Kamancheh | |
Names: | Kamancha, Kamanche, Kemancheh, Kamanjah, Kabak kemane |
Image Capt: | Persian Kamānches, ca. 1880 |
Background: | string |
Classification: | Bowed strings |
Developed: | Iran |
Range: | g3-e7 |
Related: | |
Musicians: | |
Builders: |
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Ich: | Art of crafting and playing with Kamantcheh/Kamancha, a bowed string musical instrument |
Countries: | Azerbaijan and Iran |
Id: | 01286 |
Year: | 2017 |
Session: | 13th |
List: | Representative |
The kamancheh (also kamānche or kamāncha) (Persian: کمانچه, Azerbaijani: kamança, Armenian: քամանչա, Kurdish: کەمانچە,kemançe) is an Iranian bowed string instrument used in Persian,[1] Azerbaijani,[2] Armenian,[3] Kurdish,[4] Georgian, Turkmen, and Uzbek music with slight variations in the structure of the instrument.[5] The kamancheh is related to the rebab which is the historical ancestor of the kamancheh and the bowed Byzantine lyra.[6] The strings are played with a variable-tension bow.
In 2017, the art of crafting and playing with Kamantcheh/Kamancha was included into the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists of Azerbaijan and Iran.[7]
The word "kamancheh" means "little bow" in Persian (kæman, bow, and -cheh, diminutive).[8] The Turkish word kemençe is borrowed from Persian, with the pronunciation adapted to Turkish phonology. It also denotes a bowed string instrument, but the Turkish version differs significantly in structure and sound from the Persian kamancheh. There is also an instrument called kabak kemane literally "pumpkin-shaped bow instrument" used in Turkish music which is only slightly different from the Iranian kamancheh.[9]
The kamancheh has a long neck including fingerboard which kamancheh maker shapes it as a truncated inverse cone for easy bow moving in down section, pegbox in both side of which four pegs are placed, and finial[10] Traditionally kamanchehs had three silk strings, but modern instruments have four metal strings. Kamanchehs may have highly ornate inlays and elaborately carved ivory tuning pegs. The body has a long upper neck and a lower bowl-shaped resonating chamber made from a gourd or wood, usually covered with a membrane made from the skin of a lamb, goat or sometimes a fish, on which the bridge is set. From the bottom protrudes a spike to support the kamancheh while it is being played, hence in English, the instrument is sometimes called the spiked fiddle. It is played sitting down held like a cello though it is about the length of a viol. The end-pin can rest on the knee or thigh while the player is seated in a chair.[11]
Kamancheh is usually tuned like an ordinary violin (G, D, A, E).
. Sayatʻ-Nova: an 18th-century troubadour: a biographical and literary study. 1997. Peeters Publishers. Leuven. 90-6831-795-4. Charles Dowsett. 4.