- confusion, as "
mandole" is a
French word for mandola, the
instrument from
which the
Algerian mandole developed. The
Algerian mandole is not
however a...
- singer, poet, and
thinker who
sparked an
intellectual revolution, and
mandole player who was an
advocate of the
Berber cause,
human rights, and secularism...
- Its
scale length is
typically about 28
inches (710 mm). The
Algerian mandole was
developed by an
Italian luthier in the
early 1930s,
scaled up from...
- been
described as a
fusion of
chaabi with jazz,
performed on an
Algerian mandole. He has made it his
personal mission to
change the re****tion of the mondol...
- Africa) Albania:
Qiftelia Šargija
Sharki (Sharkia) Algeria:
Kwitra Mondol (
Mandole) Argentina: Guitarrón
Argentino Asia (regional):
Dombra (Central Asia)...
- hard to discover.
Historically related instruments include the mandore,
mandole,
vandola (Joan
Carles Amat, 1596), bandola, bandora, bandurina, pandurina...
-
African fiddle African harp (Sub-Saharan) Agogô (West Africa)
Ahoko Algerian mandole (Algeria)
Amakondere (Uganda)
Anglo concertina Arghul (North Africa) Balafon...
- not loud enough. He
asked a
luthier to make one much bigger, and that
mandole was to
become his main instrument.
After the
Second World War, El HadJ...
-
Algerian musician Abderrahmane Abdelli playing the
mandole...
- An
Algerian mandole or mandolute, pla**** by a
member of Mon côté punk....