Galician gaita

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The (Galician) gaita or gaita do fole is a traditional bagpipe used in Galicia (Spain), and northern Portugal.

Gaita Galega (Galician) Gaita Gallega (Spanish) Galician Bagpipe The name gaita is used in Galician, Spanish, Asturian and Portuguese as a generic term for "bagpipe".

Just like "Northumbrian smallpipe"' or "Great Highland Bagpipe", each country and region attributes its toponym to the respective gaita name: gaita galega (Galicia), gaita trasmontana (Trás-os-Montes), gaita asturiana (Asturias), gaita sanabresa (Sanabria), sac de gemecs (Catalunya), etc. Most of them have a conical chanter with a partial second octave, obtained by overblowing, in the same way as e.g. the Eartern European gaida. Folk groups playing these instruments have become popular in recent years, and pipe bands for some models.

The word could be derived from -or at least related to- the Latin "caetras", or "gaethas", an instrument attributed to the Callaeci, a probably Celt tribe in the Iberian Roman Province of Gallaecia, by Silius Italicus:

Fibrarum et pennae divinarumque sagacem
flammarum misit dives Callaecia pubem,
barbara nunc patriis ululantem carmina linguis,
nunc pedis alterno percussa verbere terra,
ad numerum resonas gaudentem plauder caetras. (book III.344-7)
"Rich Gallaecia sent its youths, wise in the knowledge of divination by the entrails of beasts, by feathers and flames— who, now crying out the barbarian song of their native tongue, now alternately stamping the ground in their rhythmic dances until the ground rang, and accompanying the playing with sonorous caetras" (or gaethas, bagpipes).

It is also possible, however, that the name originates with the ghaita (also spelled rhaita in Morocco and algaita in Niger) a North African oboe similar to the zurna whose name derives from an Arabic word meaning "farm,", and/or the Eastern European bagpipes bearing similar names, such as gaida, gajda, and gajdy, but the linguistic relationship, if any, between these instruments is still unclear.

The word gaita might also be derived, according to Joan Corominas, from a Gothic root meaning goat (gait or gata), as the bag is a whole, case-skinned goat hide; Gothic was spoken in Spain as late as the eighth century due to Visigothic invasions.

Galician gaita made by Xosé Manuel Seivane Rivas
Galician gaita made by Xosé Manuel Seivane Rivas

The Galician gaita has a conical chanter and a bass drone (ronco) with a second octave. It may have one or two additional drones playing the tonic and dominant notes. Three keys are traditional: D (gaita grileira, lit. "cricket bagpipe"), C, and Bb. Galician pipe bands playing these instruments have become popular in recent years.

The playing of close harmony (thirds and sixths) with two gaitas of the same key is a typical Galacian gaita style.

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