Dutar

Dutar
Yaɣ shelilute Mali niŋ
Tingbani shɛli din yinaIran Mali niŋ
Intangible cultural heritage statusRepresentative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity Mali niŋ
Described at URLhttps://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/01492, https://ich.unesco.org/fr/RL/01492, https://ich.unesco.org/es/RL/01492 Mali niŋ
Hornbostel-Sachs pubu321.322 Mali niŋ

Tɛmplet:Infobox InstrumentDutar (bee dotar; Tɛmplet:Lang-fa; Russian: Дутар; Tajik: Дутор; Tɛmplet:Lang-uz; Tɛmplet:Lang-ug; simplified Chinese: 都塔尔; traditional Chinese: 都塔爾; pinyin: Dū tǎ ěr; Tɛmplet:Lang-dng) nyɛla Irania kalimboo din mali nyingoli ni mi'waɣila dibaa ayi ka be Iran mini Central Asia. Di yuli Wula maa yimi na Persian bachi ni "two strings", دوتار do tār (< دو do "two",تار tār "string"), amaa Herati dutar din nyɛ Afghanistan dini mali la mihi pia ni anahi. Dutar nyɛla din yuli du Tajikistan mini Khorasan tiŋgbani yaɣa din be Iran. Bɛ yi ŋmɛri li, bɛ mali la mihi maa gɔhiri Uyghurs din be Western China ka zaŋ li gɔhi Tajiks, Turkmen, Uzbeks. Binkumda din ŋmani ki shɛŋa n-nyɛ Kazakh dombra. Dutar gba nyɛla binkumdi li din niŋ talahi Kurds of Khorasan, din nima n-nyɛ Haj Ghorban Soleimani ŋun yina Quchan ni daa no shɛli chi virtuoso. Kurdish tiŋgbani ni ninvuɣi so ŋun pɛbiri dutar bɛ booni o la bakci (bakhshi), ka Azeri ka bɛ booni o ashiq. Khorasan bakhshi music pahi la "Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity" ni.

Dutar pilli saha 15th century daa nyɛla pɛkpariba binkumda ka bɛ mali gut maani li. Amaa, bɛ ni daa yooi Silk Road, catgut daa yooi soli ka lala mihi ma ni tooi mali "silk" din yi China kpena ni puuni. Zaŋ na hali ni zuŋɔ silk mihi na nyɛla din be binkumdi shɛŋa ni, amaa "nylon" mihi gba nyɛla din niŋ bayana.[1][2][3][4]

Dutar maa nyɛla din mali kukoli balli.[citation needed]

Di tooi kumdi la La Re bee A D, amaa di doli la luɣ'shɛli bɛ ni pɛbiri li.

  1. The Shahnameh Guide To The Lutes Of Central Asia.
  2. Collection of stringed instruments.
  3. The Stringed Instrument Database: D.
  4. ATLAS of Plucked Instruments - Central Asia.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Nelliwinne