Traditional Vietnamese musical instruments

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Traditional Vietnamese musical instruments are the musical instruments used in the traditional and classical musics of Vietnam. They comprise a wide range of string, wind, and percussion instruments, used by both the Viet (Kinh) majority as well as the nation's ethnic minorities.

Strings

Plucked

Bowed

  • Đàn gáo - two-stringed vertical violin with coconut resonator derived from the Chinese yehu
  • Đàn hồ - two-stringed vertical violin with wooden resonator; hồ derived from the Chinese hu, as in huqin
  • Đàn nhị - two-stringed vertical violin derived from the Chinese erhu
  • Central Highland

Struck

Wind

Flutes

  • Sáo (also called sáo trúc) - transverse flute made of bamboo or hardwood

Oboes

Clarinets

  • Bi doi - double clarinet similar to the Middle Eastern mijwiz; used in courtship context mainly within the Mường people.

Free reed mouth organs

  • Đing nǎm - free-reed mouth organ with gourd body and bamboo pipes; played by Highland people
  • M'buot - free-reed mouth organ with gourd body and bamboo pipes; played by upland minorities
  • Khèn - Vietnamese equivalent to the Khaen from Laos, Thailand and Cambodia.

Horns

Percussion

Drums

Tuned percussion

E De people
  • Biên khánh - a set of L-shaped flat stone chimes used in ancient court music;[1] derived from the Chinese bianqing
  • Cồng chiêng - tuned gong (comes in both flat and knobbed varieties)
  • Tam âm la - set of three small, high-pitched flat gongs in a frame; used primarily in nhã nhạc music
  • T'rưng - bamboo xylophone
  • Đàn đá - lithophone, commonly having 9+ stone bars, 65–102 cm (26–40 in) in length. It is believed the instrument dates back to 1000 BC. Also called Goong Lú (M'nong people), Kologolo (M'nong people), Gôông Luk (Mạ people).

Untuned percussion

Other

  • jaw harp
  • Klông pút
    - Bamboo tube xylophone; hands are clapped near ends of tubes to produce musical tones
  • Đàn tre ("bamboo instrument") - A hybrid form of the Vietnamese plucked string instrument, similar to a Đàn tính, called a Đàn tre, was created by Nguyễn Minh Tâm, who escaped from Vietnam in 1982 and ultimately settled in Australia. The instrument has twenty-three 800 mm (31 in)-long wire strings attached to a bamboo tube with a metal hose-clamp around the top rim. A 4 litres (0.88 imp gal; 1.1 US gal), rectangular olive oil tin, which acts as a resonator, is clamped to the base of the tube. The instrument is capable of playing both Vietnamese and Western music. The instrument can be seen and recordings of it being played by its creator can be heard at the National Museum of Australia.[2]
  • Kyey se - Vietnamese bell

See also

References

  1. ^ Đại Dương (2010-12-09). "Sắp phục chế thành công 2 bộ nhạc cụ độc đáo đã thất truyền". Retrieved 2016-10-15.
  2. . The dàn tre, translated simply as 'bamboo musical instrument', is the invention of Minh Tam Nguyen. Made from available materials first in Vietnam, then in the Philippines...

External links