Kombu (instrument)

The instrument is like a long horn (Kombu in Tamil and Malayalam).

Listed one of the Musical instruments used by ancient Tamil people[5][6][7] out in Tirumurai[8][9] dated 6th to 11th century, Sangam Period.

வெல் படைத் தறுகண் வெஞ்சொல் வேட்டுவர் கூட்டம் தோறும் சில்லரித் துடியும் கொம்பும் சிறு கண் ஆகுளியும் கூடி கல் எனும் ஒலியின் மேலும் கறங்கிசை அருவி எங்கும் 12.0654 In recent research found that the kombu resembles trumpets being used in ancient Ireland and felt this was evidence of a link between peoples in South India and those in Ireland, 2000 years ago.

Even this is only partly true, as the C-shaped trumpet, the kombu is regarded as a rhythm instrument by its players, with the function of embellishing the beats of the drums.

Within a given tala (rhythmic cycle), the leader improvises kombu patterns on the spot to be repeated by the chorus players.

Kumath Raman Nair (2001), the most famous solo kombu artist from Trichur, states that kombu pattu can be played in six talams (beats in brackets): chempata (8), atanta (14), dhruvam (14), chempha (10), anchatantha (16), and thriputa (7).

Like the other kshetram genres, kombu pattu is played in a steadily increasing tempo with decreasing rhythm units.

Kombu (instrument)
Kombu musical instrument being played
Kombu(Kahale) musical instrument being played