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Building an Erhu — The Chinese Two-String Bowed Fiddle
Woody

བཟོས་མཁན

Woody

3. སྤྱི་ཟླ་བདུན་པ 2026NO

Building an Erhu — The Chinese Two-String Bowed Fiddle

Build an erhu: a two-string Chinese fiddle with a bow trapped between the strings, a little skin-covered drum for a body, and no fingerboard — you press the strings in mid-air and slide between notes. A serious maker build in the bowed string and stick-slip friction, the physics behind every violin.
བར་མ
Several hours over a few sessions

ལམ་སྟོན

1

A fiddle with a drum for a body

The erhu has just two strings, a bow that lives trapped between them, and a little skin-covered drum for a body. It has no fingerboard, so you press the strings in mid-air and slide to every note between.
2

Make the resonator drum

Cut a short, thick length of bamboo about 13 cm long, open at both ends. This little hollow tube is the sound-body of the erhu.

གོམ་པ་འདིའི་རྫས་རིགས:

BambooBamboo1 piece

ལག་ཆས་དགོས་མཁོ:

HacksawHacksaw
3

Skin the front

Soak a piece of rawhide, stretch it drum-tight over one end of the tube, glue and lash it down, and let it dry hard. This membrane is what makes the erhu loud, like a banjo head.

གོམ་པ་འདིའི་རྫས་རིགས:

RawhideRawhide1 piece
PVA Wood GluePVA Wood Glue1 piece
4

Fit the neck

Push a long dowel neck down through the body near the skin end, so it stands up tall and straight from the drum.

གོམ་པ་འདིའི་རྫས་རིགས:

Dowel RodDowel Rod1 piece
PVA Wood GluePVA Wood Glue1 piece
5

Fit two tuning pegs

Bore two holes near the top of the neck and fit a friction tuning peg into each, one above the other.

གོམ་པ་འདིའི་རྫས་རིགས:

Tuning PegsTuning Pegs2 piece

ལག་ཆས་དགོས་མཁོ:

AwlAwl
6

String it

Run two strings from the base of the body up to the two pegs, close together and parallel — the erhu's whole set of strings.

གོམ་པ་འདིའི་རྫས་རིགས:

Steel Music Wire 0.032"Steel Music Wire 0.032"1 piece
7

Stand the bridge on the skin

Carve a tiny wooden bridge and stand it on the middle of the skin, under the strings, so the strings press down onto the membrane.

ལག་ཆས་དགོས་མཁོ:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
8

Tune the two strings a fifth apart

Tune the inner string to a low note and the outer string a fifth higher, like D and A. Twist the pegs to reach the two notes.
9

Make the bow

Tie a flat hank of horsehair between the two ends of a springy stick to make a bow, tight enough to twang.

གོམ་པ་འདིའི་རྫས་རིགས:

Curved Branch (Bow)Curved Branch (Bow)1 piece
Bow Hair (Horsehair)Bow Hair (Horsehair)1 piece
10

Thread the bow between the strings

Slide the bow hair BETWEEN the two strings. On an erhu the bow lives there permanently and cannot be taken out — that is why it plays only its own two strings.
11

Rosin the hair

Rub hard pine rosin along the bow hair so it grips the strings. Without rosin the hair is too slippery to set a string singing.
12

Play a note

Draw the bow steadily across a string. Press the hair toward the inner or the outer string to choose which one sounds.
13

Slide and bend

With no fingerboard, press a string in open air and slide your finger up or down the neck to glide smoothly between notes — the erhu's crying, singing voice.
14

Compendium — bowing and the skin drum

The erhu makes sound the way every bowed instrument does: by stick-slip friction. The rosined hair grabs the string and drags it sideways until the string's tension tears it free; the string snaps back, is caught again, and the cycle repeats hundreds of times a second. This catch-and-release, called Helmholtz motion, keeps the string vibrating steadily for as long as you bow — which is why a bowed note can sing on and on while a plucked one quickly dies. Unlike a lyre or a guitar, the erhu's soundbox is a little DRUM: the strings press through the bridge onto a stretched skin, and that membrane radiates the sound into the air, exactly as a banjo head does, giving the erhu its bright, nasal, almost human voice. And it has no fingerboard — you stop the strings by pressing them in open air — so there are no fixed frets and you can slide through every pitch, which is why the erhu can weep and sing like a person. It grew from the bowed huqin fiddles of the Tang and Song dynasties more than a thousand years ago, and its two strings are tuned a fifth apart. Its cousins are the whole huqin family and, far to the west, every member of the violin family — all of them stick-slip machines singing through a resonating body.

རྫས་རིགས

8

ལག་ཆས་དགོས་མཁོ

3

You can swap these in

Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.

འབྲེལ་ཡོད་བིལུ་པིརིན་ཊི

བིལུ་པིརིན་ཊི་འདི་ཚུ་ཐབས་ལམ་དང་རྫས་རིགས། སྤྱི་ཆོས་བགོ་བཤའ་བྱེད

CC0 སྤྱི་དབང

བིལུ་པིརིན་ཊི་འདི་CC0 འོག་བཀྲམས་ཡོད། ཁྱེད་རང་གིས་ཆོག་མཆན་མ་བཞེས་པར་ཕབ་ལེན་དང་བཟོ་བཅོས། བགོ་བཤའ། དགོས་མཁོ་གང་ལའང་བཀོལ་སྤྱོད་བྱས་ཆོག

བཟོ་མཁན་ལ་རྒྱབ་སྐྱོར་བྱེད་པའི་ཆེད་ཁོང་ཚོའི་བིལུ་པིརིན་ཊི་བརྒྱུད་ཐོན་སྐྱེད་ཉོ། བཟོ་མཁན་གྱིས བཟོ་མཁན་གྱི་ཁེ་ཕོགས ཚོང་པས་གཏན་འཁེལ་བྱས་པ། ཡང་ན་བིལུ་པིརིན་ཊི་འདིའི་པར་གསར་བཟོས་ཏེ་ཁྱེད་རང་གི་བིལུ་པིརིན་ཊི་ནང་མཐུད་སྦྲེལ་བྱས་ཏེ་ཡོང་སྒོ་བགོ་བཤའ་བྱེད།

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