Minimal Strings

by Catherine Madsen

Close up of musician's hands playing a tagelharpa | Screenshot from YouTube video by Jirka H谩jek of a tagelharpa cover of Myrkur's Leaves of YggdrasilThe Nunamiut, the I帽upiat of the area around Anaktuvuk Pass, at one point played a small instrument about 16 inches long; it was held upright along the player鈥檚 left side and had one string, which was beaten with a small hammer. According to Helge Ingstad (a Norwegian explorer who lived with the Nunamiut in 1949-50) it was called the kasagnaujaq; he included a sketch of it in his book Nunamiut: Among Alaska鈥檚 Inland Eskimos. The spells it 办补蝉补艐苍补耻谤补辩 and calls it the I帽upiaq banjo. Other than those two sources, I鈥檝e found no other reference to the instrument. Maybe someone who鈥檚 reading this has seen or played one.

Many cultures around the world developed one-stringed instruments, perhaps when bow hunters began idly tapping on their bowstrings with an arrow and discovered they could vary the pitch. Kouame Sereba, who was born in the Ivory Coast but moved to Norway in his twenties and has worked with many leading Norwegian musicians, plays a mouth bow solo . But even limiting the search to instruments that originated in the circumpolar North, we find a fair number with one to three strings. Some have fallen out of use altogether; some are being revived by folk musicians, historic instrument enthusiasts, and Viking reenactors.

The or Inuit fiddle, generally with two or three strings, is (or was) held on the lap and played with a bow. An example is heard starting at 1:02 . Since the tautirut has been found only in the Hudson Bay area, one theory holds that it was introduced by sailors from Orkney and Shetland; it does have a resemblance to the (now virtually extinct) . But it鈥檚 not impossible that the instrument predates European contact.

The Scandinavian  and the Finnish 鈥攅ssentially the same instrument by two different names鈥攁re closely related to the Shetland gue, and are among the instruments enjoying a revival. Like the gue, they are bowed. They do not have fingerboards, so the melody is created by the fingers touching the strings in mid-air. Pekko K盲ppi demonstrates traditional Finnish and Estonian scales, straight and syncopated bowing styles, and his preferred tuning in this engagingly informal . And the jouhikko isn鈥檛 only a solo instrument, as shown by  between Lassi Logr茅n and Ilkka Heinonen.

Scandinavia also produced the , which has a fretboard and is played horizontally like a one-stringed dulcimer. It can be either bowed or plucked. Developed in the early 19th century from the ancient , the psalmodikon was used to teach hymns in schools, and in churches too poor to afford an organ鈥攍argely because it was unthinkable that a fiddle (a dance instrument, therefore the devil鈥檚 instrument) should be used for the purpose. However, if the devil can quote scripture to his own purpose, he also has the option to take over the psalmodikon once in a while鈥攃heck out Magnus H枚gman鈥檚

Iceland has two folk instruments: the fi冒la, a box with as few as two strings or as many as six, is laid on a table and bowed, with the melody fingers touching the strings in mid-air. The generally has one fretted melody string and one or two drone strings, and may be either bowed or struck with sticks. This fascinating 2012 discusses the history of the fi冒la and the langspil, and the social attitudes toward them in a country whose vulnerability to natural disasters kept it impoverished and culturally underdeveloped from the time of the sagas to the era of the Second World War.

The , a popular Norwegian folk instrument similar to the langspil, has one fretted melody string and multiple drone strings, and is plucked with a plectrum. See it played in a variety of styles (don鈥檛 miss the dancing horse, starting at about 6:30).

The moral of the tale? The human musical instinct is alert to all opportunities, impossible to discourage, and can do a lot with a little.

 

 
 

Resources

Click the links below to learn more about the performers and shops mentioned in the article.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


香港六合彩开奖直播 the Author

Headshot of author Catherine Madsen

Catherine Madsen is a writer, singer and folk harper now living in Michigan. The three years she spent in Fairbanks as a child (1962-65) were a turning point in her life, and she established the Circumpolar Music Series as a gift of gratitude.