Roneat ek

US Navy musician plays a Kong touch or roneat ek with students and teachers at Kampot Traditional Music School.

The roneat ek (Khmer: រនាតឯក; also called ronneat rut) is a xylophone used in the Khmer classical music of Cambodia. It is built in the shape of a curved, rectangular shaped boat. It has twenty-one thick bamboo or hard wood bars that are suspended from strings attached to the two walls. They are cut into pieces of the same width, but of different lengths and thickness. Originally these instruments were highly decorated with inlay and carvings on the sides of the sound box. Now they are simpler. It is one of the instruments used in the pinpeat ensemble. In that ensemble, it is placed to the right of the roneat thung, a lower-pitched xylophone. The roneat ek is the analogous equivalent to the Thai xylophone called ranat ek, and the Burmese bamboo xylophone called "pattala".[1]

References

  1. "Myanmar Bamboo Xylophonel". Retrieved 10 March 2017.

See also


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