Hybrid Winds

Hybrid Winds

Hybrid Winds Linsey Pollak When I was about fifteen I had a dream that featured a wind instrument lives on the Sunshine Coast in whose sound I remembered clearly on Queensland and is a renowned waking. It reminded me of a somewhat community music facilitator, mellow crumhorn (Renaissance wind- composer and musical director who capped double reed pipe) or a sort of has built instruments for over 20 high-pitched baritone sax. That sound Figure 1: Gaidanet. years, specialising in aerophones eludes me now, for I have always been chasing that elusive, dreamt, wind- a semitone when it is opened. In fact it from Eastern Europe. He has a instrument sound. only works for the top half of the octave reputation for making and playing I started my instrument making in Macedonian gaidas, but for the full instruments made from rubber journey 25 years ago making bamboo range in Bulgarian gaidas which have a gloves, carrots, watering cans, flutes. That quickly led to a longer stint more conical bore. This enables a unique chairs, brooms, bins and other found of making wooden renaissance flutes, style of playing and ornamentation. objects. His ongoing obsession and an interest in other Renaissance and What I wanted to do was to have combines much of this: making medieval winds. But the real love affair access to the gaida style of playing and ornamentation while playing a lip-blown music more accessible to began 20 years ago with the Macedonian instrument like a clarinet. I experimented communities through instrument gaida (bagpipes), and so I travelled to Macedonia for eight months over three first with a clarinet mouthpiece and a building and playing workshops. successive trips in order to learn to play bore diameter of 13mm. With a bore of and make them. That love affair has this size the open fleahole notes were very For further information, please since taken me on a myriad different muffled, and I eventually worked down contact Linsey Pollak. Email: musical journeys, and although I still to an 8mm bore diameter, using a <[email protected]>. make gaidas, my main wind instrument sopranino saxophone mouthpiece (not making activities of soprano) which works very well. I made late have been in the the initial area of hybrid instruments in wood winds. These are I’ve often performed turned from wind instruments and recorded with this Brigalow and Gidgee that are variants of instrument and its – local Australian existing instruments, sound is excellent. hardwoods. But I’ve also made them in or are deeply Very occasionally it inspired by other bamboo and wind instruments. explodes during a aluminium (see This article describes performance, but the Clarinis below). The some of them. audience assumes sound is very soft, but the instrument that it is part of the Gaidanet comes into its own act. as an electroacoustic As the name instrument. I use a implies, the gaidanet woodwind pickup is a hybrid of the gaida and the clarinet. called a Danabug (made in Scandinavia) It is actually a narrow-bored clarinet- which works superbly for this type instrument (cylindrical bore and instrument. single lip-blown reed) but the fingering and tuning resemble that of the gaida. Clarinis The beauty of the gaida is the style of ornamentation that is used, determined After developing the gaidanet I didn’t to a large degree by the existence of a take it any further for a few years. fleahole which is actually the first However, in early 1997 I developed fingerhole positioned exactly behind the further the idea of amplified narrow- thumbhole. The ‘fleahole’ is a very small bore clarinets and developed the clarini hole with a small tube inserted which (or family of clarinis). Basically these are extends into the bore (See Fig. 1: one can narrow-bore clarinets that I make out of use a chicken feather quill or a biro refill aluminium tubing (internal diameter = tube about 8-10mm long). This has the 9.5mm), though the material could be effect of raising the note being played by plastic, bamboo, wood, etc. 42 SOUNDS AUSTRALIAN NO 62 (2003) • THE JOURNAL OF THE AUSTRALIAN MUSIC CENTRE In performance I always use them as tarogato, although carrying the same actually cylindrical, but with a sort of peg electroacoustic instruments with the name, is quite different. Since the end of insert at the top end of the bore below pickup inserted directly into the bore of the last century, it has been a keyed the reed that makes it a ‘virtual conical the instrument just below the instrument with a gradually changing bore’. The Chinese suona has greater mouthpiece. They can of course be key system that became similar to