Engineering:Traditional Philippine musical instruments

From HandWiki
Short description: None
A 2016 stamp featuring Philippine traditional musical instruments
Philippine folk music "Sungay ng Kalabaw"

Philippine traditional musical instruments are commonly grouped into four categories: aerophones, chordophones, membranophones, and idiophones.[1][2]

Aerophones

  • Bulungudyong – vertical flute (Pinatubo Ayta)
  • Diwas
  • Palendag – lip-valley flute (Kalinga)
  • Tongali – nose flute (Kalinga)
  • Tumpong – bamboo flute
  • Tulali – flute with 6 holes
  • Bansik – bamboo flute with three holes of the Negrito people in Zambales
  • Tambuli – Carabao horn

Chordophones

  • Litguit – a three-stringed bamboo violin of the Aeta people
  • Butting – a bow with a single hemp 5 string, plucked with a small stick
  • Faglong – a two-stringed, lute-like instrument of the B'laan; made in 1997
  • Budlong – bamboo zither
  • Kolitong – a bamboo zither
  • Pas-ing – a two-stringed bamboo with a hole in the middle from Apayao people
  • Kudyapi – a two-stringed boat lute from Mindanao

Membranophones

  • Dabakan – goblet drum (Maranao)
  • Gandang – double-headed barrel drum (Maranao)
  • Libbit – conical drum (Ifugao)
  • Sulibao – conical drum (Ibaloi)
  • Gambal – war drums

Idiophones

  • Agung a tamlang – bamboo (slit drum)
  • Agung – large gong suspended from an ornate frame
  • Bungkaka – bamboo buzzer
  • Gandingan – set of four large hanging knobbed gongs
  • Kagul – scraper
  • Kulintang – set of eight tuned gongs placed horizontally in an ornate frame, tuned pentatonic scale|pentatonically.
  • Gabbang – bamboo xylophone (Yakan, Batak, B'laan, Sama-Bajau, Tausūg)
  • Luntang – wooden beams hanging from a frame (Maguindanaon)
  • Kulintang a tiniok – set of eight, tuned knobbed metal plates strung on a wooden frame (Maguindanaon)
  • Babandil – small gong
  • Saronay – eight tuned knobbed metal plates strung over a wooden frame (Maranao)
  • Tongatong – stamping tubes of the Kalinga people

References

Sources

External links