masenqo
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from Amharic ማሲንቆ (masinḳo).
Noun
masenqo (plural masenqos)
- A single-stringed bowed lute commonly used by Ethiopian azmaris.
- 2017, Siegbert Uhlig, David Appleyard, Alessandro Bausi, Wolfgang Hahn, Steven Kaplan, editors, Ethiopia: History, Culture and Challenges, Michigan State University Press, →ISBN, page 211:
- The masenqo also accompanies, though played outside the church, the celebration of Epiphany (Temquat), which is the most important and holiest holiday of the Ethopian Orthodox Church.
- 2018 February 20, Giovanni Russonello, “An African Funk Pioneer Gets a Second Chance on a Global Stage”, in The New York Times[1], New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC:
- His playing, full of clustered filigree and loosely rendered rhythms, nods toward Ethiopia’s tradition of solitary folk playing, typically on the krar or the masinko, both stringed instruments.