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The ferrinho (in Cape Verdean Creole ferrinhu (:feˈʀiɲu)) is a musical instrument, more precisely a scraped idiophone. It is made up by a metal bar (generally of iron) that is scrapped by another metal object. The player holds the bar vertically, with its lower end in the palm of one hand and the upper end leaning against the shoulder. With the other hand, the player uses a metallic object, held horizontally, to scrape the bar with up-and-down movements. A custom-made ''ferrinho'' is usually 90 centimeters long, with a straight-angle section to ease handling. The ''ferrinho'' is used to mark the rhythm in funaná, a musical genre in Cape Verde. It is believed that the name “''ferrinho''” is an adaptation of “''ferrinhos''”, that is the name by which the triangle is known in popular music in Portugal. In spite of the name, the ferrinho is more similar to instruments like the ''güiro'' (scraped idiophone) than the triangle (directly struck idiophone). ==Further reading== *''Os Instrumentos Musicais em Cabo Verde'' (Brito, Margarida; Centro Cultural Português: Praia – Mindelo, 1998) * ''Relatório Diagnóstico'' (Direcção Geral de Animação Cultural: Praia, 1988) Survey about musicians and musical instruments existing in Cape Verde * ''Kab Verd Band'' (Gonçalves, Carlos Filipe; Instituto do Arquivo Histórico Nacional: Praia, 2006) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「ferrinho」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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