- but
ensembles of two or
three fujaras have been known, such as the
Kubinec family or the Javorová Húžva trio. The
fujara was
added to the
UNESCO list of...
-
didgeridoo dingulator dizi
djembe dotara dranyen drum
ektara erhu
fiddle fujara gadulka gaida ****ageum guan
gudok guitalin guitar guitarra Portuguesa gusle...
- Tin
Whistle (Pennywhistle) (Ireland) Shvi (Armenia)
Dilli Kaval (Turkey)
Fujara (Slovakia) ****ujara
Alboka (Basque Country, Spain)
Arghul (Egypt and other...
- objects,
crystal gl****,
carved wooden figures, črpáks (wooden pitchers),
fujaras (a folk
instrument on the
UNESCO list) and valaškas (a
decorated folk hatchet)...
- the
Slovak fujara, made of two
connected parallel pipes of
different lengths. This is not to be
mistaken with the
Polish single pipe (
fujara, fujarka)...
- such as the whistle, gemshorn, flageolet, recorder, tin whistle, tonette,
fujara, and
ocarina have a duct that
directs the air onto the edge (an arrangement...
-
clarinet French horn
aerophones 423.232
Europe br****
instruments trumpet Fujara aerophones 421.221.12
Slovakia fipple flutes recorder Gaida aerophones 422...
- a
multicultural urban context". ich.unesco.org.
Retrieved 3 July 2021. "
Fujara and its music".
UNESCO Culture Sector.
Retrieved 2009-09-07. "Music of Terchová"...
-
soprano to b****. the Quena, an
indigenous Andean woodwind instrument the
Fujara, a
Slovak overtone harmonic woodwind the Tarka, an
Andean soprano flute...
- orchestra,
augmented by a chorus, four
grand pianos, a pipe organ, digeridoo,
fujara, a
battery of
exotic percussion, and
three ondes Martenot,
which feature...