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The tanpura (Sanskrit: तंबूरा, romanized: Taṃbūrā; also referred to as tambura, tanpuri, tamboura, or tanpoura) is a long-necked, plucked, four-stringed instrument originating in the Indian subcontinent, found in various forms in Indian music. [1]
The Indian Tanpura (tanpura, tamboura or taanpura or tanipurani) is found in different forms and in many places even as electronic tanpura. The Shirvan tanbur has a pear-shaped form and belongs to the same family of instruments as the saz. The total length of the tanbur is 940 mm.
Anuradhapura (Sinhala: අනුරාධපුරය, romanized: Anurādhapuraya; Tamil: அனுராதபுரம், romanized: Aṉurātapuram) is a major ...
An electronic tanpura is an electronic instrument that replicates the sound of an Indian string instrument known as the tanpura (tambura), used to provide a constant drone to accompany another's vocal or instrumental melody.
Side view of a Tanjore-style rosewood tanpura bridge with cotton threads adjusted for full resonance. In Indian classical music , javārī [ a ] refers to the overtone -rich "buzzing" sound characteristic of classical Indian string instruments such as the tanpura , sitar , surbahar , rudra veena and Sarasvati veena .
Tamboori, an Indian melodic instrument similar to a Tanpura; Tanpura, a stringed drone instrument played in India; Kurdish tanbur, used in Yarsan rituals; Turkish tambur, an instrument played in Turkey; Yaylı tambur, an instrument played in Turkey; Tanbūra (lyre), an instrument played in East Africa and the Middle East
Tanpura, also called as Tambora, an instrument used in Indian classical music for continuous production of consonating reference notes (tonic) Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Tambora .
Tanpura This page was last edited on 26 June 2018, at 19:44 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...