Kaffir piano - tradução para Inglês
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Kaffir piano - tradução para Inglês

AFRICAN MUSICAL INSTRUMENT OF THE LAMELLOPHONE FAMILY
Thumb piano; Kalimba; Lkembe; Mbira dzavadzimu; Likembe; Lukeme; Mbira (rewrite); Mbiras; Likembes; Mbilas; Board piano; Board pianos; Board pianoes; Thumb pianos; Thumb pianoes; Mbira huru; Mbira hurus; Mbira njaris; Mbira njari; Mbira nyunga nyunga; Mbira nyunga nyungas; Karimbas; Kalimbas; African thumb piano; Likembé; Mbira music; List of mbira musicians; Zanza; List of notable mbira musicians; Kaffir piano; Electric thumb piano; Kuzanga; Taireva; Finger piano; Lukembe; Lukembé
  • Signature Series Gravikord
  • An example of a Marimbula in [[Haiti]].
  • <div align="center">'''mbira dzavadzimu tuning and key layout'''</div><br />* Same color keys are the same notes (usually octaves)<br />* Key “1” is the lowest note, ascending to the highest note key “23”<br />* Key “2” is often only found on the mavembe tuning<br />* Some mbira have extra keys (e.g. extra “17” on left side, or higher notes on the right beyond key “23” are most common)<br />* Note intervals can vary, but all the octaves are divided into a heptatonic scale, many being diatonic or at least nearly diatonic<br />* This diagram does not represent every mbira dzavadzimu, but does represent the most common layout<br />* The key numbering and color codes portrayed here are arbitrary and simply to communicate the layout (not traditional approach)
  • A Kalimba player in [[Brazil]] by [[Eduard Hildebrandt]] (1846).

Kaffir piano         
Kaffir Piano, Südafrikanisches Musikinstrument einer Marimba oder Xylophon ähnlich
thumb piano         
n. Mbira, afrikanisches Saiteninstrument aus Holz oder Flaschenkürbis mit den Daumen gespielt
upright piano         
  • Broadwood square action (click for page with legend)
  • Musikinstrumenten-Museum]] in Leipzig
  • Keyboard of a grand piano
  • The Yamaha Disklavier player piano. The unit mounted under the keyboard of the piano can play MIDI or audio software on its CD.
  • Steinway]] Model 'A'. From lower left to upper right: main sounding length of strings, treble bridge, duplex string length, duplex bar (nickel-plated bar parallel to bridge), hitchpins, plate strut with bearing bolt, plate hole
  • Erard square action (click for page with legend)
  • Estonia]] grand piano during the manufacturing process. The underside is facing upward, showing the thick beams that will support the rim and frame.
  • [[Cast iron]] plate of a grand piano
  • ('''1''') frame ('''2''') lid, front part ('''3''') capo bar ('''4''') damper ('''5''') lid, back part ('''6''') damper mechanism ('''7''') sostenuto rail ('''8''') pedal mechanism, rods ('''9, 10,11''') pedals: right (sustain/damper), middle (sostenuto), left (soft/una-corda) ('''12''') bridge ('''13''') hitch pin ('''14''') frame ('''15''') sound board ('''16''') string
  • Early piano replica by the modern builder Paul McNulty, after Walter & Sohn, 1805
  • Grand piano by Louis Bas of [[Villeneuve-lès-Avignon]], 1781. Earliest French grand piano known to survive; includes an inverted wrestplank and action derived from the work of Bartolomeo Cristofori (ca. 1700) with ornately decorated soundboard.
  • [[August Förster]] upright piano
  • ''Emánuel Moór Pianoforte''
  • The minipiano 'Pianette' model viewed with its original matching stool: the wooden flap at the front of the instrument has been dropped revealing the tuning pins at the front.
  • The piano was the centrepiece of social life in the 19th-century upper-middle-class home ([[Moritz von Schwind]], 1868). The man at the piano is composer [[Franz Schubert]] (1797–1828).
  • An upright pedal piano by [[Challen]]
  • frameless
  • A440]] (yellow) highlighted.
  • [[Steinway & Sons]] grand piano in the [[White House]]
  • A Prague piano player.
  • piano tuner]]
  • 1720 fortepiano by Italian maker [[Bartolomeo Cristofori]], the world's oldest surviving piano, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City
  • Birthday party honoring French pianist [[Maurice Ravel]] in 1928. From left to right: conductor [[Oskar Fried]], singer [[Éva Gauthier]], Ravel (at piano), composer-conductor [[Manoah Leide-Tedesco]], and composer [[George Gershwin]].
  • Bach]]'s ''[[The Well-Tempered Clavier]]'' on a grand piano
  • abbr=in}} grand piano shows, in order of distance from viewer: softwood braces, tapered soundboard ribs, soundboard. The metal rod at lower right is a humidity control device.
  • Strings of a grand piano
  • [[Piano pedals]] from left to right: [[una corda]], [[sostenuto]] and [[sustain pedal]]
  • Player piano from 1920 ([[Steinway]])
  • [[Stuart & Sons]] 2.9 m, 102-note piano
  • The mechanism and strings in upright pianos are perpendicular to the keys. The cover for the strings is removed for this photo.
  • <span style="font-size:90%;">[[Wurlitzer]] 210 electric piano</span>
MUSICAL INSTRUMENT
Pianoforte; Grand piano; Concert grand; Upright piano; Grand Piano; Piano forte; Baby grand piano; Piano-forte; Parts of a piano; Upright pianoforte; Vertical pianoforte; Grand pianoforte; Classical piano; Pianie; Acoustic piano; Pianofortes; Pianino; Black key; Piano Music; Hammer (piano); Vertical piano; Pianos; Piano construction; Piano performance; Piano technique; Keyboard hammer; Keyboard hammers; Piano hammers; Piano hammer; Piano maker; Piano droit; Piano a coda; Piano-playing; Parlor grand piano; Parlor grand; Concert grand piano; Boudoir grand piano; Boudoir grand; Oriental piano; Console piano
Wandklavier

