
Halion
New member
A while back, I saw a second hand Sitar on a dutch auction site for only 70 euro's, and I grabbed it. Man that thing has a sound! Resonance you won't belief and richness that can't be beat.
For those that don't know what a Sitar is, it is a traditional stringed instrument from India. It has 29 (no, that's not a typo) strings, of which only 2 or 3 are actually played. It has a small body made out of a gourd and a hollow neck made of mahogony. The frets only touch the neck at the sides, and are very rounded. About 5 strings are drones, they are tuned (most of the time) into 2 notes, over a couple of octaves. Then there are 2 strings that are tuned with a forth between them (like a guitar), and then there are a whole lot of strings that sit under the frets (yes, under) that just vibrate along with the music. They are tuned in the scale of the song, so they have to be retuned everytime the scale changes.
Made a recording with it a while back, turned out pretty well, but that thing is really, really hard to play.
For those that don't know what a Sitar is, it is a traditional stringed instrument from India. It has 29 (no, that's not a typo) strings, of which only 2 or 3 are actually played. It has a small body made out of a gourd and a hollow neck made of mahogony. The frets only touch the neck at the sides, and are very rounded. About 5 strings are drones, they are tuned (most of the time) into 2 notes, over a couple of octaves. Then there are 2 strings that are tuned with a forth between them (like a guitar), and then there are a whole lot of strings that sit under the frets (yes, under) that just vibrate along with the music. They are tuned in the scale of the song, so they have to be retuned everytime the scale changes.
Made a recording with it a while back, turned out pretty well, but that thing is really, really hard to play.