Te na ku – Karen Harp 5
Description:
One of the most distinctive instruments in physical form and musical style and rarest in Southeast Asia is the Karen harp, te na ku. Its main body, which acts as a resonator, is hollowed from a block of soft wood in a curved canoe shape with an open top, traditionally covered in animal hide, though presently with a sheet of galvanized iron. The harp is often carved with a front stand or four legs, allowing it to stand independently.
A long, gracefully arched neck is secured to the resonator front and extends inside to the back, comparable to spike lutes and fiddles. This neck is fitted with five to twelve pegs that fine-tune the harp’s strings, which are anchored at equidistant points along the horizontal iron bar on the resonator top. Once made of gut, strings are now made of metal.
Karen craftsmen affectionately give te na ku zoomorphic markings, carving them as animals, and adorn them with inlays or signature motifs of flowers, fish, birds, or tattoo designs—meaningful images to the musicians who play them.
A musician tunes the strings of his harp to his vocal range using one of numerous standard tunings that correspond to specific Karen vocal repertoire. He plucks the strings of his te na ku with the fingers of both hands, blending improvised phrases that launch a song with the regular rhythms and chords that accompany it. Pitch is based on a pentatonic scale, whose range can be extended by doubling certain tones in octaves.
Note: This charming, diminutive te na ku, with its golden eye and delicately curving neck, fits perfectly in the embrace of a Karen musician as he plucks its strings and sings Karen ballads. The harp’s sides display four round sound holes on each side that are surrounded by feather-like etchings.
Function:
Karen men perform lyrical melodies on their te na ku both for personal expression to reveal their yearnings or while away the hours, and during major gatherings—be it as an instrumental solo, as an accompaniment to singing, or with an ensemble of men playing the flute, wood drum, and bronze drum.
The te na ku is also a favored instrument heard during the courting season as a young suitor enchants his girlfriend over many days and weeks, cradling his instrument in his lap, plucking its strings, and singing poignant love songs.
Recording:
Courting Song, accompanied by a te na ku harp (Karen S’gaw)
Suchiwan Phatthanaphraiwan, Chiang Mai, Thailand, January 2009
Ethnic Group: Karen
Local Name: Te na ku
Type: Plucked Arched Harp (eight strings)
Class: Plucked Chordophone
Tuning: Pentatonic scale, attuned to the vocal range of the singer
Age: Early 20th c.
Materials: Wood, iron, metal
Dimensions: 77 x 29 x 12 cm / 30.3″ x 11.5″ x 4.75″
Location: Myanmar
Owner / Instrument Maker:
Catalog Number: 6365
.






