- Kobza
Infobox Instrument
name=Kobza
names=HS#:321.32-5
classification=
*Chordophone
range=
related=
*Lute
*Mandora
*Bandura
*Torban The term kobza refers to various musical instruments in eastern Europe.
*
Hornbostel-Sachs classification number 321.32-5:
** The "kobza" ( _uk. кобза) is a traditional Ukrainianstringed musical instrument , of thelute family, and more specifically a relative of the Central Europeanmandora .
** Thecobza or "cobsa" is also a type of four-course (triple-strung courses) folk lute found primarilly inRomania andMoldova . Some courses had 3 strings. The cobza was tuned in fifths similar to the mandolin. InHungary the same instrument is known as the "koboz". Both are now increasingly rare.*
Hornbostel-Sachs classification number 321.321-5+6:
** The "kobza" was also a term for any regional lute-like instrument used by court musicians in Central-Eastern Europe, which might not have been a kobza proper. (This may be the Hungarian koboz)
** A term used for bagpipes and occasionally for the hurdy-gurdy in Eastern Poland,Belarus andVolyn in Ukraine.
** The term "kobza" was also used as a synonym forbandura in the 19th and early 20th century in Ukraine.Etymology
The term "kobza" is first mentioned in Polish chronicles dating back to 1331, but lute-like instruments are known to have existed in the territories now known as Ukraine even earlier, either from the sixth century, brought there by
Bulgars , or possibly somewhat later by Polovetsians andKhazars Fact|date=January 2008. The term has a Turkic origin: "kobyz" or "khomus". The stringed folk instrument acquired widespread popularity in the 16th century, with the advent of theHetmanate (Cossack state).The kobza was usually played by a bard or minstrel called "
kobzar " (occasionally in earlier times a kobeznik), to accompany the recitation of a Ukrainian epics called "duma".The kobza became extinct early in the 20th century. Currently there is a revival of kobza playing in Ukraine, due to the efforts of the "Kobzar Guild" in
Kiev andKharkiv .The kobza was often referred to in historical sources as
bandura (from Latin Pandura, via medieval Polish Barduny, i.e. alute ). The terms were interchangeable until about 1900. Eventually the unfretted "starosvitska" bandura (developed ca. 1800) appropriated thebandura name, but still was often referred to as kobza among the common folk, because of the name's historical cachet.Types of Ukrainian kobzas
* Veresai kobza, (often referred to as authentic traditional kobza) with six treble strings strung along the treble side of the instrument. The instrument is played with the left hand pressing down on the strings against the fingerboard, which may or may not have frets.
* Orchestral kobza, with 4 strings tuned in fifths using tunings that parallel the violin family. The instruments are made in "prima" (soprano), alto and tenor and contrabass sizes.
* Accompaniment kobza, usually having 6 or 7 strings and a fretted neck. The six-string version uses standard guitar tuning. The 7-string version uses a Russian guitar (open G chord) tuning.The kobza revival is impeded by the complete absence of the museum specimens. All evidence is entirely iconographic.
Bibliography
*Cherkasky, L., "Ukrainski narodni muzychni instrumenty", Tekhnika, Kyiv, Ukraine, 2003, 262 pp., ISBN 966-575-111-5
See also
*
Lute
*Torban
*Theorbo
*Mandora
*Bandura
*Kobyz , a Kazakh bowed string instrumentExternal links
* [http://polyhymnion.org/torban In-depth discussion of kobza and related instruments' organology]
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