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Making an Ektara — India's One-String Drone You Bend by Squeezing
Build an ektara — literally 'one string': a gourd drum with a split-bamboo neck and a single string. Pluck it for a drone, then SQUEEZE the neck to slacken the string and bend the note down. A buildable school project that puts one of music's deepest facts — tension sets pitch — right in your hand.
ආරම්භක
45 minutes
උපදෙස්
1
1
One string, bent by hand
One string, bent by hand
The ektara — 'ek' one, 'tara' string — is the drone of India's wandering singers. You pluck its single string and SQUEEZE its springy neck to bend the note up and down.
2
2
Prepare the gourd resonator
Prepare the gourd resonator
Cut the top off a dried bottle gourd to make an open bowl. This gourd is the sound-body of the instrument.
Materials for this step:
Mature Bottle Gourd1 pieceTools needed:
Sloyd Carving Knife3
3
Skin the opening
Skin the opening
Soak a piece of rawhide, stretch it drum-tight over the open mouth of the gourd, glue and lash it down, and let it dry hard. This skin will boom when the string is plucked.
Materials for this step:
Rawhide1 piece
PVA Wood Glue1 piece4
4
Split the neck
Split the neck
Take a length of bamboo and split it partway down into two long, springy arms — a forked neck that can flex when squeezed.
Materials for this step:
Bamboo1 pieceTools needed:
Sloyd Carving Knife5
5
Fix the neck to the gourd
Fix the neck to the gourd
Fit the two arms of the neck onto opposite sides of the gourd, straddling the skin, and lash them on firmly so they stand up tall and springy.
Materials for this step:
Abaca Tying Twine1 piece6
6
Fit the tuning peg
Fit the tuning peg
Bore a hole near the top of the neck and fit a single tuning peg.
Materials for this step:
Tuning Pegs1 pieceTools needed:
Awl7
7
Attach the string
Attach the string
Tie the string to the very centre of the skin, run it straight up between the two neck arms, and wind it onto the peg.
Materials for this step:
Steel Music Wire 0.032"1 piece8
8
Tune the drone
Tune the drone
Turn the peg until the string gives a clear, ringing note. This single note is the drone the whole instrument is built around.
9
9
Pluck it
Pluck it
Pluck the string with one finger. The skin booms and the string rings out its steady drone, richer and louder than a bare string could ever be.
10
10
Squeeze to bend the note
Squeeze to bend the note
Now SQUEEZE the two neck arms together. They flex inward, slackening the string, and the note DROPS. Let go and it springs back up — the ektara's bouncing 'boing'.
11
11
Play with the beat
Play with the beat
Pluck in time and pulse your squeeze so the drone bends up and down under the rhythm — the hypnotic sound the Baul singers of Bengal carry through their songs.
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12
Compendium — tension, pitch and the skin drum
Compendium — tension, pitch and the skin drum
The ektara turns one of the deepest facts of music into something you feel in your hand: a string's pitch depends on its TENSION. Pull a string tighter and it rises; let it go slack and it falls. On most instruments the tension stays fixed while you play, and you change the note by shortening the string with frets or fingers — but the ektara does the opposite. Its one string never changes length; instead, squeezing the two springy arms of the split-bamboo neck bends them inward, which slackens the string and drops the pitch, and releasing them lets the arms spring back so the note rises. That living, sliding drone is the ektara's whole voice. It is the same physics as the musical bow, whose string tension bends the wooden stave into a bow — here the idea is simply turned around, with the player doing the bending by hand. And like the erhu and the banjo, the ektara sings through a skin: the string is tied to the middle of a stretched membrane over the gourd, and that membrane radiates the sound far more strongly than a bare string could. The ektara is the instrument of India's wandering singers, above all the Bauls of Bengal; add a second string and a longer neck and it grows toward the dotara and the wider family of Indian lutes.
ද්රව්ය
7- 1 pieceස්ථානගත
- 1 pieceස්ථානගත
- 1 pieceස්ථානගත
- 1 pieceස්ථානගත
- 1 pieceස්ථානගත
You can swap these in
Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.
- Instead of Abaca Tying Twine, try:
Cotton Twine (for bundling)
Jute Twine - Instead of Sloyd Carving Knife, try:
Blunt Collection Knife
Gilder's Knife
Knife
Sharp Cinnamon Knife - Instead of PVA Wood Glue, try:
Polyurethane Glue - Instead of Steel Music Wire 0.032", try:
Hook-Up Wire - Assortment (Stranded)
Tie Wire
Thin Brass Wire (for cleaning spouts)
Slip Ring - 6 Wire (2A)
Bezel Wire
සම්බන්ධ බ්ලූප්රින්ට්
මෙම බ්ලූප්රින්ට් දැනුම බෙදා ගනී — ශිල්ප ක්රම, ද්රව්ය හෝ මූලධර්ම
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CC0 පොදු වසම
මෙම බ්ලූප්රින්ට් CC0 යටතේ නිකුත් කර ඇත. ඔබට අවසර නොමැතිව පිටපත් කිරීම, වෙනස් කිරීම, බෙදා හැරීම සහ භාවිතා කිරීම කළ හැක.
බ්ලූප්රින්ට් හරහා නිෂ්පාදන මිලදී ගැනීමෙන් නිර්මාතෘට සහාය වන්න නිර්මාතෘ කොමිසම විකුණුම්කරුවන් විසින් නියම කළ, හෝ මෙම බ්ලූප්රින්ට්හි නව අනුවාදයක් සාදා ආදායම බෙදා ගැනීමට ඔබේ බ්ලූප්රින්ට්හි සම්බන්ධතාවයක් ලෙස ඇතුළත් කරන්න.