The
Kemenche
Sam Topalidis
2010
(Author of
A Pontic Greek
History)
Where music is
considered a
frill, where no
effort in made
to transmit a
musical heritage
to new
generations,
where it is not
cultivated,
music and man
have been robbed
of value and
meaning.1
Description
The
bottle-shaped
kemençe,
pronounced
kemenche
(see Plate 1),
is the beloved
instrument of
Pontic people
from
north-eastern
Asia Minor
bordering the Black Sea. It
has strong
symbolic value
for Pontic
Greeks and
serves as a
symbol of
cultural
identity.2

Plate 1
Kemenche
handcrafted by
Terry Topalidis,
Hellenic
Club
of
Canberra,
Australia
The word
kemenche is
Persian in
origin meaning
‘little bow’.
It is
sometimes called
the
karadeniz
kemenchesi
(Turkish for
Black Sea fiddle) and the
Pondiaki lyra
(Greek for
Pontic
lyra).3
The body of the
kemenche*
is carved from
cherry, plum,
mulberry, walnut
or juniper wood
with seasoned
plum heart-wood
regarded the
best.4
It is
carved in the
shape of a
trough with
rounded ends and
covered with a
coniferous wood
sound-table.
The short
neck, which may
have a
fingerboard,
tapers to a
pear-shaped
pegbox.
Three
strings are
played with a
short horsehair
bow.
The
strings are
tuned in 4ths
and played in
two-part
polyphony
(bowing across
two strings at
once).3
Until
around 1920,
some, or all of
the three
strings were
made of silk.
However,
silk strings
produce a
beautiful but
weak sound.
Silk made
way for gut
strings and
subsequently
replaced by
metal strings.5
Two classes of
kemenche
differing in
size have been
distinguished,
but local Black
Sea Turks, did
not
differentiate
them.
The
smaller ones,
around 54 cm in
length, often
have a
fingerboard and
the larger
instruments are
around 68 cm in
length.
Also, the
kemane of
Cappadocia, is a
type of ‘large
kemenche’,
which, as seen
in Turkish
Museums, have
six strings with
a further six
sympathetic
strings under
the
fingerboards.4
In contrast,
according to the
Greek
kemane
player, George
Poulantzaklis,
the
kemane is
between 55 cm
and 70 cm in
length and only
larger in volume
and shape than
the
kemenche.
The
instruments
Poulantzaklis
uses have four
strings with
four other
strings
(sympathetica)
which create a
vibration
(clamour) to the
first four.6
The
kemenche is
one of the four
basic types of
lyra.
The
other three, the
Cretan
lyra (see
Plate 2), the
lyra of the
Dodekanisa and
the Thrakian
lyra, are
pear-shaped with
three or four
metal or gut
strings which
are stopped from
the side by the
fingernails
(which differs
from the
kemenche
where
strings
are
stopped by the
finger tips).7
Small
pellet-bells
attached on the
bow (which
provide rhythmic
accompaniment),
on the
pear-shaped
lyra, were
once common
(until around
World War II),
but are now rare3
(see Plate 3).
The pear-shaped
lyra is
closely related
to the medieval
rebec and like
the rebec, a
precursor of the
medieval fiddle.
The
earliest known
bowed instrument
and the parent
of the medieval
European rebec
is the rabab.8

Plate 2
A Cretan
lyra

Plate 3
A
pear-shaped
lyra with
small
pellet-bells on
the bow
History
The origin and
history of the
kemenche are
obscure.
The
earliest known
representation
of a
kemenche
appears to be in
an album of
watercolours of
Istanbul
painted by
Amadeo Preziosi.
Preziosi
was active in
Istanbul
from about 1840
onwards and was
the chief figure
in the Turkish
art world in the
1870s.
It is
important to
remember that
the lack of
images of humans
and human
artefacts in
Islamic
countries
hinders the
dating of the
kemenche to
an earlier
period.4
Matthaios
Tsahourides,
researcher and
respected
kemenche
player, believes
the instrument
(which he
prefers to call
the Pontic
lyra) and
its music has
similar roots in
Medieval Europe
and
Byzantium.
If the
construction of
the instrument
with other
European
instruments is
examined, the
kemenche
looks more like
a Byzantine or
Medieval
European
instrument, than
an instrument of
Asian origin.2
The
kemenche was
taken to the
Caucasus in the
last half of the
19th century and
the first
quarter of the
20th century by
Pontic
immigrants and
refugees.9
It was
also taken to Greece in the first quarter of the
20th century by
Pontic Greek
refugees.
