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Thaum cov lus qhia tsis muab kev txhais lus hauv koj cov lus, lawv feem ntau txhais los ntawm Google. Txawm li cas los xij, qee cov lus qhia tsuas yog muaj nyob hauv lawv cov lus qub.

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  • Tabla and Bhaya, Hide, wood, chromed copper, Indian

Tabla and Bhaya

#9366

late 20th Century

Hide, wood, chromed copper

Kev piav qhia

The term tablā is often incorrectly used to describe a pair of hand drums played in northern India, but the tablā is actually the cylindrical wood drum played with the right hand, while the bāyā is a clay or metal kettle drum played with the left hand. The evolution of the instruments and their playing techniques in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries corresponds with the development of the sitar and sarod.

9366. Tabla and Bhaya

Cov ntaub ntawv ntxiv

Qhov ntev
Tabla: 12 1/4 × 8 × 8 in. (31.1 × 20.3 × 20.3 cm); Bhaya: 13 1/2 × 10 1/8 × 10 1/8 in. (34.3 × 25.7 × 25.7 cm)
Qhuas
Gift of Herbert J. Harris, 1986
Tus lej nkag
1986.467.79a, b

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