Another popular instrument is the seigureh, which consists of stones in a rope-bound calabash. |
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Dolo is served in a calabash after having been cooked for over three days in huge jars. |
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Cloth, bamboo, calabash, cutlass, wood, metal, and many other materials can be used by the Grenadian artist as painting surfaces. |
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At the funeral of Nanan Toto Kra, a Baoule Akan, Mossi men dance with calabash rattles. |
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A calabash cut in half lengthways and attached in a corner of a likely nesting place could also attract swallows. |
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A typical breakfast might consist of corn porridge eaten with a spoon made of a small, elongated calabash split in half. |
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Several series of images from this visit depict techniques, ranging from weaving and basketry to pottery making and calabash carving. |
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Across the street, the fat man sporting aviator shades and a floppy straw hat loitered behind a calabash tree perusing the Bermuda Sun. |
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This went on until all the chickens had shed their blood, some into the calabash, some sprayed onto the altar and some into the stream. |
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Carved calabash or gourds are made into masks or filled with seeds to rattle as maracas. |
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The traditional kora, a stringed calabash instrument, symbolizes the singing poet tradition in the country. |
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Artists cast sculptures in bronze and brass, produce glass and metal work, and make quality leatherwork and calabash carvings. |
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Apart from some ngoni on Green, Ali is usually accompanied by the click and boom of calabash, played by his long term sidekick, Hamma Sankare. |
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One of the commonest African names for the xylophone, usually with calabash resonators. |
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They told stories, sung, and danced and shared the contents of the calabash! |
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To facilitate quick thickening of the cream the root of the munkudi plant is added to the calabash. |
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He forced them to swallow some corn meal and some of the water he'd brought in a calabash. |
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While a small band is playing and singing the traditional song of San Juan, blindfolded dancers from the audience try to hit the calabash with a stick. |
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A calabash basin consists of a basin that sits above a toilet cistern. |
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The timing of calabash, as everyone here seems to acknowledge, throws that debate into sharp relief. |
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I hadn't learnt to play the kora properly by that stage, so I used to sit there tapping on a calabash with a stick. |
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Carried in a sling, a sash, a calabash or a cradle, the baby is constantly close to the mother's body. |
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Additionally, in Mali it has been recognized that the calabash tree's maintenance and development is due to the uses women give to it. |
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The women shaman, followed by her maids, brings the calabash of a magic drink. |
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Afel was trained by Ali Farka and Afel taught us to play the guitar and calabash himself. |
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I tend to highlight my njarka, my violin and my calabash because I feel the guitar isn't an instrument that belongs to me. |
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My brothers have also played an active role in my career, one of them actually playing the calabash with me. |
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Since then calabash decoration has ceased to be a monopoly of the Akanchalabey family. |
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The woman who was the spokesperson held out a calabash, a hollowed out gourd traditionally used to hold the cutters' instruments. |
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It's in this spirit that calabash surely puts the festival back into the term literary festival. |
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That bowl is shaped like a small flat calabash cut vertically. |
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Then, when he shed the canopy, the thing looked like a large calabash, and he resembled a woman going to market with a heavy load of produce on her head. |
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The ground's design is inspired by the iconic African pot known as the calabash, and its aesthetic appeal will be heightened when the stadium is lit at night. |
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For example, the masked dancer kneels down at the house's entrance and pays his respects to the widow who at the same time is looking for her late husband's Kine by means of a calabash that she is holding in her hand. |
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Another that is common is made from a dried calabash gourd. |
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Traditional percussion is also featured with djembe and doumdouba, calabash and shekere. |
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Elegant and slender, both the men's and ladies' models are distinguished by their original dial design: a mother-of-pearl centre decorated with a motif resembling the outline of an upside-down calabash. |
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Someone would play violin, someone would be on the calabash, someone would have left his animals, someone else would have left his work in the fields and we'd all get together in the moonlight and sing. |
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They were planning on spending the evening and a good part of the night walking there. On the way, we drive past an old man carrying a large calabash with metal slats fitted inside a traditional musical instrument. |
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Alice Lorot takes a long root from a plant she calls sokotei, scrapes the skin of the root into a calabash of water, and soaks it for several hours. |
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To complete his composition and add splashes of colour, Gauguin has included a European faience bowl, a calabash serving as a jug, fruit, a partly-eaten guava and some oranges. |
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It is not uncommon, for example, to see people walking down the street of Buenos Aires sipping maté tea out of a calabash gourd with a special metal straw called bombilla. |
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It was smoked in calabash water pipes with terracotta smoking bowls, apparently an Ethiopian invention which was later conveyed to eastern, southern and central Africa. |
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Calabash Cove Resort and Spa, a resort in Saint Lucia, West Indies, has announced a Valentine's Day offer. |
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Downtown, Charles Cros's Calabash, an upstairs, over-the-store eatery, offers excellent edibles in unassuming islandy surroundings. |
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