Playing the
kemenche
The sound of the
kemenche is
sharp and
instantly
recognisable.
It is
played in three
positions:
·
While sitting,
with the bottom
end resting on
the knee
(although
occasionally the
fiddler will
raise the fiddle
above the knee,
to obtain
maximum
resonance).
·
While standing
still, with the
fiddle hanging
vertically; or
·
While actively
leading a
horon (chain
dance), with the
tailpiece
directed away
from the
fiddler’s body,
the long axis of
the
kemenche
being horizontal
when the arms
are raised and
vertical when
the arms are
lowered.4
In the past,
kemenche
players placed
their wrist
through a loop
made of a
ribbon, which
was tied to the
fiddle’s head.
This
helped them
stabilise the
instrument when
they played the
notes of the
upper register
with the
extension of the
fourth finger.2
The string tuned
to the highest
pitch (on the
observers right
when viewed in
front) is known
by Turks as the
zil (I)
string and is
tuned first.
The
sağir (II)
is the middle
string and
bom (III)
the lowest
string.
Turkish
fiddlers choose
a pitch at which
their
instrument,
often made by
themselves or a
local carpenter,
is most
resonant.4
From a Greek
perspective, the
strings of the
kemenche
are:
tuned on re, la,
re, but their
pitch is not
absolute.
The
melody is played
on the first or
the second
string, either
while pressing
down its
adjacent string
so as to form
two parallel
melodic lines,
or touching with
the bow the
other string as
a drone.
Kementse
is mainly played
solo or
accompanying the
singer.
Nevertheless,
when the dance
takes place in
the open air it
may be
accompanied by a
second kementse
or a daouli10
[drum].
Playing
techniques of
the
kemenche in Greece
have been
described.
The strings of
the
lyra are
stopped with the
player’s
fingertips …
using the four
fingers of the
left hand give
expressiveness
to the colourful
playing of the
lyra.
In order
to produce
pitches higher
than those of an
open string, the
string is firmly
pressed against
the fingerboard
with the fingers
of the left
hand, thus
shortening the
sounding length,
and consequently
raising the
pitch.
The
string itself
vibrates only
between the
bridge and the
nut. … When the
lyra player
plays a melody,
he often
simultaneously
stops a
neighbouring
string with the
same fingers.
Something
similar takes
place in the
case of the bow.
In the
course of
playing, the bow
will often be
used to vibrate
two strings, the
string upon
which the melody
is played and
the neighbouring
string.11
In relation to
the left hand
playing
technique:
The most
important
characteristic
left-hand
technique in
Pontic
lyra playing
is the trill.
The
movement of one
finger produces
a note that
alternates
repeatedly with
a sustained tone
held by another
finger.12
‘The
left hand
playing
technique is
also very
important in
order to
evaluate a
musical
performance, but
it is the bowing
[right hand
playing]
that forms the
overall acoustic
result.’13
The bow is held
firmly, yet
lightly, between
the fingers and
thumb of the
right hand.
The third
finger is in a
position to
exert varying
pressure on the
bow hair. … The
bow is drawn at
right angles
across the
strings … The
correct bow
position on the
instrument
(about 2 to 4cm
away from the
bridge) makes a
clear and pure
sound. … In
performance, the
performer may
need to turn the
body of the
instrument with
his left hand in
order for the
bow to touch
another string.14
Defining a
specific melody
in Pontic
lyra music
is very elusive.
There is
no authoritative
or written
version of a
melody or tune
and each time it
is performed by
the
lyra player,
it is played
differently. …
The use of
modulation in
Pontic
lyra music
is common.
The
lyra player
usually
modulates by
playing a
melodic phrase
in a different
key tonality
above or below
that of the
original tonal
centre.
In
contemporary
music repertory,
most of the time
modulation takes
place through
improvisation.
