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3 string russian guitar
3 string russian guitar








  1. #3 string russian guitar for free
  2. #3 string russian guitar series

I was sitting in my room, when I heard the most beautiful guitar playing coming from next door. My first encounter with the Russian guitar came almost thirty years ago, at a guitar conference in the German city of Michaelstein, where I had been invited to deliver an academic talk/paper on the guitar in Scotland.

3 string russian guitar

#3 string russian guitar for free

It’s high time we took a closer look at this treasure, much of which is available for free and legal download online. The repertoire which survives from this period is of the highest quality, equaling and sometimes bettering the compositions we are more familiar with. If there is a gaping hole in the classical guitar repertoire, it must surely be filled by the unjustly neglected 19th and early 20th-century Russian school. If you’d like to check out more about instruments from this region of the world, Daria will be sharing Chinese New Year customs, the Tibetan Singing Bowl and a “Make-Your-Own” Chinese Gong craft this month at Making Multicultural.I have no connection with the Doff company from St Petersburg, and provide no link, but you could find them easily enough. She has also created a multicultural kids video site as well as My Favorite Multicultural Books.Ī free copy of this month’s song can be downloaded on Daria’s Monthly Song Page. Her “world music for kids” website, was given a 2009 Parents Choice Award for its musical and cultural content. She has the most awesome job of traveling the world to sing for kids and peace. Riddles And Answers From the Song Tum BalalaikaĪward-winning children’s performer, DARIA (Daria Marmaluk-Hajioannou) has created 7 cd’s that have won national honors. Once you’ve gotten a chance to check out this instrument, I’m sure you’ll really like a balalaika! I also have a Balalaika Coloring Page where younger kids can color their own balalaika and add their own unique flair to it! Notice the different sizes and shapes working together to create the beautiful melody. You’ll see a group of boys and men of various ages playing the Beatles Song “Yesterday” on their balalaikas.

3 string russian guitar

If you’d like to see and hear an actual balalaika, check out this balalaika orchestra: It’s a perfect ending since the young lady also wanted a boyfriend as clever as he might be handsome! She answers all his questions then asks him to be her beau. The girl is as clever (or more clever) then the boy. If you’d like to see some of the riddles he poses, there’s an English translation below.īecause I often sing for audiences that speak mainly English, I sing the original verse in Yiddish and then add new verses in English that tell the story. The chorus of the song: “tum bala, tum bala, tum, balalaika” imitates the strum of the balalaika.

#3 string russian guitar series

So he stays up all night and devises a series of riddles that are questions for her. In the original Yiddish, a boy is seeking a lovely girl who is as pretty as she is smart. This folksong from Eastern Europe is actually a riddle song.

3 string russian guitar

If you’d like to see a balalaika, check out this video in Yiddish and English called Tum Balalaika: And the contra bass is so large that it is played with a pick made from a large piece of leather or even a boot heel – wow! Unlike the guitar, the balalaika is actually a family of instruments with a variety of sizes from the smaller, mandolin-sized prima balalaika to a huge contrabass balalaika which is so large that it needs wooden legs to support it as it stands on the floor. But instead of the familiar guitar, they might be making their own musical magic with a triangular-shaped instrument called a balalaika. Along with the banjo and the fiddle, it’s one of our country’s “stringed instruments of choice.” Now if you were to travel almost halfway around the world to countries like Russia or the Ukraine, you’d also see some pretty amazing musicians and musical groups. It might be a bass guitar, an electric guitar, an acoustic guitar or maybe even a 12 string guitar, but it probably is some kind of guitar. If you’re watching someone “rock out” in the USA, chances are they are playing a guitar.










3 string russian guitar