T - Oud Professional(¿ìµå ÇÁ·ÎÆä¼Å³¯)
Al-Oud(³ª¹µ°¡Áö)¶õ ÀǹÌÀÇ ¾Æ¶ø¾î¿¡¼ ³ª¿Â ¿ìµå´Â ¼¾çÀÇ ·ùÆ®°è ±âŸ, µ¿¾çÀÇ ºñÆÄÀÇ ±â¿øÀÌ µÈ ¾Ç±â·Î ÇöÀç, Áßµ¿Áö¿ª°ú Ä«ÇÁÄ«Áî, ºÏ¾ÆÇÁ¸®Ä«¿¡¼ ³Î¸® »ç¿ëµÇ°í ÀÖ´Â ´ëÇ¥ÀûÀÎ ¾Ç±âÀÔ´Ï´Ù. 5½ÖÀÇ Çö°ú ¿ìÃø ÇÑ°³ÇöÀ¸·Î ±¸¼ºµÇ¾î ÀÖÀ¸¸ç ¼Õ°¡¶ôÀ¸·Î ¶â¾î¼ ¿¬ÁÖÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
1. ÀçÁú : ¸ñÀç
2. ¿ø»êÁö : ÅÍÅ°
3. ¾à 37*78*20cm
4. ¼ÒÇÁÆ® ÄÉÀ̽º Æ÷ÇÔ(ÇϵåÄÉÀ̽º´Â '¾Ç±âºÎ¼ÓÇ°'³¿¡¼ ±¸ÀÔÇϼ¼¿ä)
* Oud is an short-necked, half pear-shaped, plucked lute of the Arab world, the direct ancestor of the European lute. Oud's name derives from al-oud (branch of wood). There are five pairs of strings on an oud, each pair tuned to the same pitch, and a single string which is also the thickest and known as the bamteli in Turkish. The most common way to tune the oud is to tune each string a fourth apart. The most common Turkish tuning with D being the highest open string is DAEBF#C#.