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Be not blown about as a leaf on the wind
Be not blown about as a leaf on the wind












be not blown about as a leaf on the wind

"Leaf instruments occur in many music-cultures notwithstanding a sense that gumleaf sounds 'belong' to Australia. Similar instruments are used in other places under different names and from the leaves of different species, such as the gum leaf (from eucalypts) in Australia, grass flutes in Japan, the pipirma in Nepal, and tree leaf flute in China. Players can control the pitch and make songs, normally solo, but sometimes with other instruments. While it is used to imitate sounds wild animals make, it can produce sustained sound, a sharp, high-pitched whistle. Īn instrument of country people, it has been observed being played by herders riding their water buffalo in the rice fields. The player can control the pitch of the noise with their upper lip. The leaf vibrates in contact with them as the player blows air across it. It is also known as phlom slek, 'blow leaf.' To play a leaf, the musician curls the edge of a leaf into a semi-circle (along the leaf's long edge) and "places the arch between the lips", making sure that the leaf is touching both upper and lower lips. In Cambodia it is called a slek ( Khmer: ស្លឹក) and is played by country people in Cambodia, made from the leaves of broad-leaf trees, including the sakrom and khnoung trees. It goes by many names, including leaflute, leaf flute, leaf whistle, gum leaf, and leafophone. The musical leaf is one of any leaves which is used to play music on.














Be not blown about as a leaf on the wind