Difference between revisions of "Zootibar"

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Fictional musical instrument from the fantasy short story "Bethmoora" by Lord Dunsany, published in the collection ''A Dreamer's Tales'', 1910. A wind instrument, apparently. It is not described.
 
Fictional musical instrument from the fantasy short story "Bethmoora" by Lord Dunsany, published in the collection ''A Dreamer's Tales'', 1910. A wind instrument, apparently. It is not described.
  
<blockquote>In the little gardens at the desert's edge men beat the tambang and the tittibuk, and blew melodiously the zootibar.
+
<blockquote>In the little gardens at the desert's edge men beat the [[tambang]] and the [[tittibuk]], and blew melodiously the zootibar.
 
</blockquote>
 
</blockquote>
  

Revision as of 09:26, 27 September 2012

Fictional musical instrument from the fantasy short story "Bethmoora" by Lord Dunsany, published in the collection A Dreamer's Tales, 1910. A wind instrument, apparently. It is not described.

In the little gardens at the desert's edge men beat the tambang and the tittibuk, and blew melodiously the zootibar.

The above quote is discussed by Lord Dunsany in his 1938 autobiography, Patches of Sunlight:

In that tale comes a line that escaped from the obscurity hat seemed in those days to wrap the rest of my work, and was sometimes quoted. I used of course to invent names for things in use in my unknown lands … On this occasion I threw down three invented names in a heap, rather perhaps in the spirit in which Beethoven amused himself withthe calls of teh quail and the cuckoo in the 6th Symphony; they were the names of musical instruments, and the sentence went, 'In little gardens at the desert's edge men beat the tambang and the tittibuk, and blew melodiously the zootibar.' As I wrote at the same time as what was known as the Irish renaissance, and as I am Irish, some vaguely associated me with it, and the tambang and the tittibuk were even thought to be Irish instruments.

Other writers have appropriated the instrument and inserted it into their own works.

And look at this review from The Musical Times August 1, 1919:

At his pianoforte recital in Crane Hall on June 18, Mr. Joseph Greene introduced three remarkable 'Eastern Pieces' by Norman Peterkin, a young local composer who has musically illustrated subjects from Lord Dunsany’s 'Dreamer's Tales' with extraordinary suggestiveness. The music is saturated with Eastern rhythms and weird melodies. These appear to have an attraction approaching to an obsession of which the composer might well beware. At least his atmospheric harmonies are novel and cleverly contrived, especially in one instance which depicts 'little gardens at the desert’s edge where men beat the tambang and the tittibuk, and blew melodiously the zootibar, while here and there one played upon the kalipac.'

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