Oriental Hand Made Professional Da

Turkish Darbuka Drum Dumbek Cast with Replacement Skin Bag and Key

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Oriental Hand Made Professional Darbuka

Coated with craquelure varnish









The instruments resembling the darbuka in various shapes and sizes were used by civilizations in Anatolia, Mesopotamia and Central Asia in ancient times. In more recent periods the darbuka changed and developed further. The instrument is known by different names, given at different times and in different places. These include: dümbek, dümbelek, deplek, deblek, dönbek, tömbek, darbeki and debulak.

This percussion instrument was originally made from fired clay, copper, aluminum, various metals, plaster and porcelain fibers. Generally speaking, the darbuka resembles a pipe with a narrow end and was previously covered with leather - today synthetic materials are preferred for production. The skin is passed over a hoop and the instrument is tuned by stretching it with screws. The body bears various forms of decoration, which vary from region to region.

Item features:

Material: aluminum (coated with craquelure varnish)

Boiler height: 44.5 cm

Head diameter: 22 cm (playing surface)

8 Screws for precise tuning

Scope of delivery:

1x cast aluminum Darbuka

1x replacement skin

1x carrying bag

1x tuning key





























Member of the dealer association
The instruments resembling the darbuka in various shapes and sizes were used by civilizations in Anatolia, Mesopotamia and Central Asia in ancient times. In more recent periods the darbuka changed and developed further. The instrument is known by different names, given at different times and in different places. These include: dümbek, dümbelek, deplek, deblek, dönbek, tömbek, darbeki and debulak. This percussion instrument was originally made from fired clay, copper, aluminum, various metals, plaster and porcelain fibers. Generally speaking, the darbuka resembles a pipe with a narrow end and was previously covered with leather - today synthetic materials are preferred for production. The skin is passed over a hoop and the instrument is tuned by stretching it with screws. The body bears v