Suling

Bamboo ring flute can also be found in Southeast Asia, especially in Brunei,[1] Indonesia,[2] Malaysia,[2] the Philippines and Singapore.

The mouthpiece of the suling is circled with a thin band made of rattan near a small hole.

To play the suling, performers blow into a gap between the rattan band and the bamboo tube at one end of the instrument.

Namely, it is necessary for the performers to use the technique circular breathing in order to create a highly strung sense of constancy that continues even at moments of dramatic climax by the percussive gamelan instruments.

[6] While in East Malaysia, especially in Sabah with a wide variety of aerophone,[7] the instrument is played by all the interior ethnic groups in the state of Kadazan-Dusun, Murut, Rungus and Lun Bawang/Lundayeh.

A Native Indonesian boy, playing a Sundanese Suling instrument.
Seruling Gambuh Bali
Suling players (bottom row) depicted on the 8th-century reliefs of Borobudur temple in Central Java , Indonesia
Suling, transverse bamboo flute, Papua, New Guinea . The word suling describes mostly lengthways flutes but also some transverse flutes made of bamboo.
Sundanese suling performer, member of the Gamelan group SambaSunda
A diagram showing the technique used to play a suling.
Kacapi and suling