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You said berimbau . That's my main instrument . I do live looping with a lot of berimbaus playing together at different pitches . regards Ramiro > At one tme I did graduate work in ethnomusicaolgy ,and my area of >focus was the African roots of American music. The Diddey Bow,is not >a slide it's single string streched taught on a stick( or >sometimes attached to the side of a building) and played >percussively.It's called berimbau in brazil and there are many >variations all over Africa,commonly adding a gourd resonator,which >can be closed and opened by pressing against ,and moving from the >body,causing a dynamic and pitch variation further which adds >rythmic epressiveness.Hugh Tracy's book on southern African >instruments details one version which is ony played by Women ,who >move the gourd on and off a breast.The only instrument I ever heard >of that could physically only be played by one gender. There are >also versions where the string is connected to a very large stick >which is rooted into the ground and a hole in the ground resonates >the vibration.