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Bachi can be made of various materials and with varying levels of strength. Similarly to guitar picks, bachi were traditionally made of tortoise shell ( 鼈甲 , bekkō ) or ivory ( 象牙 , zōge ) , but these materials are rare and expensive (and illegal to trade in some territories, due to protection of endangered species ), therefore making ...
Roberto Bachi (Hebrew: רוברטו בקי; 16 January 1909 – 26 November 1995) was an Italian-Israeli statistician and demographer, and founder of the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. His research focused on the graphical presentation of statistics and the renewal of Jewish demographic studies in the diaspora .
There are sometimes also jiuta bachi that are made with a buffalo horn handle. The material, however, makes no difference in the sound. The gidayu shamisen style uses the heaviest and thickest bachi, though the nagauta bachi is wider. The bachi used for tsugaru-jamisen is the smallest, and is almost always tipped with tortoiseshell.
Bachi is a 2000 Indian Telugu-language comedy film directed by Puri Jagannadh. It stars Jagapathi Babu , Neelambari and Prakash Raj . The music was composed by Chakri with cinematography by V. Srinivasa Reddy and editing by V. Nagi Reddy.
Bachi are sticks used specifically for taiko performance, and can be slightly thicker than typical drum sticks. The sticks for playing taiko are called bachi, and are made in various sizes and from different kinds of wood such as white oak, bamboo, and Japanese magnolia. [123] Bachi are also held in a number of different styles. [124]
Salim Bachi (born 1971, Algiers) is an Algerian novelist who grew up in Annaba, eastern Algeria. After a one-year stay in Paris in 1995, he returned there in 1997 to study literature. After a one-year stay in Paris in 1995, he returned there in 1997 to study literature.
Takahiro Satō (佐藤 タカヒロ, Satō Takahiro, 24 July 1976 – 3 July 2018) [1] was a Japanese manga artist from Yamagata prefecture.. Satō created the manga Bachi Bachi, a sumo series that ran in Weekly Shōnen Champion from 2009 to 2012.
In Japanese folklore, the tsuchinoko (ツチノコ or 槌の子), literally translating to "child of hammer", is a snake-like being.The name tsuchinoko is prevalent in Western Japan, including Kansai and Shikoku; the creature is known as bachi hebi (バチヘビ) in Northeastern Japan.