Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Domra

 
Wikipedia: Domra
Not to be confused with Dombra
Domra
Domra-topview.jpg
Classification
Related instruments
Balalaika, Mandolin

The domra (Russian: домра) is a long-necked Russian string instrument of the lute family with a round body and three or four metal strings.

Contents

History

In 1896, a student of Vassily Vassilievich Andreyev found a broken instrument in a stable in rural Russia. It was thought that this instrument may have been an example of a domra, although no illustrations or examples of the traditional domra were known to exist in Russian chronicles. A three-stringed version of this instrument was later redesigned in 1896, patented, and introduced into the orchestra of Russian folk instruments.

The three-stringed domra uses a tuning in 4ths.

Later, a four-stringed version was developed employing a violin tuning by Moscow instrument maker, Liubimov, in 1905.

In recent times, scholars have come to the conclusion that the term "domra" actually described a percussive instrument popular in Russia, and that the discovered instrument was either a variant of the balalaika or a mandolin.

Today, it is the three-stringed domra that is used almost exclusively in Russia. It is played with a plectrum, and is often used to play the lead melody in Russian balalaika ensembles.

The four-string domra

4 stringed domra

The four-string domra is somewhat different from the three-string variant. It is larger and has a different tuning, and as a result a different quality of sound. It is used and taught exclusively in Ukraine where it replaced the mandolin that was popular in the 1920s.

The fact that the four-stringed domra is no longer used or taught in Russia has raised the question of whether the four-string variant remains, in fact, a Russian folk instrument, or whether it has effectively become a Ukrainian folk instrument. In 2001, the Kyiv Conservatory renamed their domra class, calling it a kobza class, and ordering instruments with a slightly different appearance, but using the same tuning and playing technique. Other conservatories in Ukraine are also following suit.

Orchestral instruments

The basic domra is tuned as follows:

  • Three strings—EAD tuning
  • Four strings—GDAE tuning (like the mandolin or the violin)

Instruments are made in various sizes including piccolo, prima, alto, tenor, bass, and contrabass.

  • Piccolodomra : b1 e2 a2 Tessitura
  • Primdomra : e1 a1 d2 [1]
  • Soprandomra : b e1 a1 [2]
  • Altdomra : e a d1 [3]
  • Tenordomra : B e a [4]
  • Bassdomra : E A d [5]
  • Kontrabassdomra (minor): 1E 1A D [6]
  • Kontrabassdomra (major): 1A D G [7]

Performers

Tamara Volskaya is considered to be one of the leading contemporary performers on the domra. She is a Merited Artist of Russia, a Laureate of the USSR competition, and a Professor at the Mussorgsky Ural State Conservatory in Yekaterinburg, Russia.

See also

Sources


(Some help to improve it, you may find in the german article which has been refreshed)


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 
Learn More
balalaika
Vorony (1994 Album by The Ukrainians)
No, Russia Cannot Be Perceived by Wit (2000 Album by Terem Quartet)

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Domra" Read more

 

Mentioned in