Definição

pianoforte
(pianofortes)
A pianoforte is a piano
. (OLD-FASHIONED)
N-COUNT

Wikipédia

Mbira

Mbira ( əm-BEER) are a family of musical instruments, traditional to the Shona people of Zimbabwe. They consist of a wooden board (often fitted with a resonator) with attached staggered metal tines, played by holding the instrument in the hands and plucking the tines with the thumbs (at minimum), the right forefinger (most mbira), and sometimes the left forefinger. Musicologists classify it as a lamellaphone, part of the plucked idiophone family of musical instruments. In Eastern and Southern Africa, there are many kinds of mbira, often accompanied by the hosho, a percussion instrument. It is often an important instrument played at religious ceremonies, weddings, and other social gatherings. The "Art of crafting and playing Mbira/Sansi, the finger-plucking traditional musical instrument in Malawi and Zimbabwe" was added to the UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2020.

A modern interpretation of the instrument, the kalimba, was commercially produced and exported by ethnomusicologist Hugh Tracey in the late 1950s, popularising similar instruments outside of Africa. Tracey's design was modeled after the mbira nyunga nyunga and named ''Kalimba'' after an ancient predecessor of the mbira family of instruments. The kalimba is basically a westernized younger version of mbira. It was popularized in the 1960s and early 1970s largely due to the successes of such musicians as Maurice White of the band Earth, Wind and Fire and Thomas Mapfumo in the 1970s. These musicians included mbira on stage accompanying modern rock instruments such as electric guitar and bass, drum kit, and horns. Their arrangements included numerous songs directly drawn from traditional mbira repertoire. Other notable influencers bringing mbira music out of Africa are: Dumisani Maraire, who brought marimba and karimba music to the American Pacific Northwest; Ephat Mujuru, who was one of the pioneer teachers of mbira dzavadzimu in the United States; and the writings and recordings of Zimbabwean musicians made by Paul Berliner. Claire Jones, a student of Dumisani Maraire in the 1970s, has been playing and teaching mbira for more than 40 years. She is also a Festival Coordinator for Zimfest, a Zimbabwean Music Festival held annually in North America that offers many opportunities to learn and listen to mbira.

Joseph H. Howard and Babatunde Olatunji have both suggested that mbira (and other metal lamellaphones) are thoroughly African, being found only in areas populated by Africans or their descendants. Similar instruments were reported to be used in Okpuje, Nsukka area of the south eastern part of Nigeria in the early 1900s.