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bamboo flute b natural medium
Includes FREE Carry
₹1,820.00Includes FREE Carry Bag & FREE Shipping In India.
Bansuri price with overseas shipping costs: Details Below
Divya Vadya Bamboo Bansuri is a professional Bamboo flute B natural medium scale Flute for beginners.
DIVYA VADYA FLUTE SPECIFICATIONS & FEATURES:
– Bansuri Scale – B Natural Base
– Keynote – F sharp
– Bansuri – 7 Finger Holes
– Bansuri Mouthpiece: Transverse (side blowing)
– Bansuri Flute Length: 10 inches Approximate
– Bansuri Flute Diameter: 0.8 Inches Approximate
– Indian B Natural Medium scale – White 7
– Europe B Natural Medium scale – Si– Buy Top rated, best quality, professional level Bamboo Bansuri on sale at affordable, low-cost price tag for Flute learning students. Handmade, tuned and tested by experienced Flautist artisans, tested again for sound quality, pitch, key note by Divya Music school faculty / Flutists before dispatch.
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Dholak for beginner
Dholak is one of the...
₹6,189.00Dholak is one of the most widely utilized popular folk drum of northern India along with considerable variation in the technique. It is named after the Urdu word Dhol meaning Drum.
In India it is mainly a folk instrument and it has one side with a high pitch and another side with a lower pitch.
The Dholki is a smaller Femine version of the dholak which is about 35cm long and 20cm in diameter.
The player usually produces sound on the dholak by beating it with the hand or by using a stick. North Indian folk music and dance, especially the Bhangra is incomplete without the pulsating beats and rhythmic sounds of the Dholak. -
Dholak for Concert
Dholak is one of the...
₹7,322.00Dholak is one of the most widely utilized popular folk drum of northern India along with considerable variation in the technique. It is named after the Urdu word Dhol meaning Drum. In India it is mainly a folk instrument and it has one side with a high pitch and another side with a lower pitch. The Dholki is a smaller Femine version of the dholak which is about 35cm long and 20cm in diameter.
The player usually produces sound on the dholak by beating it with the hand or by using a stick. North Indian folk music and dance, especially the Bhangra is incomplete without the pulsating beats and rhythmic sounds of the Dholak.
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Dholak for Learner
Dholak is one of the...
₹6,642.00Dholak is one of the most widely utilized popular folk drum of northern India along with considerable variation in the technique. It is named after the Urdu word Dhol meaning Drum. In India it is mainly a folk instrument and it has one side with a high pitch and another side with a lower pitch. The Dholki is a smaller Femine version of the dholak which is about 35cm long and 20cm in diameter. The player usually produces sound on the dholak by beating it with the hand or by using a stick. North Indian folk music and dance, especially the Bhangra is incomplete without the pulsating beats and rhythmic sounds of the Dholak.
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Dholak for Performance
Dholak is one of the...
₹6,384.00Dholak is one of the most widely utilized popular folk drum of northern India along with considerable variation in the technique. It is named after the Urdu word Dhol meaning Drum. In India it is mainly a folk instrument and it has one side with a high pitch and another side with a lower pitch. The Dholki is a smaller Femine version of the dholak which is about 35cm long and 20cm in diameter. The player usually produces sound on the dholak by beating it with the hand or by using a stick. North Indian folk music and dance, especially the Bhangra is incomplete without the pulsating beats and rhythmic sounds of the Dholak.
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Dholak for Players
Dholak is one of the...
₹4,804.00Dholak is one of the most widely utilized popular folk drum of northern India along with considerable variation in the technique. It is named after the Urdu word Dhol meaning Drum. In India it is mainly a folk instrument and it has one side with a high pitch and another side with a lower pitch. The Dholki is a smaller Femine version of the dholak which is about 35cm long and 20cm in diameter. The player usually produces sound on the dholak by beating it with the hand or by using a stick. North Indian folk music and dance, especially the Bhangra is incomplete without the pulsating beats and rhythmic sounds of the Dholak.