Professional Charango Kjarkas Model - Naranjillo Wood
Product code: IMCHA031
$729.50
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Very important: This product will be manufactured by our artisans and will be shipped within 25 days after the purchase.
Professional Charango Kjarkas model. This charango has a jacarandá and white spruce pine sound box. The sound hole is assimetrical, which gives the model the final touch. It is named Kjarkas model because of the similarity with the Ronroco (variation of the charango created y Gonzalo Hermosa, member of the Kjarkas).
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Characteristics: Sound box: White Spruce Pine Fingerboard: Jacaranda Type of wood: Naranjillo Sound hole: Round Strings: Nylon Tuning Pins: Metallic Material Bridge: Bolivian Jacaranda and bone frets General Features: Nbr.36 cm. Scale Tuning: The charango has five pairs (or courses) of strings, typically tuned GCEAE. This tuning, disregarding octaves, is similar to the typical C-tuning of the ukulele or the Venezuelan cuatro, with the addition of a second E-course. Unlike most other stringed instruments, all ten strings are tuned in one octave. The five courses are pitched as follows (from 5th to 1st course): gg cc eE aa ee. Some charanguistas use "octave" strings on other pairs in addition to the middle course. Note that the lowest pitch is the 1st "E" string in the middle course, followed by the "g" course, then the "a" course, then the "c" and finally the "e" strings. This tuning pattern is known as a re-entrant pattern because the pitches of the strings do not rise steadily from one string or course to the next.
Dimensions: Length: 66 cm. (25.98") Width: 18 cm. ( 7,08").
There are many stories of how the charango came to be made with its distinctive diminutive sound box of armadillo. One story says that the native musicians liked the sound the vihuela (an ancestor of the classical guitar) made, but lacked the technology to shape the wood in that manner. Another story says that the apaniards prohibited natives from practicing their ancestral music, and that the charango was a (successful) attempt to make a instrument that could be easily hidden under a garment. It is believed the charango originated in the 18th century in the andes, somewhere in modern-day Potosí, Bolivia, probably from amerindian contact with spanish settlers
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