Damaru: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Indian two-headed drum}}
{{Redirect|Damru|the 2018 Indian film|Damru (film)}}
{{for|Surinamese-born singer|Damaru (singer)}}
{{refimprovemore citations needed|date=December 2011}}
{{Infobox instrument
| image = File:Damaru.jpg
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| names =
| classification =
| hornbostel_sachs = 211212.3241
| hornbostel_sachs_desc = [[Membranophone]]. Individual [[hourglass drum|hourglass-shaped]] rattle vi drums (under revised Hornbostel Sachs classifications)<ref>{{cite web |title= Revision of the Hornbostel-Sachs Classification of Musical Instruments by the MIMO Consortium |date=8 July 2011 |publisher = MIMO Consortium |url= http://www.mimo-international.com/documents/hornbostel%20sachs.pdf |quote= 2 Membranophones The sound is excited by tightly stretched membranes; 21 Struck drums The membranes are struck; 212 Rattle drums (sub-divisions as for drums struck directly, 211) The drum is shaken; percussion is by impact of pendant or enclosed pellets, or similar objects India, Tibet; 212.2 Tubular rattle drums; 212.21 Cylindrical rattle drums; 212.24 Hourglass-shaped rattle drums; 212.241 Individual hourglass-shaped rattle drums}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |publisher =Grinnell College Musical Instrument Collection|title=damaru |url= https://omeka-s.grinnell.edu/s/MusicalInstruments/item/5191 |quote=Classification (Sachs-Von Hornbostel revised by MIMO) 212.241 membranophone--individual hourglass-shaped rattle drum (the drum is shaken; percussion is by impact of pendant or enclosed pellets, or similar objects)}}</ref>
| hornbostel_sachs_desc = [[Membranophone]]
| inventors =
| developed =
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}}
 
A '''damaru''' ({{lang-langx|sa|डमरु}}, {{IAST3|ḍamaru}}; [[Tibetan languages|Tibetan]] ཌ་མ་རུཌ་མ་རུ་ or རྔ་ཆུང) is a small two-headed drum, used in [[Hinduism]] and [[Tibetan Buddhism]]. In Hinduism, the damrudamaru is known as the instrument of the Hindu deity [[Shiva]], andassociated with [[Tantra|Tantric traditions]]. It is said to be created by [[Shiva|Lord Shiva]] to produce spiritual sounds by which the whole [[universe]] has been created and regulated.<ref>{{citationCite neededweb|url=https://instrurentals.in/divine-intervene-lord-shiva-and-his-damru/|title=Divine Intervene: Lord Shiva and his Damru.|first=Sahil|last=Tewari|date=JuneMarch 20164, 2019|website=InstruRentals}}</ref> In [[Tibetan Buddhism]], the damaru is used as an instrument in [[tantra|tantric]]meditation practices.<ref>{{citationcite web needed|date url=Junehttps://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/500782 | title=Damaru &#124; Tibetan 2016}}</ref>
{{Vajrayana}}
 
A '''damaru''' ({{lang-sa|डमरु}}, {{IAST3|ḍamaru}}; [[Tibetan languages|Tibetan]] ཌ་མ་རུ) is a small two-headed drum, used in [[Hinduism]] and [[Tibetan Buddhism]]. In Hinduism, the damru is known as the instrument of the deity [[Shiva]], and is said to be created by Shiva to produce spiritual sounds by which the whole [[universe]] has been created and regulated.{{citation needed|date=June 2016}} In Tibetan Buddhism, the damaru is used as an instrument in [[tantra|tantric]] practices.{{citation needed|date=June 2016}}
 
==Description==
The drumdamaru is typically made of wood, metal with [[leather]] drumdamaru heads at both ends. The resonator is made of brass. The height of the damaru is 6 inches and weight varies from 250- to 330 gm.<ref>[{{Cite web |url=http://www.usd.edu/smm/Tibet/1383/Damaru.html |title=Skull drum (damaruDamaru) on exhibitExhibit at the National Music Museum] |access-date=2009-01-13 |archive-date=2009-01-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090110132841/http://www.usd.edu/smm//Tibet/1383/Damaru.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> Its height ranges from a few inches to a little over one foot. It is played single-handedly. The strikers are typically beads fastened to the ends of leather cords around the waist of the damaru. Knots in the leather can also be used as strikers; crocheted material is also common. As the player waves the drum using a twisting wrist motion, the strikers beat on the drumhead.
 
==In Hinduism==
{{Hinduism}}
The damaru is very common throughout the [[Indian subcontinent]]. The damaru is known as a power drum, and when played, it is believed to generate spiritual energy.{{citation needed|date=March 2022}} It is associated with the Hindu deity Shiva. It is believed that Sanskrit language was recognized by the drumbeats of the damaru (see [[Shiva Sutra]] for the sounds), and his performance of the cosmic dance of [[tandava]]. The damaru is used by itinerant musicians of all stripes, due to its small portable size.
 
