View allAll Photos Tagged didgeridoo
Aboriginal do not like being photographed. I had get his permission before I could take this photograph.
Free healing? The place always had several motorbikes parked in front and the bedsheet pulled closed.
This guy is a street performer in Queen Street Mall. As you can imagine he is very popular with the overseas tourists. He's also a great didge player and passing toddlers in particular seem to be drawn to the deep rhythmic base sound of his music.
Aborigine playing the Didgeridoo Brisbane
The didgeridoo (also known as a didjeridu) is a wind instrument developed by Indigenous Australians of northern Australia around 1,500 years ago and still in widespread use today both in Australia and around the world. It is sometimes described as a natural wooden trumpet or "drone pipe". Musicologists classify it as a brass aerophone.
"Didgeridoo" is considered to be an onomatopoetic word of Western invention. The earliest occurrences of the word in print include a 1919 issue of Smith's Weekly where it was referred to as an "infernal didjerry" which "produced but one sound – (phonic) didjerry, didjerry, didjerry.
Some other regional names are, Mandapul (Yidaki), Yiraka, Yirtakki, Artawirr, Gunbarrk, Garnbak, Kurmur, Ngaribi, Bambu, Martba, Paampu and Ilpirra
gehört und fotografiert auf dem Kunsthandwerkermarkt im Schloßgarten des Barockschloßes zu Lichtenwalde
Didgeridoo Player at Ferrara Buskers Festival 2005.
didgeridoo
Le didgeridoo est un instrument de musique à vent de la famille des aérophones. A l'origine, cet instrument est joué par les Aborigènes du Nord de l'Australie, son usage semble très ancien, certains prétendent qu'il pourrait remonter à l'âge de pierre (20 000 ans), d'après une peinture rupestre ancestrale, représentant un joueur de didgeridoo, analysée au carbone 14. C'est une trompe en bois, lointaine cousine du cor des Alpes ou du tongqin tibétain.
Didgeridoo, didjeridoo, didjeridu ou didjeridou, est un mot d'origine onomatopéique inventé par les colons occidentaux à partir du son de cet instrument. Les Aborigènes le nomment différemment en fonction de leur ethnie. Parmi la cinquantaine de noms, les plus courants sont : yidaki, mooloo, djubini, ganbag, gamalag, mago, maluk, yirago, yiraki, etc.
The didgeridoo (also known as a didjeridu or didge) is a wind instrument developed by Indigenous Australians of northern Australia at least 1,500 years ago and is still in widespread usage today both in Australia and around the world. It is sometimes described as a natural wooden trumpet or "drone pipe". Musicologists classify it as an aerophone. The instrument is traditionally made from Eucalyptus trees which have had their interiors hollowed out by termites or died of other causes.
Source : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Didgeridoo
The details on these didgeridoos were awesome! Taken at SoundQuest Fest 2010. Check out Rob Thomas at www.inlakesh.com/
Every time I deal with these photos, I get the Didgeridoo song stuck in my head. "What does a didgeridoo? What does..."
Vikas from Nepal is a man of many talents. A wonderful tattoo artist, he also plays this improvised didgeridoo which has made him a big hit along the Ghats of Varanasi.
Val was playing his didgeridoo when we were camping in Nordegg.
Ilford Delta 100, developed in Ilfotec DD-X (1+4), 12 mins.
Just a short clip of me playin the didgeridoo. Didn't have enough space to upload the longer video of my adaptation of Beethoven's Concerto No. 9