Misplaced Pages

Mizwad

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Mezoued) North African wind instrument
Mizwad
Related instruments
  • x
  • y

The mizwad (mezoued, mizwid) (Algerian Arabic / Tunisian Arabic : مِزْود; plural مَزاود mazāwid, literally "sack," “bag,” or “food pouch”) is a type of bagpipes played in Tunisia and Algeria, The instrument consists of a skin bag made from ewe's leather, with a joined double-chanter, terminating in two cow horns, similar to a hornpipe (instrument).This instrument is played with a single-reed.

The ethnomusicologist Anthony Baines stated that the term "zukra" is also used for this instrument. Bagpipe enthusiast, Oliver Seeler, states that this connection is incorrect. While the zukra may be similar, it is instead a wind instrument in Libya, similar to the mizwad.

Mizwad is a popular type of traditional music in Tunisia and Algeria which incorporates a type of North African drum called the darbouka as well as the mizwad. This music was originally considered the music of the countryside and the working class. It is often played at weddings and formal parties, and it also has its own traditional dances which are said to make people enter a trance-like state.

Mizwad is one of the most popular music genres in Tunisia and is played along with the drum, and is one of the most popular genres in east Algeria.

See also

References

  1. Seeler, Oliver. "MEZOUED". Accessed 23 May 2012.
Traditional Arabic musical instruments
Plucked lutes
Zithers
Bowed lutes
Lyres
Flutes
Reed instruments
Drums
Other percussion
Categories:
Mizwad Add topic