Standard Tar - Double row of jingles - Ray skin - Morocco
The tar, tar, tari, tara, tarra or tchentchana is an Arab-Andalusian percussion instrument.
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TAR1
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The tar, tar, tari, tara, tarra or tchentchana is an Arab-Andalusian percussion instrument.
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The tar, tar, tari, tara, tarra or tchentchana is an Arab-Andalusian percussion instrument. It is a frame drum found in Spain, the Maghreb and the Middle East (Qatar, Bahrain, Yemen), cousin of the European tambourine and the Arab riqq and undoubtedly the ancestor of the pandeiro and pandero.
We find varieties in East Africa (Sudan, Kenya, Uganda, Zanzibar), in the Indian Ocean (Comoros, Maldives) and also in Malaysia. This Arabic term designating a round object or a frame drum, has thus replaced that of daf or duff, as in the expression itâr al-duff ("roundness of the frame drum"). The term duff having a more generic and more literary use, it is sometimes confused with the tar when it is circular (and not angular), although the latter has cymbals in general.
The small version is played standing up (perpendicular to the body) to accompany Arab-Andalusian music; very flexible in use, it is however less complex than the riq.
Height | 7cm |
Diamètre | 6.70in |
Reviews subject to control
Based on 4 reviews
Good tambourine to learn the oriental way of playing tar or riq, for not expensive. The sound is good but the decoration is a bit cheap (Translated review)
Very favorable. Thank you. Yannick Grazzi (Translated review)
Very good tar nice to play fish skin sounds good and cymbalettes are perfect (Translated review)
Very nice Tar, nice workmanship and good finishing. The sound of the fish skin is good, but the sound of the cymbalettes needs to be improved for a perfect instrument! Thanks to the craftsman who made it! Happy New Year, and may the music resound in all hearts! (Translated review)