- Tsymbaly
Infobox Instrument
name=Tsymbaly
names=HS#:314.122-4
classification=
*Chordophone
range= various
related=
*Chang
*cimbal
*Cimbalom
*cymbalom
*cymbalum
*Hackbrett
*Joqin
*Kanun
*ţambal
*tsymbaly
*tsimbl
*Qanun
*Santir
*santouri
*santur
*hammered dulcimer
*ţambal
*Tamthap-luk
*Tsintsila
*Tympanon The tsymbaly ( _uk. цимбали) is the Ukrainian version of the
hammer dulcimer . It is achordophone made up of a trapezoidal box with metal (steel or bronze) strings strung across it. The tsymbaly is played by striking two beaters against the strings.The strings are strung in groups of 3-5, which are tuned in unison. The bass strings may have 1 or 2 wrapped strings tuned in union. The beaters were quite short in comparison to those used by the Cymbalom although not as short as those of the Belarus variety. Traditionally they had leather wrappings rather than the cotton wrap used by Hungarian and Romanian players.
Under the
Hornbostel-Sachs system of classification of musical instruments, it has the catalog number 314.122-4,5. [Baran, T. - The Cimbalom world - Lviv: Svit, 1999 P. 15]History
A small multi-stringed
chordophone was first was depicted onAssyria n frescoes dating back to 3500 B.C. It is thought to have developed from thePersia nsantur , which entered Europe in theMiddle Ages during theCrusades .Eastern Europe
With the rise of piano manufacturing
Vienna in the 1800s, access to metal tuning pins and strings became much easier. The "hammered dulcimer" became popular throughout Austro-Hingarian Empire where it was quickly spread by itinerantJewish and Gypsy (Roma) musicians. It spread toRomania ,Moldavia ,Hungary ,Slovakia ,Ukraine andBelarus , where a variety of regional folk versions and concert instruments were developed. These instruments differed in size, tuning, number of strings and method of holding and playing the hammers.Ukraine
According to
Hnat Khotkevych , [Khotkevych, H. - Instrumenty Ukrainskoho narodu - Kharkiv: DVU, 1930 p. 78] the tsymbaly has existed in Ukraine since the 9th century.The first documented evidence of the "tsymbaly" in Ukraine dates to 17th century, where it appears in various dictionaries. [Humeniuk p. 107]The "tsymbaly" were relatively easy to make and quite forgiving in its manufacture. With access to
piano wire and metal tuning pegs, an instrument could easily be constructed in the village environment. The instrument spread in popularity among the population in theCarpathian s inSouthwestern Ukraine particularly among theHutsul s and Bukovynians. It also became relatively popular in Boykivshchyna, Transcarpathia, Podolia, Bessarabia andEastern Ukraine .The instrument is often used in folk ensembles known as
Troyista muzyka , usually made up of 3 instruments played in an ensemble with theviolin ,basolia ,sopilka orbubon .Tsymbaly in the Ukrainian diaspora
"Tsymbaly" playing is popular in Western Canada among the ethnic Ukrainian diaspora there [Bandera p. 6] . Numerous music competitions exist, and the instrument defines what "Ukrainian-ness" is in the local music scene.
Types of Ukrainian Tsymbaly
1) The Hutsul "tsymbaly": a small instrument usually carried by the musician, using a strap around the player's neck and leaning one edge of the instrument against the player's waist. These instruments usually have 12-13 courses of strings.
2) A semi-concert "tsymbaly": manufactured by the
Chernihiv Musical Instrument Factory in three sizes designed byOlexander Nezovybat'ko andIvan Skliar . These instruments were manufactured from 1950-1986.3) Concert
cimbalom s: originally developed in Hungary byJózsef Schunda in the 1870s. These instruments stand on four legs, have many more strings, and a damping pedal. The concert cymbalom has replaced most of the smaller folk tsymbaly previously used in Ukrainian orchestras and in Academic Conservatory courses. These instruments are fully chromatic and have a range of over four octaves.Use of the Tsymbaly in Ukrainian music
Concert works have been composed for the "tsymbaly" by professional Ukrainian composers
V. Shumeiko ,Volodymyr Zubytsky ,Anatoliy Haidenko ,Bohdan Kotiuk ,Izydor Vymer ,Dezyderiy Zador ,Myroslav Skoryk ,Yevhen Stankovych .Tsymbaly manufacturers in Ukraine
Among the first concert "tsymbaly" to be manufactured in Ukraine were made by the
Melnytse-Podilsk workshop inWestern Ukraine byVasyl Zuliak . These instruments had two pedals and were slightly smaller than the concert Hungarian instruments, although the range was the same. Zuliak later made three different types of instrument.Instruments were also made by the
Chernihiv musical instruments factory . These instruments were designed byIvan Skliar aided by O. Nezovybat'ko. They were made in 3 sizes: prima, alto and bass [Mizynec,p. 19] .Prominent Tsymbaly players of Ukraine
Some notable Ukrainian "tsymbaly" players are:
*
Taras Baran : Professor of tsymbaly at theLviv conservatory
*Heorhy Ahratina : Professor of tsymbaly at theKyiv conservatory
*Dmytro Popichuk : One of the first tsymbaly graduates from the Kyiv conservatory
*Oleksander Nezovybatko : One of the pioneers of "tsymbaly" playing in Eastern Ukraine.Footnotes
ources
*Bandera, M. J. - The Tsymbaly maker and His Craft - The Ukrainian Hammered Dulcimer in Alberta - Edmonton:CIUS. 1991
*Baran, T. - The Cimbalom world - Lviv: Svit, 1999
* - The Cimbalom player Taras Baran - Lviv: Kobzar, 2001
*Humeniuk, A. - Ukrainski narodni muzychni instrumenty - Kyiv: Naukova dumka, 1967
*Ivanov, P. - Orkestr ukrainskykh narodnykh instrmentiv - Kyiv: Muzychna Ukraina, 1981
*Khotkevych, H. - Instrumenty Ukrainskoho narodu - Kharkiv: DVU, 1930
*Mizynec, V. - Ukrainian Folk Instruments - Melbourne: Bayda books, 1984
*Nezovybat'ko, O. - Shkola hry na ukrainskykh tsymbalakh - Kyiv: Mystetsvo, 1966
*Nezovyba'ko O. - Ukrainski tsymbaly - Kyiv: Muzychna Ukraina, 1976.
*Cherkasky, L. - Ukrainski narodni muzychni instrumenty // Tekhnika, Kyiv, Ukraine, 2003 - 262 pages. ISBN 966-575-111-5See also
Cimbalom
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