Tabla Reheading Tabla Re-heading
Description & Parts of the Tabla
The tabla is really a two drum set. The cylindrical, wooden drum played
with the right hand is called the dayan, dahina, or tabla. The metal drum
is slightly bowl shaped, played with the left hand, and is called the
bayan, duggi, or dagga. The specialized goat-skin head of a tabla is called
a puddi. The puddi has a main skin sandwiched between two donut-shaped
skins. The three layers are intricately braided together by the collar
called the gajara. Near the center of the head, is a multi-layered black
spot called the syahi. The syahi is usually made of rice, glue, graphite,
and iron fillings. It must not become damp or the layers will loosen.
Once a syahi has been damaged the drum must be re-headed. At the bottom
of the drum is the kundal, a ring made of coiled rawhide or wire. A tasma,
or rawhide lace, holds the puddi tight to the drum. The tasma (rawhide
lace) is woven over the gajara on the puddi (collar on the head), down
the side of the drum, over the kundal (the ring at the bottom of the drum),
and back up over the gajara. The tasma is woven through 16 slits found
between the gajara and puddi and must exert an equal amount of pressure
around the puddi. Once the puddi is tightly fitted, the drum can be tuned
by inserting one or more tuning blocks, called gatta, between the tasma
and the drum shell. These gatta are wooden dowels that can be adjusted
to increase or decrease the tension on the puddi, which increase or decrease
the tone of the drum.
Requirements
Tabla with good kundal and Tasma (approx. 11 yards)
New Puddi
Light weight cord (approx. 4 yards)
A little arm strength
Time, approx. 60 minutes
Before You Begin
If you have a bayan or dayan that has an old puddi (head) in place, look
at the tasma (laces). Pay attention to the method used to weave the tasma
around the kundal (bottom ring) and gajara (collar). Pay special attention
to the way the tasma is tied at the beginning and end.
When You Are Ready To Begin
Remove the gatta (dowels). Find the end of the tasma and untie it and
then unlace the entire puddi. Place your new puddi on the drum. Set the
kundal under the drum. To make it a little easier take any piece of lightweight
cord and wrap it around the drum, puddi and kundal. Start the cord on
the top center of the puddi, wrap down, under, and up again. Give the
drum a 1/3 turn, and wrap again. Repeat. You can tie the cord off on the
top center of the puddi. It should now be tied like a package ready to
ship. This cord will hold the parts in place while you weave the tasma.
You may think that soaking the tasma will make it more pliable and therefore
easier to work with. Do not make this mistake. It will become more pliable
but it will become so slippery that you will not be able to work with
it.
Start on the bottom of the drum at the kundal. With the drum sitting up-side-down
push 4" of one end of the tasma between the kundal and the drum shell.
Push it from the bottom of the drum toward the puddi. Now bend the long
end of the tasma over the kundal toward the puddi. Hold it against the
drum shell, this is your starting lace. Take the 4 inch end and wrap it,
from left to right, OVER the lace. Then tuck it, from right to left, UNDER
the lace. Make sure the loose end passes between the kundal and the 4
inch piece on the left side. Pull the loose end tight and it should lay
on the drum shell parallel to the kundal. This should tie off the starting
place for your tasma. In this manner you will weave right to left around
the drum. As you proceed, the loose end from the starting knot will be
secured under subsequent wraps.
You will be lacing from right to left around the drum. Each time you
weave the tasma you want it to pass over the outside of the gajara (collar).
It passes over the outside of the gajara, and then through one of the
16 pre-made slits in the puddi. The slits are between the gajara and the
puddi. They are sometimes difficult to see since they are found where
the gajara is laced onto the puddi. Pull the tasma through the slit in
the puddi and down along the drum shell. It then passes over the outside
of the kundal. Tuck it back down between the kundal and the drum shell.
Pass it along the drum shell and then repeat over the gajara. You are
always passing the tasma OVER the outside of the gajara and kundal.
The tasma may be a bit unruly. It can be stiff and may have a tendency
to flip about. Make certain, as you weave the tasma over the gajar and
kundal, that it does not become twisted. If you pull the tasma tight and
there is a twist you have to back it out of the slit and start again.
This is most likely to happen when you just begin, since there will be
so many yards of tasma flipping about. Just work carefully.
As you continue to tighten the tasma remember to keep the gajara and
kundal straight. You also want to get an even amount of pressure around
the drum. You may find it more comfortable to work with your hands and
feet. This is a traditional method, take off your shoes and brace the
drum with your feet. Pull on the tasma with your hands and push the drum
with your feet.
At first you need to keep the tasma lightly snug, but not tight. When
all 16 slits have been used you can take up the slack in the tasma. Start
at the beginning knot and pull the tasma tighter. Work from right to left
and continue to take up the slack until the puddi is snug. Remove the
light weight cord.
When you have tightened it completely the end knot should be next to
the starting knot. When you tie it off you want to create a mirror image
of the beginning knot. With the drum up-side-down, pull the loose end
of the tasma between the kundal and the drum shell toward the puddi. Pull
it to the right side of the lace. Fold it over the tasma to the left.
Then tuck it under the tasma from left to right. Pull tight to make the
knot. Push the loose end over and under each lace to the right. If you
have several inches you can weave it in and out of the loops, do not cut
it off.
Tabla Tuning
The "Exotic Percussion of the World" video (code VIDE) is available
from DulcimerShofar.com. It provides an introduction to a number of percussion
instruments. The video also demonstrates the tabla. DulcimerShofar also carries
an "Introduction to Tabla "video (code VBT1). This video covers
the parts the tabla, care and maintenance, tuning, and several learning
exercises.
When tuning the tabla make an effort to keep the tension equally dispersed
around the entire head of the drum. Uneven tension on the head will create
problems. All DulcimerShofar dayans come with eight gatta (wooden dowels) in
place. The gatta can be moved up or down to change the tension and the
tune of the drum.
On a newly re-headed tabla, tension is increased by adding the gatta.
If the tasma are very tight you may have to begin with smaller diameter
gatta. You can use 1 inch thick dowel rod cut into 3" lengths.
As you add gatta maintain an even number to keep the tension even. Once
the gatta are in place you can achieve considerable tuning by hammering
the gatta. Hammer them downward to increase the tension and pitch, and
hammer them upward to decrease the tension and pitch. Or you may lift
additional tasma (laces) over the existing gatta. When inserting gatta,
or lifting tasma, there is a prescribed way. Look at the side of your
drum. The tasma run up and down, up and down around the drum. Do not think
of this as 16 individual laces- rather think of this as four sets (remember
there were 16 holes). Each set make a capital letter "M." The
pattern is 1-up, 2-down, 3- up, 4-down. When positioning a gatta, insert
it first under the 2-down lace. When you need to add tension pull the
tasma over the gatta in the following sequence: begin with 2-down, then
3-up, 1-up, and 4-down last. This sequence is important to avoid torque
on the puddi.
Once you have the drum close to tuned you can fine tune by adjusting
the gajara (collar). Tapping down on the top outside edge of the gajara
with the flat side of the hammer tightens it and raises the pitch. Tapping
up from the underside loosens the puddi and lowers the pitch. Important-
the area of the puddi that overlays the drum's top edge is delicate, do
not strike the head!
The wooden dayan should be tuned very low. However, do not tune the dayan
so low that it does not compliment the bayan. Ultimately, the tuning of
the tabla is dependent on the raga being played.
Remember the tasma and the puddi are natural animal skin. Over time they
will stretch. This may be most noticeable in the first weeks after a re-head,
so you may have to tune more often. Or even, re-tighten the tasma.