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Brass Instruments Ghungharu India
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Quantity Available -
5 |
Mass Weight : 0.40kg
Shipping Weight : 1kg (2.2 lbs) |
Price:
$53.91
Sale :
$48.52 |
You Save:
10%
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Product Feature Brass
Instruments
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* Manzira
made of padded cushion,60 bells
* Size : Length 19
inches
* Perform classical Indian dance
* Handmade by metal craftsmen from Patiala in Punjab in North India
* Shipped in 24 hours from Gurgaon, a suburb of New Delhi, India
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Product
Description
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Brass Instruments Ghugroos
are globular bells each about 2 cm in diameter. Dancers
string them on ropes or sew them onto cloth or leather
strips and wear them around ankles. Larger ghungroos may
be strung on a circle of wire and shaken as
accompaniment to a song. They are often fixed to other
instruments to add to the sound. The bells are
decorative in themselves and the cords strung are often
bright and finished with tassels.
There are two common forms
of the ghungharu. The traditional form is merely
a number of bells woven together on a string. However
today it is common to find them stitched to a padded
cushion. This may then be strapped to the feet of a
dancer. Both forms are shown in the accompanying
illustration.
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Development of Indian Music
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There is a lot of music
in India as also in every other part of the world. It is not posiible
to trace the whole history or to set it in a proper perspective. It
deals mainly with the sound or sounds which are pleasing and
fascinating to the ear.
It is possible to divide sound in small parts. The smallest part of a
sound is known as Shruti. Shrutis, when combined in a suitable
manner, form notes or swaras.
How did shrutis come into being ? How, why or when notes formed ? Who
was responsible for forming and developing those notes ? These
questions are relevant as replies to these questions will help us in
understanding the true significance of music.
Shrutis and notes are the means to transform natural music into a
regular form. That transformation enables us to enjoy the natural
sound as and when we desire by combining the shrutis and notes in a
systematic manner for purposes of singing. That combination of
shrutis and notes should be such that all human beings, without any
exception, may sing and enjoy those notes. Not only that. It should
be possible for every human being not only to sing for his own
enjoyment but also for the enjoyment of others including the birds
and beasts.
According to the Indian culture, music is meant for self-enjoyment.
It is also considered as a means for unification of soul with the
Almighty Bhagwan. That is why Hindu ascetics and mendicants used to
sing songs and hymns in praise of God musically. They when used to
sit in samadhi and concentrate on his worship was through music. That
is why the history of Hindu or Indian Music begins from the day
shrutis came into being and notes were formed with the combination
and permutation of those shrutis. For the fixation of that very
period, we begin from the very first historical date line of India. |
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