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Recent Posts
- Coziest Irish Gifts for Christmas
- Irish Gifts of Romance
- Two Irish Christmas Symbols Explained
- Were Witches Welcome in Ireland?
- True Blue Irish Gifts
- Celebrating Irish Grandparents
- Lughnasa: The Irish Festival Celebrating the First Fruits of Fall
- Go West: Explore the Wild Atlantic Way
- The Gift of an Irish Name
- How to Spot an Irish Dad
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Bodhran: The Heartbeat of Ireland
IrishShopShare
The bodhran is a traditional Irish drum. If you like trad music, you have heard the bodhran. It’s pronounced bow (as in take a bow) ron (as in short for Ronald). Bodhran drums come in a range of sizes, from small souvenir ones that make nice Irish gifts to larger, tunable ones for serious musicians. They range from 8 inches to 18 inches.
These traditional Irish drums are flat, made of a wooden hoop frame with goatskin stretched over it. The round frame is typically made of birch or ash and features crossed wooden bars behind the goatskin to stabilize it and provide a handle. Bodhrans look a bit like large tambourines without the jingles. Players hold the drum with one hand on their leg and use a beater to play it. This beater is a short, wide drumstick, and both ends are used to hit the drum. It’s also called a cipin or a tipper. Some players prefer to use the back of their hand to beat the bodhran.
Bodhrans look as beautiful as they sound, which is why they are popular Irish gifts. The goatskin is usually painted. You can find bodhrans decorated with anything from swirling Celtic spirals to GAA county colors to family coats of arms. The decoration doesn’t diminish the sound, and professional bodhran players do use gorgeously painted drums.