The
ancestry of the setar can be traced to the ancient tanbour of
pre-Islamic Persia. It is made of thin mulberry wood and its fingerboard
has twenty-five or twenty-six adjustable gut frets. Setar, in
Persian, means "three strings", but a fourth one was added by Moshtaq
Ali Shah, a famous Setar player of the 18th century. This
"sympathetic" string is flot played but its echo highlights the
predominant note of the avāz (a derived part of the modal system of the
Persian traditional music) or the Dastgah. It is a very "intimate"
instrument, its confidential sound being the consequence of the years
that it had to be played in secret, when musicians were persecuted.
Moshtaq Ali Shah used to play at private musical evenings in restricted,
often Soufic, cercles. Because of its delicacy, the setar is the
preferred instrument of Sufi mystics.
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