Trembita
Classification | |
---|---|
Hornbostel–Sachs classification | 423.121-12 |
Playing range | |
c1-g4 | |
Related instruments | |
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The trembita (from the
Etymology
The word "trembita" is believed to be derived from
The variant "trombita" is apparently borrowed from Hungarian trombita, where it comes from Italian trombetta.
Description
A trembita was used primarily by mountain dwellers known as
The tube is made from a long straight piece of pine or spruce (preferably one that has been struck by lightning) which is split in two in order to carve out the core. The halves are once again joined together and then wrapped in birch bark or osier rings. It is also used by shepherds for signaling and communication in the forested mountains and for guiding sheep and dogs. The trembita has a timbre that is much brighter than that of the alpenhorn due to its narrow bore and very minor flare.
The trembita has no lateral openings and therefore gives the pure natural harmonic series of the open pipe. The upper harmonics are the more readily obtained by reason of the small diameter of the bore in relation to the length.
The notes of the natural harmonic series overlap, but do not exactly correspond, to notes found in the familiar chromatic scale in standard Western equal temperament. Most prominently within the trembita's range, the 7th and 11th harmonics are particularly noticeable because they fall between adjacent notes in the chromatic scale.
In the hands of a skilled composer or arranger, the natural harmonics can be used to haunting melancholy effect or, by contrast, to create a charming pastoral flavor.
Modern use
The trembita is often used in Ukrainian ethnographic ensembles and as an episodic instrument in the Ukrainian folk instrument orchestra.
The trembita was shown on
It is also used by Ukrainian band
The longest trembita (8.35 m) was made by Polish folk musician Józef Chmiel, located in the Czech Republic.[1]
Similar instruments
- Alphorn, used by mountain dwellers in Switzerland and elsewhere
- Erke, a similar instrument of the Argentine Northwest
- Birch trumpet, a similar instrument used in Norway, Sweden and the Baltic region
- Lur, native Scandinavian term for Birch trumpet
- Trâmbiță or Bucium, a type of alphorn used by mountain dwellers and by shepherds in Romania and Moldova
See also
- Ukrainian folk music
- Polish folk music
- Romanian folk music
- Slovak folk music
References
Sources
- Humeniuk, A (1967). Ukrainski narodni muzychni instrumenty. Kiev: Naukova dumka.
- Mizynec, Victor (1987). Folk instruments of Ukraine. Doncaster: Bayda Books. OCLC 19355447.
- Cherkasky, Leonid Musiiovych (2003). Ukrainski narodni muzychni instrumenty. Kiev: Tekhnika. OCLC 56112444.
- Demonstration of trembita performance
- Mr Plyushko explains about trembita to students (in Ukrainian)
- Christmas call by trembitas
External links
Media related to Trembita at Wikimedia Commons