- Source: Tarka (flute)
The tarka (Quechua, Aymara: tharqa) is an indigenous flute of the Andes. Usually made of wood, it has 6 finger holes, fipple on mouth end and free hole on distant end.
The tarka is a blockflute, like a recorder, but is comparatively shorter and quite angular in shape, requires greater breath, and has a darker, more penetrating sound.
The tarka has three variants: big, medium (tuned by fifth above) and small (tuned by octave above). Usually all three kinds of tarka are used together in a big ensemble, all playing the same melody on three voices at fixed intervals and accompanied by percussion instruments (tinya, wankar). This traditional genre is called tarqueada.
See also
Quena
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Tarka (flute)
- Tarka
- Pinkillu
- Quena
- Moseño
- Music of Grim Fandango
- Andean music
- Alan Ridout
- James May
- Music of Peru