Hello,
I asked this once, before their was a G.Shop forum. All about the wood. So: I have a sitar. I have a horn bridge, nicely hand cut. It is about 1.5 inches thick. I need to replace the "feet" between the
bone (deer) and the teak (or toon) wood that the body is made out of.
What does anyone think, or have an opinion of the best wood to use between the horn and the body
to transfer vibration. This is critical to getting the sympathetic strings (under bridge horn only) all 13
of them to vibrate and cause them to ring out as loudly as possible, the heart of the sitar. Or as the Indian musician would call "Jawari" or Life of the instrument.
I have talked to all Sitar makers and sellers I can find on the web. The makers rarely come to the phone or just plain won't talk. "Sitar Secrets" and all the nice sellers have no opinion. Which leads me here, as wood is wood and it works on sitar the same way it works on any stringed wooden instrument.
Help a brother out. It takes a lot of time to carve these feet by hand and situate them on the slight curve of the body. Like 2 or 3 days working a couple hours of each day.
Thank you in advance, of course.
Namaste,
Steve Buffington.
I asked this once, before their was a G.Shop forum. All about the wood. So: I have a sitar. I have a horn bridge, nicely hand cut. It is about 1.5 inches thick. I need to replace the "feet" between the
bone (deer) and the teak (or toon) wood that the body is made out of.
What does anyone think, or have an opinion of the best wood to use between the horn and the body
to transfer vibration. This is critical to getting the sympathetic strings (under bridge horn only) all 13
of them to vibrate and cause them to ring out as loudly as possible, the heart of the sitar. Or as the Indian musician would call "Jawari" or Life of the instrument.
I have talked to all Sitar makers and sellers I can find on the web. The makers rarely come to the phone or just plain won't talk. "Sitar Secrets" and all the nice sellers have no opinion. Which leads me here, as wood is wood and it works on sitar the same way it works on any stringed wooden instrument.
Help a brother out. It takes a lot of time to carve these feet by hand and situate them on the slight curve of the body. Like 2 or 3 days working a couple hours of each day.
Thank you in advance, of course.
Namaste,
Steve Buffington.