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Settings | Star Tambourine remove | Wooden tambourine 16 remove | G1V408 cylindrical dock remove | Hengdram Mark Gift 9 notes remove | Double Echo Tambourine remove | Wooden maracas remove |
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Description | به علت نوسان قیمت ها لطفا قبل از سفارش برای اطلاع از آخرین قیمت تماس حاصل فرمایید | |||||
Content | tambourine, small frame drum (one whose shell is too narrow to resonate the sound) having one or two skins nailed or glued to a shallow circular or polygonal frame. The tambourine is normally played with the bare hands and often has attached to it jingles, pellet bells, or snares. European tambourines typically have one skin and jingling disks set into the sides of the frame. The designation tambourine refers specifically to the European frame drum; however, the term is often extended to include all related frame drums, such as those of the Arabic countries, and sometimes those probably unrelated, such as the shaman’s drums of Central Asia, North America, and the Arctic. | In the 1970s the Trinidad steel drum sparked a phenomenon throughout Europe. Felix Rohner had been playing the steel pans for twenty years and by the 1990s, he founded his own company, PanArt, for the creation of these concave instruments. Sabrina Scharer, who would become his long-term business partner, signed on to PanArt shortly after. | ||||
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