the accuracy of pitch and extended range played without amplification but are very Albert system found on some clarinets. due to its conical bore. So, in my hybrid quiet instruments. Because these The tarogato, however, overblows an zurna I’ve used the bore profile and the instruments do not cross-finger, enabling octave (like the sax) because of its conical attached brass bell of the Chinese suona a chromatic scale, I make a family group bore. I wanted to design a simple conical- in conjunction with the tuning and body of instruments with different scales and bored single-reed instrument with no shape of the Turkish zurna, combined tunings and a shared interchangeable keys – a sort of folk sax. Because the with an oboe staple and a zurna-shaped mouthpiece. They can be built in a whole design and intent was similar to a reed made from a plastic drinking straw range of tunings. Because one of my tarogato, I called it a tarogatino (it was rather than flattened cane. In the sidebar main influences is music from Eastern to be smaller and pitched in C rather I include details on making these reeds Europe I use various Turkish and Greek than Bb like the tarogato). for those people who have various ‘folk scales as a basis for tuning. The In 1988 I began experimenting and shawms’ without working reeds. advantage for modal playing is that each built my first tarogatinos; and over the The instrument works extremely well instrument is firmly based in the scale to years I have modified the design and is quite similar in sound to the which it is tuned. (modifications are mainly very small Turkish zurna with perhaps more Figure 2 shows the measurements for changes to the mouthpiece and upper activity in the upper harmonics. It has a a clarini in ‘A’ Hidzaz tuning (F, G, A, Bb, bore). I make them in wood, usually an range of nearly two octaves (if the reed is C#, D, E, F, G): a 12mm OD aluminium Australian acacia called Gidgee (Acacia working well) and it’s definitely an tube with a 1.2mm wall thickness (ID: Cambagie), step boring them on a lathe outdoor instrument. The zurna comes 9.6mm), fingerhole size 6.5mm, and a and then reaming them to the final bore into its own when played in pairs (one sopranino saxophone mouthpiece. taper. I have used modified clarinet instrument droning, or both in unison) Measurements on figure are in mm. mouthpieces and sopranino sax and played with a davul or daouli or Numbers marked indicate the distance to mouthpieces. tapan (large double-sided drums played centre of fingerhole from top of tube. The instrument has changed gradually with one small and one large stick). Note played with open hole is given. over the last ten years and I now call it a There are literally hundreds of varieties of this instrument in different parts of the world. Carrot Flute The carrot flute is exactly what the name implies – a flute made from a Figure 2: Clarini. saxillo. It is still pitched in C, with the carrot. It is an end-blown flute played in lowest note being the D above middle C, the same way as the Turkish ney, Saxillo and it has a cross-fingered chromatic Bugarian kaval, Macedonian supelka or range of just under two octaves. The the New Zealand Maori koauau. In fact For many years I was obsessed with mouthpiece is a heavily doctored clarinet it is incredibly similar to the koauau. I’d the sound of the tarogato, a Hungarian mouthpiece with an insert that reduces been making carrot flutes for a few years conical-bored single-reed instrument its bore. The saxillo has a spun brass when I went to New Zealand. While I somewhat resembling a wooden soprano bell, but this aspect of the instrument is was there I was introduced to the sax but with a much mellower tone, currently in the process of change. The koauau by a maker who made them partly due to the bore profile and sound is like a mellow soprano sax. from clay (they are also made from mouthpiece design. It was developed in bone). I had just started making a three- the late nineteenth century by Schunda The Hybrid Zurna fingerhole design instead of a four- and later by Stowasser in Budapest. I was fingerhole one and coincidentally the lucky enough to come across a very good The zurna is a loud and fantastic koauaus mostly seem to have three Stowasser tarogato, but I also had a real Turkish double reed instrument. The fingerholes. To make a carrot flute I first ambition to design a tarogato-type suona is a loud and fantastic Chinese cut the carrot to length and then drill it instrument that had no keys. double reed instrument. You either love down the center with a 12-13mm drill.

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