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Woodwind instrument
Svirel (Russian: свирель) is a Slavic woodwind instrument of the end-blown flute type traditionally used in Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine.[1][2] It is a parallel-bore flute. The six-hole versions are similar to the tin whistle; the ten-hole versions are fully chromatic.[3]
The traditional Russian svirel has not been extensively studied. Specialists have long tried to relate the present day's pipe instruments to their old Russian names. Most often, the chroniclers used three names for this type of instrument: svirel, sopel (sopilka) and tsevnitsa.[citation needed] The Ukrainian term for the instrument is sopilka and in Belarusian the term is dudka.[3]
^"Svirel". The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
^Blabbermouth (2014-11-06). "METALLICA's 'One' Gets Medieval Folk Treatment By Belarusian Band STARY OLSA (Video)". BLABBERMOUTH.NET. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
^ abCite error: The named reference oc was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
Svirel (Russian: свирель) is a Slavic woodwind instrument of the end-blown flute type traditionally used in Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine. It is a parallel-bore...
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