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  2. Category:Turkish folk music instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Turkish_folk...

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  3. Music of Turkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Turkey

    Kemençe is a popular folk music instrument on Turkey's Black Sea coast. Folk music or Türkü generally deals with subjects surrounding daily life in less grandiose terms than the love and emotion usually contained in its traditional counterpart, Ottoman court music. [5]

  4. Cümbüş - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cümbüş

    The instrument became a folk instrument of the poor and of ethnic minorities in Turkey, including Rûm, Armenians, Jews, Kurds, and Romani, "playing indigenous folk music or repertoires shared with ethnic Turks." It was excluded specifically by classical musicians of the era, being seen as lower-class or ethnic.

  5. List of Intangible Cultural Heritage elements in Turkey

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intangible...

    Balaban or balaman is an instrument belonging to the wind instrument group used in many South Caucasus and Central Asian countries. Spring celebration, Hıdrellez + [k] 2017 01284: Hıdırellez or Hıdrellez is one of the seasonal holidays celebrated in Central Asia, the Middle East, Anatolia and the Balkans. Arts of the Meddah, public ...

  6. Turkish folk music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_folk_music

    Turkish folk music (Turkish: Türk Halk Müziği) is the traditional music of Turkish people living in Turkey influenced by the cultures of Anatolia and former territories in Europe and Asia. Its unique structure includes regional differences under one umbrella.

  7. Tulum (bagpipe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulum_(bagpipe)

    The tulum (Laz: გუდა, romanized: guda) is a musical instrument, a form of bagpipe from the Black Sea region of Turkey. It is droneless with two parallel chanters, and is usually played by the Laz, Black sea Turks, Hemshin peoples and by Pontic Greeks, particularly Chaldians.

  8. Category:Turkish musical instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Turkish_musical...

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  9. Kobyz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobyz

    The kobyz is still played today by jyrau (one of the two types of Karakalpak bard), as accompaniment during recitation of epics and dastan. [1]: 114 The kobyz punctuates spoken narrative, plays the melodic line in unison with the voice during the sung parts, supports sustained notes in the voice by repeatedly bowing the same note, and plays the melody when the jyrau is not singing.