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Tsuur

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tsuur
Цуур
Tsuur player
Woodwind instrument
Other namesChoor, chuur (шоор)
Classification End-blown flute
Related instruments
Sybyzgy, kurai
More articles or information
Music of Mongolia
Traditional music of the Tsuur
CountryMongolia
Reference00312
RegionAsia and the Pacific
Inscription history
Inscription2009 (4th session)
ListNeed of Urgent Safeguarding
Tsuur player

The tsuur (цуур, Mongolian), choor (Kyrgyz), or chuur (шоор, Tuvan) is an end-blown flute of varying lengths that is common among Inner Asian pastoralists.[1][2]

It is similar to the sybyzgy (Kazakh) and kurai (Bashkir). In western Mongolia it is mainly used by the Altai Uriankhai people, although other ethnic groups like the Kazakhs and the Tuvans are known to play them or have played them.

The tsuur has only finger holes. The blowing technique utilizes the teeth, tongue, and lips in the same way as the ney used in Persian classical music. The tsuur is usually immersed in water before playing in order to seal any leaks in the wood.

The melodies that are played on the Tsuur are usually imitations of the sound of water, animal cries, and birdsongs as heard by shepherds whilst on the steppes or the mountain slopes of the Altai. One of the melodies, “The Flow of the River Eev,” represents the river where the sound of khöömii was mythically supposed to have originated. The Uriangkhai called the tsuur the “Father of Music”. A three-holed pipe was in use in Mongolia in the 18th century and was believed to possess the magical properties of bringing lamb’s bones back to life. In the Jangar epic of the 14th century, the tsuur is said to have had a voice like a swan. This reference may also be indirectly a very early reference to khöömii, as the singing style sung with the tsuur is known as Khailakh.

Traditional Mongolian tsuur music was added to the List of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding in 2009.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Chuluunbaatar, Otgonbayar (2013): The Cuur as Endangered Musical Instrument of the Urianxai Ethnic Group in the Mongolian Altai Mountains. In Gisa Jähnichen (ed.), Studia Instrumentorum Musicae Popularis (New Series) III, Münster: MV-Wissenschaft Verlag, 97-110.
  2. ^ Pegg, Carole (Mar 15, 2001). Mongolian Music, Dance, & Oral Narrative: Performing Diverse Identities. University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295981123 – via Google Books.
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