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Tracklist:
1. Pigi
2. Wedding dance procession
3. Zeibekiko for male dancers
4. San ta marmara tis polis
5. The turtle dove
6. Azizi
7. Taksim "Huzam"
8. Widow
9. Tender Girl
10. Dance Tsamikos
11. Zeibekiko of Adramytium (city in Asia Minor) Kioroglou dance
12. Dance Kioroglou
13. Ston Adi tha Katevas
14. Aishe
15.
Taksim 16. Hassapikos dance from the day after the wedding ...
Sandouri cymbal
The Greek, comes from a variant of the Hungarian cimbalom, is a musical instrument that has a somewhat uncertain origin. It is believed that the Roma in Eastern Europe led to approximately the thirteenth century. It is widely used in music from countries such as Hungary, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine, etc., And Iranian Persian music, which is known as the Santur.
is a stringed instrument played with a pair of mallets in both hands, hitting the strings to make them sound. It is a kind of dulcimer but larger, although there are also portable. uses steel strings, the most acute are arranged in groups of four and are tuned in unison. The most serious are gimped steel arranged in groups of three. Also tune in unison.
The first representation of a simple percussion stringed instrument which is categorized dulcimer as a deck can be found in the Assyrian bas-relief in Kyindjuk, approximately 3500 BC. The peoples of the Mediterranean had this instrument, like many peoples in Asia, but called it different names.
The hammer dulcimer folk was taken by V. Josef schund, an expert piano maker who lived and worked in Pest, Hungary, as a basis for a cymbal concert, devised the series production in 1874. The first textbook for this instrument was published by Geza Allaga, a member of the orchestra of the Royal Hungarian Opera in 1889.
The instrument became popular in the Austro-Hungarian Empire and was used by all ethnic groups in the country, including Jews klezmorim and musicians Slavs and Magyars (Hungarians), and Roma (Gypsies) and musicians Lautari (Lautari). The use of this instrument was extended to the late nineteenth century and replaced the kobza in Romanian and Moldovan folk groups. In Wallachia is used almost as a percussion instrument. In Transylvania and Banat, the style of playing is more tonal, heavy with arpeggios.
Links:
Wikipedia - cimbalom dulcimer
Psalter
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