Thus, the
Pontic
lyra player
may modulate by
improvising and
changing the
mode of the
original piece
but must always
return to the
tonic of the
original tune.15
Distribution in
Turkey#
It appears that
Samsun
on the Black Sea
coast is the
western limit of
the playing of
the
kemenche.4
Playing
the
kemenche
continued
eastwards,
beyond
Trabzon
(300 km
straight-line
distance east of
Samsun)
and Hopa to the
Soviet frontier
(160 km east of Trabzon). Reinhardt
regards the
neighbourhood of
Machka (25 km
south of
Trabzon)
as having
players with the
highest
technical skill,
including the
highest
frequency of
bowing.16
In Findikli
(130 km east of
Trabzon):
the average
speed
[of playing]
falls, and
extended use of
undecorated
fourth parallels
becomes more
frequent.
In
villages south
of Pazar
[100 km east of
Trabzon],
the simultaneous
bowing of all
three strings
may be used
extensively. …
In the opposite
direction, West
of Ordu
[140 km east of Samsun],
the style tends
to become more
linear, with
only occasional
use of two
voices, and
there is perhaps
more frequent
use of
tetrachords that
include an
augmented
second.17
From the work of
Dr Davis in his
volumes of
Flora of Turkey,
the distribution
of Turkish folk
musical
instruments is
regulated in
part by similar
factors that
regulate the
distribution of
wild
plant-species.
Barriers
to the spread of
plants are
usually also
barriers to the
movement of men.4
Davis
notes a break in
the
characteristic
flora between
Giresun and Ordu
(115 km and
160 km west of
Trabzon
respectively).
This may
be correlated
with a sharp
break in the
character of the
coastal scenery
east of Ordu,
where forested
hills run down
to the sea, and
are transected
by steep valleys
which become
more broken than
the rolling
country to the
west.
From this
break to the
Georgian border,
there is a
distinctive
region,
extending inland
up to the
watershed that
separates it
from the central
plateau.
This
region is
floristically
linked with
Western Georgia
and the
Caucasus.
The same
region coincides
very closely
with the
distribution of
the
kemenche.
The
fiddle extends
into both the Caucasus and Soviet Armenia.4
It may be
significant that
the
kemenche
appears to be
linked with the
hazelnut
cultivating
population of
the eastern
coastal region.4
References
1
Kilpatrick, DB
1980,
Function and
style in Pontic
dance music
(A dissertation
submitted
in partial
satisfaction for
the degree
Doctor of
Philosophy in
Music 1975,
University
of California,
L.A.),
Archeion
Pontou [Archives
of Pontos],
supplement
no.12,
Epitropi
Pontiakon
Meleton [The
Committee for
Pontic
Studies] Athens, p. 256.
2
Tsahourides, M
2007,
The Pontic lyra
in contemporary Greece,
Unpublished
PhD
thesis,
Goldsmiths College,
University
of
London.
3
The
New Grove
Dictionary of
Musical
Instruments, In
three volumes.
1985.
4
Picken, L 1975,
Folk musical
instruments of
Turkey,
Oxford
University
Press,
London.
5
Anoyanakis, F
1991,
Greek popular
musical
instruments,
Melissa
Publishing
House, Athens.
(Quoted
in Tsahourides
(2007).)
6
Poulantzaklis, G
www.kemanes.gr/english/index.php?page=kem-lyra
viewed May 2010.
7
New
Groves
Dictionary of
Music and
Musicians, In 29
volumes.
2001,
8
Encyclopaedia
Britannica,
2005,
9
Petrides, Th
n.d.,
‘Traditional
Pontic dances
accompanied by
the Pontic
lyra’, at:
www.karalahana.com/english.html
edited by
Ozhan Ozturk,
under the
heading Pontic
Music, created
2005, viewed
June 2006.
(Petrides
lived 1928-88.)
10
Raftis, A 199?,
Twenty Pontic
dances and songs,
Booklet on
Pontic Greek
songs with
compact disk,
Dora Stratou
Greek Dances
Theatre, Athens,
pp. 18-9.
11
Tsahourides, M
2007,
pp. 45-6.
12
Tsahourides, M
2007,
p. 47.
13
Tsahourides, M
2007,
p. 52.
14
Tsahourides, M
2007,
p. 49.
15
Tsahourides, M
2007,
p. 58.
16
Reinhardt, K
1966,
Quoted in
Picken (1975).
17
Picken, L 2007,
pp. 329-30.
*
Kemenches
can be purchased
from
The Violineri.
Details
available from:
http://kemenche.pontosworld.com
#
In the future,
I look
forward to
reading
information that
is more
contemporary
from
accomplished
kemenche player,
Nikos
Michailidis, who
is researching
for his PhD
thesis.