Information About

Surbahar




The surbahar, also known as bass Sitar , is a plucked String Instrument used in the Hindustani Classical Music of North India . It is related to the better-known Sitar but has a lower tone. The surbahar is over 130 cm (51 inches) long, uses a Pumpkin as a resonator, and has a neck made of Teak with very long frets that allow a glissando of six notes on the same fret by the method of pulling.

Its neck is made of tun ('' Cedrela Tuna ''), or teak wood. The neck is fixed on a large pumpkin used as a resonator, and the instrument can emit low frequencies (less than 20 Hz). The surbahar has four rhythm strings (cikari), four playing strings (the thicker is 1 mm in diameter) and 15 to 17 unplayed Sympathetic Strings . All these strings lay on a flat bridge. This type of bridge considerably amplifies the sound and the spectrum, as the vibrating string hits the flat part of the bridge. The strings are played by way of a metallic Plectrum fixed on the index of the right hand, the ''mizrab''.

The ''surbahar'' was developed around 1825 . Its invention is generally attributed to Ustad Sahebdad Khan, although recent research shows that it may actually have been invented by a lesser known Lucknow -based sitarist named Ustad Ghulam Mohammed. {Link without Title}


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