MUSICAL INSTRUMENT.
                                       

                    

INTRODUCTION.  

Musical instruments are almost universal components of human culture: archaeology has revealed pipes and whistles in the Paleolithic Period and clay drums shell trumpets in the Neolithic age. It has been firmly established that the ancient city cultures of Mesopotamia, the Mediterranean. India, East Asia, and the Americas all possessed diverse and well-development assortments of musical instruments, indicating that a long previous development must have existed. as to the origin of musical instruments, however, there can be only conjecture. Some scholars have speculated that the first instruments were derived from such utilitarian objects as cooking pots (drums) and hunting bows (musical bows); others have argued that instruments of music might well have preceded pots and bows; while in the myths of cultures throughout the world the origin of music has frequently been attributed to the gods, especially in areas where music seems to be regarded as an essential component of the ritual believed necessary for spiritual survival.

 

Whatever their origin, the further development of the enormously varied instruments of the world has been dependent on the interplay of four factors: available material, technological skills, mythic and symbolic preoccupations, and patterns of trade and migration. Thus, residents of Arctic regions use bone, skin, and stone to construct instruments; residents of the tropics have wood, bamboo, and reed available; while societies with access to metals and the requisite technology are able to utilize these malleable materials in variety of ways. Myth and symbolism plays an equally important role. Herding societies, for example, which may depend on a particular species of animal not only economically but also spiritually, often develop instruments that look or sound like the animal or prefer instruments made of bone and hide rather than stone and wood, even when all the materials are available. Finally, patterns of human trade and migration have for many centuries swept musicians and their instruments across seas and continents, resulting in constant flux, change, and cross-fertilization and adaptation. 

In this part of the site we have picked some special instruments to show case in their different groups and varieties some are: -

GUITARS.

 

PLUCKED CHORDOPHONES.

PLUCKED AND BOWED LUTES.

 

HARPS AND LYRES. 

 

KEYBOARD CHORDOPHONES.

 

ZITHERS.

 

LIP-VIBRATED INSTRUMENTS.

FREE REEDS AND OTHER INSTRUMENTS.

SINGLE AND DOUBLE REEDS.

MEMBRANOPHONES.