (Skinned ınstruments)
Instruments that produce their sound from the striking of a skin.
For example: Dümbelek (small drum) (deblek,
darbuka (drum made by stretching
a skin over a clay cylinder)), davul (drum),
daire (tambourine), def (tambourine
with cymbals), kudüm (small double drum), zilli def (stringed def) etc.
Ideophones (Instruments that strike their own bodies)
These are instruments played by means of striking, beating, waving etc. And
are usually made of hard materials, giving off sound by the vibration of their
entire bodies.
For example: Zil (cymbal), maşa (fork), çalpara (castinets),
şakşak (the
spoons), çan (bell), çengizli (cymbalet), band bells etc.