OTHER CLASSICAL MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS : MUSICAL INSTRUMEN
Other Classical Musical Instruments : Instrumental Music Blog
Other Classical Musical Instruments
(musical instrument) any of various devices or contrivances that can be used to produce musical tones or sounds
, occasionally called Legend of Zelda or Zelda, is a high fantasy action-adventure video game series created by Japanese game designers Shigeru Miyamoto and Takashi Tezuka. It was developed and published by Nintendo, with some portable installments outsourced to Flagship/Capcom and Vanpool.
To see musical instruments, denotes anticipated pleasures. If they are broken, the pleasure will be marred by uncongenial companionship. For a young woman, this dream foretells for her the power to make her life what she will.
classical music: traditional genre of music conforming to an established form and appealing to critical interest and developed musical taste
(of language) Having the form used by the ancient standard authors
(of art or architecture) Influenced by ancient Greek or Roman forms or principles
Of or relating to ancient Greek or Latin literature, art, or culture
of or relating to the most highly developed stage of an earlier civilisation and its culture; "classic Cinese pottery"
authoritative: of recognized authority or excellence; "the definitive work on Greece"; "classical methods of navigation"
Pandit ji's flutes
The bansuri (Hindi: ???????) is a transverse alto flute of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal, made of a single length of bamboo with six or seven open finger holes. An ancient musical instrument associated with cowherds and the pastoral tradition, it is intimately linked to the love story of Krishna and Radha, and is depicted in Buddhist paintings from around 100 AD. It is intimately associated with Krishna's Rasa lila; the tunes on his flute are poetically associated with driving the women of Braj mad. The North Indian bansuri, typically about 14 inches long, was traditionally used as a soprano instrument primarily for accompaniment in lighter compositions including film music.
The word bansuri originates in the Sanskrit bans [bamboo] + swar [musical note]. There are two varieties of bansuri: the transverse, and the fipple. The fipple variety is usually played in folk music and is held away from the lips like a whistle. Because of the flexibility and control it offers, the transverse variety is preferred in classical music.
Pandit Pannalal Ghosh (1911-1960) elevated the Bansuri from a folk instrument into serious classical music. He improvised with the length and number of holes and eventually came up with longer bansuris with larger bores and a seventh hole placed 90 degrees around from the line of the other six holes. Longer bansuris provided better coverage in the lower octaves.
0808 0722 Lute
A friend who is a fine classical guitarist posed for me with his lute. This was more a grab shot than a studio effort. I used available light and did extensive post processing to burn down the distracting background after converting the image to black and white, and cropping square.