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Arts & Culture > Music > Tambura
     
TAMBURA

Tambura is an age-old drone instrument familiar to the Andhraites ever since the period of Ramdas and Thyagaraja! Tanpura as it is known in North India, forms an essential part of every classical concert and is played all along the concert to maintain the Sruthi of the main melody.

Tambura is a look alike of Veena usually made of Jackwood consisting of a long but unfretted neck, which has around 4-6 tuning pegs. It has a bowl-shaped resonator with a broad grooved bridge made of bone or ivory at the lower end that vibrates and amplifies the sound. About 4-6 strings run along the entire length of the main bridge that bear a bead each, which is used for finer tuning by moving it up or down. Fine silk threads called the "Jiva" are also used between the bridge and the strings, positioning of which enhances the tonal effect.

In the four-stringed Tambura, the two middle strings are tuned to the Tonic, while the last brass string is tuned an octave lower. The first string however is usually tuned to the dominant. In the five or six stringed Tambura, the performer can choose to tune the extra string(s) to any note(s) in the Raga that is being played. It is thus, quite common to find a Tambura player sitting behind the main artist at an audible distance for him to constantly hear the drone in any classical concert.

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Saint Composers
Thyagaraju
Annamacharya
Ramadasu
Musical Instruments
Bellowed
  Harmonium
  Sruthi Box
Percussion
  Ghatam
  Kanjira
  Mridangam
  Morsing
  Dholu
String
  Gottuvadyam
  Tambura
  Veena
  Violin
Wind
  Clarinet
  Flute
  Nadaswaram


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