[[File:Damaru instrument 5.jpg|thumb|Damaru]]
 
In the shield shape of some ''damaru''s, the triangular upward representation also symbolizes male procreativity (the [[lingam]]), and the downward round representation symbolizes the female procreativity (the [[yoni]]). Symbolically, the creation of the world begins when the lingam and yoni meet at the midpoint of the ''damaru'', and the destruction takes place when they separate from each other.{{citation needed|date=March 2022}}
 
===Damaru-coinage of Kosambi===
[[File:Tribal Kosambi (Kaushambi) damaru coinage from the Ganges Valley.jpg|thumb|Two Damaru-shaped coins from the Gangetic Valley.]]
In the post-Mauryan period a tribal society at [[Kosambi]] (modern [[Allahabad district]]) made cast copper coinage with and without punchmarks. Their coinage resemble the Damarudamaru-drum. All such coinage has been attributed to the Kosambi. Many Indian museums, such as the National Museum, have these coins in their collections.<ref>{{cite book|last=Sharma|first=Savita|title=Numismatic Digest|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6E0aAAAAIAAJ|year=1981|publisher=Numismatic Society of Bombay.|volume=5|pages=1–3|chapter=Damaru-shaped Coins from Kausambi|oclc=150424986}}</ref>
 
==In Tibetan Buddhism==
{{Vajrayana}}{{unreferenced section|date=March 2022}}
In the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, the damaru is part of a collection of sacred implements and musical instrument was adopted from the tantric practices of ancient India. These reached the Himalayas from the 8th to 12th century, persisting in Tibet as the practice of [[Vajrayana]] flourished there, even as it vanished in the subcontinent of India.{{citation needed|date=June 2016}}
 
===Skull Damarudamaru===
The skull (thöpa) damaru is made from a male and female skull bone or [[Calvaria (skull)|calvarium]], cut well above the area of the ear, and joined at their apex. Inside, male and female mantras are appropriately inscribed in gold. The skins are traditionally cured by burying them with copper and other mineral salts, and special herbal formulas for about two weeks. These are then stretched and applied to the two sides, giving the skins their familiar blue or green mottled appearance. A collar of simple brocade, or copper or silver, has a hand-hold, and is the site of attachment of the beaters, whose knit cover represents two eyeballs. The skulls are also carefully chosen for their attributes and source. After the Tibetan diaspora in 1960, they began to be manufactured in India and Nepal, with a continued degradation of quality. Today, India is no longer a source, and their creation and export from Nepal are banned, because of the acquiring of human bone through illegal practices. One still does find occasionally those with painted skins and without the proper mantras or other characteristics.
 
The symbolism and energetic properties of the drums is extensive. These human skull damaru or chang te'u are used in a wide range of [[Vajrayana]] ritual, as a standard right hand accompaniment to the bell, held in the left hand. Usually used to together as an accent or punctuation during various tantric practices, the drum can also keep time during entire passages. For the solo practitioner, it is an essential tool, while in larger assemblies, only the presiding [[Rinpoche]]s and [[Umdze|chant master]]s use them, in concert with the long horns ([[Tibetan horn|{{transliteration|xct|italic=no|radung}}]]), short horns ({{transliteration|xct|italic=no|[[gyaling]]}}), large cymbals ({{transliteration|xct|italic=no|[[silnyen]]}} and {{transliteration|xct|italic=no|[[rolmo]]}}) and large temple drums ([[lag-na]]).
 
===Chöd damaru===
The Chöd damaru (or ''chöda'') is a specialized form of damaru. It is generally larger in circumference and has a more round shape than its smaller counterpart. The Chöd damaru is used in the [[Tantra techniques (Vajrayana)|tantric]] practice of [[Chöd|Chod]].
 
[[File:Bęben Damaru - Zbiory Muzeum Azji i Pacyfiku w Warszawie.jpg|thumb|Drum Damarudamaru - Thethe Asia and Pacific Museum in Warsaw]]
 
With no known antecedent, the chod is traditionally made of [[acacia]] wood (seng deng), though a variety of woods are acceptable, as long as the tree is not toxic and does not possess thorns or other negative attributes. Made as a one-piece, double-sided (two-headed) bell shape, size varies from 8 inches to 12 inches in diameter. Usually featuring only a thin veneer of varnish, so that the grain of the wood shows, they come the common red (marpo), black (nakpo) or rare yellow (serpo) type of acacia, and are very occasionally painted with skulls, the eight charnel grounds, or other symbols. The waist or belt is traditionally made of leather, though often brocades are used. A set of mantras are traditionally painted on the interior of the drum prior to its skinning.
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The pitch of the drum varies, and the tone may vary depending on conditions of dampness, temperature and so on. Played slowly, and methodically, the droning of the damaru accompanies the haunting melodies and chants of the chod ritual, as of which are accompaniments for the inner meditations and visualizations that are at the heart of this spiritual practice.
 
The above applies to the ideal manufacture of the damaru, and as still described in the definitive modern work, the "Mindroling Handbook of Vajrayana Implements.". Those manufactured in India and Nepal are made of indeterminate and cheap woods, with painted skins, often no interior mantras, and altogether deviating from the many other essentials, as presrcibedprescribed in technical literature such as the Mindroling Handbook. Such copies are now widespread and in use by Eastern monastics and Western students.
 
=== Chöpen ===
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* [[Na (drum)]]
* [[Skull (symbolism)]]
* [[Udukai]]
* [[Kangling]]
 
==References==
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{{commons category|Damaru}}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20071202110056/http://www.ancientworlds.net/aw/Article/841450 Damaru drum on Ancientworlds.com]
* [http://www.tibetanchoddamaruworks.com DamaruWorks: Worlds Only Authentic Chod Damaru] SchoolSacred ofImplements Tibetanfor Healingthe Practice of Chod
 
{{Indian musical instruments}}
{{Musical instruments of Nepal}}
 
[[Category:Buddhist ritual implements]]
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[[Category:Hindu symbols]]
[[Category:Indian musical instruments]]
[[Category:Nepalese musical instruments]]
[[Category:Shaken membranophones]]
[[Category:Tibetan musical instruments]]
[[Category:Drums of Nepal]]