Uday Deshpande from Pune, India, is playing the traditional "tabla" drum. The left hand plays a bass called "dugga" with a thick drum and the main hand plays the main drum with "tabla" on the right hand. The drums are called "tabla" together. The skin is made up of concentric circles, various sounds are heard, and the performer can create percussion of the melody. Tabla players often use compound rhythms, but sometimes it is as difficult as "36 and 1/4". They accomplish this by internalizing complex instruments until you instinctively can play them in perfectly precise ways.
Tabla is a membrane percussion instrument from the Indian subcontinent and consists of a pair of drums for traditional, classical, popular and folk music. It is a particularly important instrument in the classical music of Hindustan since the 18th century and continues to be used in India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. The name of tabla probably comes from tabl, Persian, Arabic taiko. However, the ultimate origin of this instrument has been questioned by researchers dating back to West Asia and researchers dating back to the evolution of indigenous instruments in the Indian subcontinent.
Indian theory traces the origin of tabla's ancient civilization. This version shows that the instrument gained the name of the new Arabian during the rule of Islam, but that is the evolution of Puscala Drum of ancient India. Evidence of homemade Psukara is established in sculptures of many temples, such as the Muktesvara Temple in India from the 6th to 7th centuries and the Bhuvaneswara Temple. These art shows a sitting drummer with two or three independent snare drums, and their palm and fingers seem to play drums. However, with these sculptures, these drums are made of the same material and skin as the modern tabla, or they play the same music, but this is not obvious.
Uday Deshpande from Pune, India, is playing the traditional "tabla" drum. The left hand plays a bass called "dugga" with a thick drum and the main hand plays the main drum with "tabla" on the right hand. The drums are called "tabla" together. The skin is made up of concentric circles, various sounds are heard, and the performer can create percussion of the melody. Tabla players often use compound rhythms, but sometimes it is as difficult as "36 and 1/4". They accomplish this by internalizing complex instruments until you instinctively can play them in perfectly precise ways.