Talharpa


The talharpa, also known as a tagelharpa or the stråkharpa, is a four-stringed bowed lyre from northern Europe. It was formerly widespread in Scandinavia, but is today played mainly in Estonia, particularly among that nation's Swedish community. It is similar to the Finnish jouhikko and the Welsh crwth. The instrument is still known in Finland.
The name talharpa probably comes from tagel - horsehair - from which the strings were made.

Background

The earliest known Norse literary mentions of a harp or lyre date to the Eddic poem Völuspá, though not as a bowed instrument. However, visual representations from iconography show Gunnar charming the snakes in the snake pit with a harpa and a stone carving at the Trondheim Cathedral of Norway shows a musician playing a bowed lyre. In Nordic countries the bowed lyre has continued in Finland where it is called jouhikantele and Estonia where it is called the talharpa.

Modern use

The talharpa is sometimes used in modern folk music. Most notably by the Estonian nu-folk duo Puuluup who use talharpas and modern live looping