![]() ![]() The Semantics of Chinese Music: Analysing selected Chinese musical concepts. ^ Atlas of Plucked Stringed Instruments.The Acoustic Guitar Guide: Everything You Need to Know to Buy and Maintain a New Or Used Guitar. Strange Sounds: Offbeat Instruments and Sonic Experiments in Pop. "Dutar - Xinjiang, China" in Play the World: The 101 World Instrument Primer. The American Blues Guitar: An Illustrated History. Multicultural Perspectives in Music Education, Volume 3. ^ "The Ultimate Beginners Resource Guide to Steel Guitar".The NPR Classical Music Companion: An Essential Guide for Enlightened Listening. Performance Practice: A Dictionary-Guide for Musicians. ^ “ chuniri,” Grinnell College Musical Instrument Collection.The Guitar from the Renaissance to the Present Day. ^ "Chillador" in the Atlas of Plucked String Instruments.^ "Chanzy" in the Atlas of Plucked Instruments.Ottoman Medicine: Healing and Medical Institutions, 1500-1700. Choro: A Social History of a Brazilian Popular Music. ![]() ^ The enigmatic Puerto Rican Bordonúa.Japanese Singers of Tales: Ten Centuries of Performed Narrative. Traditional Music: Sounds in Harmony with Nature. The Tamburitza Tradition: From the Balkans to the American Midwest. A Kingly Craft: Art and Leadership in Ethiopia : a Social History of Art and Visual Culture in Pre-modern Africa. Tradition and Change in the Performance of Chinese Traditional Music. ^ "Bandurria" in Encyclopedia Brittanica.Simon Broughton, Mark Ellingham, Richard Trillo. World Music: Africa, Europe and the Middle East. The Garland Handbook of Latin American Music. Edited by John Shepherd, David Horn, Dave Laing, Paul Oliver, Peter Wicke. Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Part 1. Encyclopedia of Latin American Popular Music. Ethnomusicological Encounters with Music and Musicians. Francesca Caccini's Il primo libro delle musiche of 1618. Edited by Sir George Grove, John Alexander Fuller-Maitland. Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Volume 1. "Aeolian harp" in Encyclopedia Britannica. Venezuelan tiple: A second Venezuelan instrument called a tiple, this one part of the cuatro family, and featuring five strings.Venezuelan tiple: An instrument similar to the Colombian tiple, with pairs of triple strings it is also called a guitarro segundo or segunda guitarra in Spanish.Uruguayan tiple: The word tiple in Uruguay refers to the type of guitar known in English as the requinto.Peruvian tiple: A stringed instrument four strings, which can be either singular or doubled.Puerto Rican tiple: The smallest instrument in the jibaro trio, most often with four or five strings and a distinctively angled upper body.Minorcan tiple: A small guitar more widely known as the guitarro.Dominican tiple: A melodic stringed instrument with ten steel strings in five double courses it is called in Spanish a tiple de Santo Domingo, tiplecito, guitarrito or a tiplet.Cuban tiple: A stringed instrument with five strings in double courses.Colombian tiple: A plucked stringed instrument with twelve strings in four courses, and a national symbol of Colombian culture.Argentinian tiple: The word tiple in Argentina refers to the type of guitar known in English as the requinto.American tiple: A ukulele-like instrument based on the Colombian tiple.See also the glossary of musical instrument classification ( organology).Ĭhordophones acoustic bass guitar Īny of several kinds of small, plucked stringed instruments of the guitar family, used in the traditional musics of Spain and various Latin American nations. This appendix does cover such foreign words and any other non-English terminology that can be helpful to understand writing about music and musical instruments. Some instruments do not have a direct English translation. This appendix does not generally include translations, but in English writing foreign words are often used to describe instruments. It does not comprehensively include families or types of instruments - only specific instruments - but some families of instruments are listed because they are also used as the name of a specific instrument from within that family. It does not include playing techniques, bows or plectrums, music genres or anything other than the names of instruments. This glossary only includes the names of actual instruments. ![]() It can include any stringed instrument, or any musical instrument that produces sound through one or more vibrating strings. ![]()
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