A tricordia (also trichordia or tricordio) or mandriola is a twelve-stringed variation of the mandolin. The tricordia is used in Mexican folk music, while its European cousin, the mandriola, is used identically to the mandolin. It differs from a standard mandolin in that it has three strings per course. Tricordias only use unison tuning (ggg d'd'd' a'a'a' e"e"e"), while mandriolas use either unison tuning or octave tuning (Ggg dd'd' aa'a' e'e"e").

PropertyValue
dbpedia-owl:thumbnail
dbpprop:abstract
  • A tricordia (also trichordia or tricordio) or mandriola is a twelve-stringed variation of the mandolin. The tricordia is used in Mexican folk music, while its European cousin, the mandriola, is used identically to the mandolin. It differs from a standard mandolin in that it has three strings per course. Tricordias only use unison tuning (ggg d'd'd' a'a'a' e"e"e"), while mandriolas use either unison tuning or octave tuning (Ggg dd'd' aa'a' e'e"e").
dbpprop:classification
dbpprop:name
  • Tricordia,Mandriola
dbpprop:range
  • 130px|center(a regularly tuned tricordia with 14 frets to body)
dbpprop:reference
dbpprop:related
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
rdfs:comment
  • A tricordia (also trichordia or tricordio) or mandriola is a twelve-stringed variation of the mandolin. The tricordia is used in Mexican folk music, while its European cousin, the mandriola, is used identically to the mandolin. It differs from a standard mandolin in that it has three strings per course. Tricordias only use unison tuning (ggg d'd'd' a'a'a' e"e"e"), while mandriolas use either unison tuning or octave tuning (Ggg dd'd' aa'a' e'e"e").
rdfs:label
  • Tricordia
owl:sameAs
skos:subject
foaf:depiction
foaf:page
is dbpprop:drum of
is dbpprop:redirect of
is dbpprop:related of