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Domra small, 3-string. Beech, resonant fir (solid). Russian, Belarusian, Ukrainian folk instruments

Product ID : 31681476


Galleon Product ID 31681476
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About Domra Small, 3-string. Beech, Resonant Fir

Case: beechUpper deck: resonant fir (array).Griffin: beech.Cover and stand: beech.24 frets.Shell: ABS plastic.Pins mechanics: metal on one barsmall Domra is a Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian folk stringed plucked musical instrument. Domra has a body of hemispherical shape. The sound of strings is made with the help of a mediator. A characteristic method of sound extraction is tremolo. There are two types of domra: a three-string domra with a quart system, traditionally used in Russia, and a four-string domra with a quintup system, which has become most widespread in Belarus and Ukraine. Domra is used for solo singing (domra small, prima) and as a part of ensembles and orchestras of Russian folk instruments.Domra was widely used by buffoons in Russia in the 16th-17th centuries as a solo and ensemble instrument ("bass" domra), but since the XVII century, after the issuance of a number of church and state decrees (one of them, 1648, Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich "On the Correction of Manners and the destruction of superstition "), according to which the buffoonery was persecuted; With the disappearance of buffoons, Domra also disappeared.Doff factory history:From 1818 until May 1918 - the Piano Factory "K. M. Schroeder (German S. M. Schröder) (Founder Lebedev Petr Nikolaevich)May 1918 - The first state piano factory.September 20, 1922 - The first state piano factory named after A. Lunacharsky.1926 - Factory of folk musical (plucked) instruments. Lunacharsky.From May 20, 1993 to 2005 - Open Joint-Stock Company for the production of folk musical instrument Harp instruments.In 2005 the factory went bankrupt. On the basis of the production of a master of making Russian musical instruments, the Doff factory was created.Today, the Doff factory continues the tradition of producing Russian musical instruments and is one of the