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Gottuvadyam

by David Courtney working tools

gottuvadyam

The Gottuvadhyam also known as the chitravina, is an instrument played in Southern India.  It is us­ually used as a solo instrument in Carnatic sangeet.

Gottuvadhyam has an inter­est­ing construction.  It resembles the saraswati vina in its ge­ne­ral form.  It has six main play­ing strings which pass over the very top of the instrument.  It has three thallam (drone) strings at the side, and a series of sympathetic strings which pass under the main strings.  The approach to tuning is in some ways si­mi­lar to the sitar, in other ways it is si­mi­lar to the saraswati vina, but in many ways it is unique.  It is played with a slide in a man­ner somewhat like a Hawaiian guitar.

The gottuvadyam does not appear to be very old, prob­ably around 100 years old.  It was pop­ularised in the south by Sakharam Rao of Tiruvidaimarudur.  It was later taken up and fur­ther pop­ularised by Narayan Iyengar who was a palace musician of the old state of Mysore.


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Other Sites of Interest

Bharatiya Sangeet Vadya (Review)

Catalogue of Indian Musical Instruments

Fractal dimension analysis of audio signals for Indian musical instrument recognition

Natural synthesis of North Indian musical instruments

Recognition of Indian Musical Instruments with Multi-Classifier Fusion

The Tagore collection of Indian musical instruments

Improvement of Audio Feature Extraction Techniques in Traditional Indian Musical Instrument

East Indians musical instruments

Yantra kosha; or, A Treasury of the Musical Instruments of Ancient and of Modern India, and of Various Other Countries