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Saturday, September 3, 2011

Didgeridoos - Clearly Unique

By Claudia Kasen


There isn't any mistaking the distinctive sound of a didgeridoo, the ancient woodwind instrument associated for hundreds of years with the aborigines of Australia. They've been made and used from long ago and are valued today as amongst the finest symbols of aboriginal culture, music and custom. Most times made from the wood of the eucalyptus tree, which has been hollowed out, they're decorated with decorative inscriptions and pictures, all of which are meaningful and symbolic to people who make and play them. It is often said that a didgeridoo isn't legitimate unless it has been manufactured by someone that himself has been steeped in this long line of custom and history and whose ancestors similarly made and used these instruments.

Succeeding generations have utilised the didgeridoo in ceremonies, civil and religious, at celebrations and on special occasions. It is regarded nearly as something holy, like totem poles to the Indians, and is believed to be a potent way of perpetuating the traditional aboriginal custom, culture and way of life, currently under threat. They come mainly from the Yolgnu peoples of northerly Australia and occasionally the didgeridoo is commonly known as a Yidaki. Some are made now in plastic as they are claimed to be more hygienic. There are long didgeridoos, bell didgeridoos, and forked didgeridoos. Nobody exactly knows the origins of the word didgeridoo, although many views and hypotheses have been propounded.

The Unmistakeable Characteristics Of The Australian Didgeridoo

They come in all sizes and shapes though fundamentally they seem to be a long hollow pipe but you can buy didgeridoos which make low sounds and others that produce high notes. The material they are made of impacts on the sound they make and they require a powerful pair of lungs if they are to be truly effective. Because of this there are some health advantages to be extracted from playing this traditional instrument and it might be sensible to browse sites that focus on the way to correctly play the didge.

Although the didgeridoo is very popular and many are sold throughout the world, there's no guarantee that these are legitimate, in the way I have described and so the north Australian tribes who still make them and rely heavily upon their sales for income, are seeing very little by way of profit and their way of life and awfully existence is in serious danger. We are able to do something to help by insisting on buying truly legitimate aboriginal didgeridoos and obtaining some type of explanation or evidence the instrument you are purchasing is authentic.




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