-
Fingerboard
-
The fret board of a veena has a unique scalloped shape. The unique hollow, scalloped fret board is known as the dandi and contains 24 frets, or mettu, often made from gunmetal, stainless steel or bronze. The seven strings are of steel manufacture. The three tala pakarekku or talam are the rhythm and drone strings which are fashioned as subsidiary strings tuned to the tonic, upper tonic and fifth. These are attached to three pegs on the side of the neck that reside on a separate, curving bridge placed aside the main bridge, and are closest to the player's body when held. The other four (main) strings, the sarani, are tuned to the fifth and tonic in two octaves.
Meru and Peg Box
-
The four main strings ascend into and are attached to the four pegs, the birdai, in the peg box. The meru is the upper bridge which begins where the fingerboard ends, on which the peg box resides before its neck curves back toward the player to end in a carved dragon's head---the yali.
Resonators
-
A veena kudam is sometimes made from ornately carved wood. The main resonator, or kudam, is at the end of the fingerboard. It is made of hollowed-out jackwood or fiberglass. The strings descend over the resonator in the lower portion, passing over two sound holes, or nada randhra, carved into the kudam. The kudirai is the bridge over which the strings are positioned before they end in the fine-tuning langar adjustment. The langar are tied at the bottom to the naga pasha at the end of the kudam. The extra resonator, the surakkai or sarrokai, is made from tin or a gourd and hangs below the meru.
Variants
-
The ekanda veena is an instrument carved from a single piece of wood. Alternatively, the parts are often made separately and joined together. The appearance of the veena has changed over time as alterations have been made to its body shape or parts manufactured from different materials, such as wood, gourd and metal pieces.
Synthetic Materials
-
While the veena has traditionally been made from jackwood, contemporary versions are often made from fiberglass. A fiberglass body has the advantage of being more impact-resistant than wood and of producing a more consistent sound quality from instrument to instrument. Additionally, a fiberglass veena is lighter than one made of wood.
-
Wednesday, 4 January 2012
veena the bobbili project
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
Saraswati Saraswati Veena BACK IN STOCK and REDUCED!!! About the Saraswati Veena: The Saraswati Veena is...
-
DRAFTING SUPPLIES Whether equipment is purchased in a kit or by the individual tool, the following items are the minimum normally needed ...
-
A.R.RAHMAN JAGAO MERE DES KO FOR AUG 15 INDEPENDENCE DAY SPECIAL A.R Rahman creates the perfect tune for this Independence Day, fusi...
-
Neutron bomb A neutron bomb , or enhanced radiation weapon (ERW), is a type of nuclear weapon designed specifically to release a large por...
-
Trakanon holds the lost medallion of the Chelsith Stone. Go to Veeshan's Peak and face the leader of the Ring of Scale, Trakanon . He h...
-
Bobbili Veena 30 March 2010 By Vikram_Boga 1 In Music Darsana sparsane cha...
-
Thursday, June 11, 2009 Latest Car For Future Technology: World New Technology This car will be mirror of future technology and world. ...
-
VEENA (SARASWATI) The Saraswati veena (also spelled Saraswati vina ) is an Indian plucked string instrument . It is named after the Hindu g...
-
first enter the site http://cpanel.freezoka.net/ create an account start creating file manager account,ftp account with your own username an...
-
Internal views of Agra fort History Agra Fort was originally a brick fort, held by the Hindu Sikarwar Rajputs. It was mentioned ...
No comments:
Post a Comment