Rog / Rog gadljarski (m)
sound enhancing end of a chanter
Chanter bell; Eastern Slavonia (Aljmaš; Andrijevci; Prkovci Stari); Srijem [Syrmia] region (Komletinci, and an instrument brought, ca. 1920, from Vinkovci by Pavle Lukić);
NB: ➺ homonyms; The adjective gadljarski is only added by Kuhač, who unfortunately fails to reveal his source...
1 piece (krakljaste [from "krak" (leg)]) of wood, usually maple (Acer pseudoplatanus); The actual chanter being stopped, this bell serves in fact only the semidrone; Bells of Andrijevci bagpipes have 1 opening with, internally, 2 vertical rims suggesting a semi-division; Those of Prkovci Stari have two separate openings.
Širola, Božidar: Sviraljke s udarnim jezičkom [Aerophones with a beating tongue]. Zagreb, 1937, p.178 (»Kuhač), 180/* (»Čipuzović), 182, 185/*, 188/*, 192*, 194*, 195*.
Brömse, Peter: Flöten, Schalmeien und Sackpfeifen Südslawiens. Brünn [Brno], 1937, p.89.
Gojković, Andrijana: Narodni muzički instrumenti [Folk musical instruments]. Beograd, 1979 (»Širola [129]).
Kuhač, Franjo Š. [Šaver]: Prilog za poviest glasbe južnoslovjenske: Gajde [Contribution to the history of South Slavic music: Bagpipes]. In: Rad jugoslavenske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti, knjiga L (Zagreb, 1879), p.46 [3x], 67¹ (»prorok Danilo [prophet Daniel]), 93 (~ gadljarski), 94 (➺ truba / trumbenta), &c. [various grammatical forms].
ws (linguistics [➺ Dictionaries, &c.])