FUJARA Tutorial 'what is it?- how does it work?-construction and tuning'
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- Опубліковано 30 січ 2017
- For more please visit my website: www.fujaraflutes.com
This is a basic tutorial on Fujara, the base overtone flute originating in Slovakia. How it is constructed and decorated, the basic types, tuning and overal physics.
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Thank you Winne, I've been looking at your videos lately and researching. I make and play Didgeridoos and I am always amazed by the original craftsmanship of these instruments, especially when they didn't have access to the tooling we have now. I don't think people know how tough it is to get that bore properly done. I would love to explore making one, perhaps in PVC to explore the physics behind it. Again, thanks for the videos. If anyone has read this far, please look up "Fujara & Double bass", "Fujara and Didgeridoo" and "Fujara and Shakihachi" for some sound exploration.
beautiful art on this flute. And first time to hear this sound with clear explanation
Winne, hats down, you really did your homework, you know more about fujara, than many folks in Slovakia who consider themselves to be quite good on topic. 😄😄 But you are doing amazing job, no doubt. God bless you.
oh, thank you...
thank you for this video.. I really liked the sound of all of them... and the traditional smaller one was very awesome
Fascinating! Really well presented! Never heard of the instrument before, now you made me fascinated
Wow! Its like finding new ways to play a flute + didg + rainstick :) True innovator I'm a big fan!
.... clear instructions and wonderful, wonderful Instruments. In every Filmclip wich you have done, I get a deeper understanding of Fujara.
..... thank's a lot, Mr. Clement
Wonderful instrument again.it is very intresting to see all kind of instrument of world from you channel !
Fujara is an amazing instrument ❤
Fantastic! I'm so interested in this.
Thanks Master, congratulations from Spain!
master is a big word, I prefer eternal student- mastery is in there ;-)
thanks a lot for explaining the details!
You até the best! Thank you so much tô share your knowledge!
Lovely explanation & craftsmanship. I've met two people in the past 6 months who have fujara in NE Ohio US. Small world!
thanks :-)
I had never heard of a Fujara until today, being a didgeridoo player I would like to try one :-)
I really enjoyed this Winne, you explained it very well and inspires me to perhaps build one in the near future. I've been building Native American Indian style flutes for a couple of years now and find the native wind instruments from other countries very interesting. Thank you for sharing! Mark
Hi @MarkMaysey just read your comment. Would you mind to recommend any resources to start building those kind of flutes? Thanks in advance
Mindblowing!
Very nice work. Greetings from an instrument maker in Vienna, Scott
Great !! Brilliant .
welcome :))
Slovensko, krajina mojich predkov
Interesting instrument. It plays overtones, so like a brass instrument you use your embouchure to change pitch
omg amazing sound
Srdečný pozdrav zo Slovenska 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Winne, initials " J. K. " is maybe maker Jozef Krnáč, he was made as this fujara with decoration by brass metal strip.
Wow beautiful sounds!!!!!!!
Thanks!
Winne, great tutorial 👍 and fantastic sounding instrument.
Where in England can you purchase one ?
That first instrument belongs in a museum.
Is so fantastic,you are my teacherr
oh yes I have "youtube teachers" too, works perfectly! :)
just Wonderful...I am meeting my Family in Dolni Lomna this summer. Is there a place nearby to hear or see these beautiful instruments. I would love to take one home or build one. Gratitude.
Sure, just travel 50 km down in Slovakia and you can find many makers :-)
I have been searching everywhere for weeks trying to find information on the type of long hand drill BIT type. Do you have any idea where I can find info on making/buying that drill bit?
it's called a 'schneckenbohrer'
thanks atually I'm making my own fujara in bambu
Second one freaks me out!
Hallo Winne,
schöne Instrument! LG Andreas (Du kennst mich noch?) ;-)
Fujara is one of two Slovak words in English. The other one is ''koncovka'' and that is a short Fujara.
Hello, yes, the second fujara is from master Krnáč. Could you send me measurements of the black fujara ? I would be very grateful.
I sold it , sorry :)
Hello Winne, how are you? :) Will you still upload a video about making a Fujara from pvc? :)
I would like to but its so time consuming to make these videos.. I will make videos on how to play fujara first!
what is the average cost of the fujaras that you make? I currently have no way of affording one (no matter the cost) but I would like to know for future reference. :)
Please contact me trough my website fro questions: www.fujaraflutes.com
How do you drill that?
with a forged hand drill
what's the price of the big one?
what do you mean? the price for a G fujara?
yes. The one you were playing. What's the price range?
Depends on the quality you want and where you get it from :-) you can get a big G fujara online starting at about 450 euro I think, for a G of my hand the price starts at 1270 euro.
up next the Tibetan bone flute
Who did you sell that black fujara to? I'll pay any money for it...is it possible that you could get back??
I sold it to someone about a year ago, tjis was a collectors item fujara from the 80-ties. He wont sell it im sure. Are you looking for a old fujara or just one that is beaten with copper like this one? Many makers make them new like this still.
@@1fujara I'd like to buy fujara only from this craver Jozef Karnac...is he still alive? Wood which comes from that region where he lives is carrying spirit of that region...wood, love he puts in making this instrument...older the better... .that black fujara was nice
@@tonykollar6870 no he passed away some time ago. Yes the fujara was nice :) I bought it at a second hand auction 15 years ago. I used the money from selling it to buy a new lathe, so it goes back into flutemaking again completely. I think that this way it was a honest and appropriate trade :)
A difficult instrument to find here in New Zealand, and I don't know how customs here would appreciate me importing any wooden goods that aren't heavily treated with synthetic soul-sucking chemicals.
Ironically, I can see myself making one from PVC instead.
sound of Slovakia....region Podpoľanie and Poľana......Only one who knows this region and his history very well, only the one who was there and walked in the forests and pastures and who breathed the air of this beautiful region, just only this person can play the real melody of Fujara ...... the others only blows to wood, because sound of Fujara is sound of this region, sound of this history, sound of this beauty and it is sound of very hard but happy life.....This is not a instrument for virtuoso, this is the instrument of expressing the deepest feelings....so, there are lot of the players which only blows to wood...
The sound of the fujara makes my body completely freak out. My first instinct is to drive to the airport, buy a ticket and hop on a plane to Slovakia. It reverberates in my soul and calls me back to my ancestral homeland. I have to fight it but it is so, so hard.
I don't believe in gatekeeping and the concept of cultural appropriation. I enjoy nice things without being snobbish. It's like saying that you can't play blues if your wife didn't leave you and your dog died and now you're broke in Memphis.
@@tiberiu_nicolae you can play anywhere in US but if that region in Slovakia it's been played for centuries... If you go there I hold this instrument and try to play...souls of Our dead ancestors will help you and this instrument start play on it's own
I wanted to to the big forests in polana. Sadly its a bear hotspot.
@@tiberiu_nicolae No, this is not a snobbish approach. It's in the sense, that if you want to write about love, you have to survive it.
www.kaypacha.com.ar/instrumentos/moxeno.htm there is the same found in the Andes
Not the same at all but similair look yes :-)
With plans from Stodoys you can make it really easy.
PERO TOCA LA WEÁ POH WEÓN!!!
YA PO TOCA LA WEÁ
Are you anggle /yes are you