Category:Arpa grande
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See also categories: Arpa andina and Arpa grande.
References
[edit]
John Mendell Schechter (1992) The Indispensable Harp - Historical Development, Modern Roles, Configurations, and Performance Practices in Ecuador and Latin America, Kent State University Press, pp. 202, 204, 283. ISBN: 978-0-87338-439-1.
"[p.202] The smaller nineteenth-century arpa jarocha today has been abandoned for the arpa grande, which produces greater volume. ",
"[p.204] The harp played on the Pacific coast of Michoacán and neighboring Guerrero has been referred to as the “arpa de tierra caliente”; ... Of special interest in this region is the coastal Guerrero harp. A large instrument, often called the “arpa grande de la costa” (Collaer et al. 1973:36), is often played standing, and its neck has front and rear humps such as are typical twentieth-century Peruvian harps (mendoza 1956:ill. 40; Cárdenas Montes 1978:308). ",
"[p.283] Arpa grande(Mexican), 202 / Arpa grande dela costa(Mexican), 204 "
"[p.204] The harp played on the Pacific coast of Michoacán and neighboring Guerrero has been referred to as the “arpa de tierra caliente”; ... Of special interest in this region is the coastal Guerrero harp. A large instrument, often called the “arpa grande de la costa” (Collaer et al. 1973:36), is often played standing, and its neck has front and rear humps such as are typical twentieth-century Peruvian harps (mendoza 1956:ill. 40; Cárdenas Montes 1978:308). ",
"[p.283] Arpa grande(Mexican), 202 / Arpa grande dela costa(Mexican), 204 "
Media in category "Arpa grande"
The following 2 files are in this category, out of 2 total.
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Costume from Peru (14165318017).jpg 380 × 640; 95 KB