XIII Festival Murcia Tres Culturas 26 de octubre de 2012 Muralla de Verónicas, Murcia Stelios Petrakis: lyra de Creta Efrén López: guitarra fretless Bijan Chemirani: zarb, bendir
It's probably standart tuning, but the the thing is semi or quarter tones between the actual notes. ex: divide the full tone between c and d into 4, and you get the sound.
Cawe Coy Rodrigues Marega The percussion instrument is called "zarb" and it's used in Persian music. In fact Chemirani (the player here) is one of the best nowadays in zarb. Check "Chemirani Ensemble", the group of that family. The other instrument is a cretan "lyra", mostly used in the island of Crete, Greece. Stelios Petrakis is one of the best players today and he is a highly regarded musician in Greece and abroad. He has collaborated with other Greek and foreign musicians making Cretan music travel to new places.
Cawe Coy Rodrigues Marega -first one is zarb yes, but it's mostly called 'Tombak' -second is 'Fretless Classical Guitar' which is firstly invented(in 1976) by Turkish musician Erkan Ogur (born April 17, 1954) A pioneer of fretless guitars. -third one is not 'lyra'. it is 'Classical Kemenche' which derives from the 'Persian Kamancheh' and mostly used in Ottoman-Turkish classical musics. They are analogous but not same exactly. Even the name of the song 'Üç telli' is turkish which means trichord. As i know, also lyra & classical kemenche have different chord systems. capman21
+Gökhan Sarı the third one is lyra. Actually its name is "Lyraki" which means a small lyra. They have the same strings but create different sound due to their sizes, creation etc. I am from Crete, I play the lyra, and I am a student of Stelios Petrakis and I was also playing the "lyraki" for a short time period.
@@gokhansar7535 It's lyra from crete actually, but either way, instruments like these are very similar and can be found throughout greece and balkans.that's why it used to be called Kemence-i-Rumi. if it derives from persian kemanche, that means that violin (keman in turkish) derives from persia, too? :)