Kantele
A
kantele is a traditional
Finnish
plucked
string
instrument. The conventional kantele has five strings (pentatonic scale)
and a wooden body. Modern concert kanteles can have up to 36 strings and can
be tuned on the fly. The kantele player holds the kantele in her lap or on a
small table, plucking the strings with her fingers. One can also play chords,
traditionally with a matchstick. In The
Kalevala
(Finland's national epic), the magician
Väinämöinen
invents the first kantele with the jawbone of a giant pike and a few hairs from
Hiisi's gelding. The music
it makes draws all the forest creatures near to wonder at its beauty. The kantele
has a distinctive bell-like sound. Around the Baltic, its near relatives are
the kankel and the kannel (in Estonia).