A tricordia (also trichordia or tricordio) or mandriola is a twelve-stringed variation of the mandolin.[1] The tricordia is used in Mexican folk music, while its European cousin, the mandriola, is used identically to the mandolin. It differs from a standard mandolin in that it has three strings per course. Mandriolas only use unison tuning (G3 G3 G3 • D4 D4 D4 • A4 A4 A4 • E5 E5 E5), while tricordias use either unison tuning or octave tuning (G2 G3 G3 • D3 D4 D4 • A3 A4 A4 • E4 E5 E5).
Other names | Mandriola |
---|---|
Classification | String instrument (plucked) |
Hornbostel–Sachs classification | 321.321 (Composite chordophone) |
Playing range | |
(a regularly tuned tricordia with 14 frets to body) | |
Related instruments | |
References
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