Small Balalaika

Details

  • Origin: Russia
  • Date: N/A; Balalaikas themselves developed late 18th-early 19th centuries 
  • Collection: DUMIC 16-2

Description

Small balalaika constructed with wood, metal, metal strings, plastic, and paint.

Label in Russian inside; gift of Richard and Virginia Diller, 8-17-05.

The Balalaika is a Russian stringed instrument developed in the 18th century. It derived from the dombra, or domra, a three-stringed lute played in Russia and Central Asia. It is possible that the emergence and evolution of the balalaika was a product of interaction with Asian-Oriental cultures.

The balalaika comes in six sizes, ranging from piccolo to double bass. It has a flat back and triangle table, or belly, which tapers to a fretted neck, and the three strings can either be plucked with the fingers, or if they are metal, with a leather plectrum.

Two strings are typically tuned to the same note, with the third string a perfect fourther higher. Melodies and chords are usually played on the higher-pitched balalaikas. Higher-pitched balalaikas have a short sustain which lends itself to rapid strumming or plucking used to play melodies.

Balalaikas were used in folk music and dancing as well as large balalaika orchestras formed in the 20th century. The characteristic size, known as the prime or treble, is normally tuned E-E-A in the octave above middle C.

The balalaika family of instruments includes instruments of various sizes, from the highest-pitched to the lowest: the piccolo balalaika, prima balalaika, secunda balalaika, alto balalaika, bass balalaika, and contrabass balalaika. There are balalaika orchestras which consist solely of different balalaikas; these ensembles typically play Classical music that has been arranged for balalaikas.

Balalaika Favorites by Osipov State Russian Folk Orchestra
Ossipov Balalaika Orchestra
Contrabass Balalaika
Sources
  1. Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia. “balalaika.” Encyclopedia Britannica, January 9, 2020. https://www.britannica.com/art/balalaika.
  2. “Balalaika – Russian Music Instrument.” 2022. Skaz1.com. 2022. http://www.skaz1.com/balalaika.engl.html.
  3. ‌“ІСТОРИЧНИЙ СЛОВНИК УКРАЇНСЬКОГО ЯЗИКА.” (tr. “Historical dictionary of the Ukrainian language “) Історичний словник українського язика. Accessed June 22, 2022. http://izbornyk.org.ua/djvu/tymchenko_slovnyk.htm. 
  4. Felińska, Ewa, and Felińska, Ewa. Revelations of Siberia. United Kingdom, Colburn and Company, 1853.
  5. “File:Contrabassbalalaika.jpg – Wikimedia Commons.” 2009. Wikimedia.org. August 11, 2009. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Contrabassbalalaika.jpg.
  6. ‌“The Ossipov Balalaika Orchestra.” 2022. Ossipovorchestra.ru. 2022. http://www.ossipovorchestra.ru/en/audio.