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Meend

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In Hindustani music, meend (Hindi: मींड, Urdu: مینڈ) refers to a glide from one note to another. It is an essential performance practice, and is used often in vocal and instrumental music. On the veena, sitar, sarangi and other plucked stringed instruments, it is usually done by pushing the strings across the frets to vary their effective length and tension; compare portamento and finger vibrato. This can be done on wind instruments like the bansuri by using the fingers to cover the holes in a manner that the changes between discrete pitches are imperceptible. It is considered a sort of alankar, or ornament.

Meend is an important part of any classical performance; however, it is a technique not possible on a hand-held harmonium often used in musical concerts (or on the santoor). For this reason, traditionalists singing khyal prefer an accompaniment on an instrument such as a sarangi that can perform meend.

References

  1. Introduction to Meend at the ITC Sangeet Research Academy.
  2. Encyclopaedic Dictionary of World Musical Instruments. Global Vision Pub House. pp. 273–. ISBN 978-81-87746-51-5. Retrieved 13 July 2013.
Indian musical instruments
Wind (Sushir)
Plucked Stringed (Tat)
Bowed Stringed (Vitat)
Membranous Percussion (Avanaddh)
Non-Membranous Percussion (Ghan)
Other
Historical/possibly extinct


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