In the system, bar zithers are made up of musical bows and stick zithers.[1] Musical bows have flexible ends, stick zithers are rigid or have only one flexed end.[1] Bar zithers, whether musical bow or stick zithers, often have some form of resonator. Examples of resonators include the player's mouth, an attached gourd or an inflated balloon or bladder.
A stick-zither has a stick in place of a resonating body and always needs an additional resonator, generally a gourd, sometimes the mouth of the player.
Instruments may be monochords (single stringed) or polychord (multiple stinged).[1] They may also be idiochords (string made from the bar or stick) or heterchords (string made of separate substance from the bar or stick.[1]
Man playing a heterochord musical bow, using his mouth for a resonator. Heterochords have strings made of a different material than the rigid part of the bow.[1]
Flanders, 16th century. European heterochord musical bow, using a bladder for a resonator. Bladder fiddle.
Mozambique, 21st century. Man playing a heterochord musical bow, using his mouth for a resonator.
Brazil. Berimbau musical bow with gourd resonator. Tapped with stick to play. String also vibrates caxixi wrattle.
India, 19th century. Heterochord stick zither called a Tingadee, using gourds for resonators.
Cambodia, 21st century. Yoeun Mek plays a Kse diev heterochord stick zither, which uses a gourd for a resonator.
Borobudur, 9th century C.E. Stone relief showing girls playing stick zither and lute.
Belgium, 19th century. Heterochord stick zither using a bladder for a resonator.
Banjul, Gambia. Heterochord stick zither using a tin can for a resonator. Called a cora.
Indonesia, 20th century. Heterchord stick zither, using a gourd resonator. Example of a vertical board being use instead of a bar, called a lath-zither.[3] Still considered bar zither.[1]
Belgian Congo 20th century. Stick zither, gourd resonator, heterochord.
Africa. Mvet, a stick zither from Africa. Hornbostel-Sachs didn't consider a mulitiple-string bar zither (or poly-heterochord bar zither).
Lake Arereco in Chihuahua, Mexico, 21st century. Stick zither called a "chapareque", Native American instrument. Heterochord bar zither, using mouth for resonator.
Vietnam. Goong stick zither
Tanzania. Zeze, a bowed stick zither played here by Gogo musicians
Sachs, Kurt (1940). The History of Musical Instruments. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. p.4631. in the Malay Archipelago, Madagascar and Zanzibar, the round stick is replaced by a short lath which the player holds on edge (lath-zither).
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