Yidakiwuy Dhawu Miwatjngurunydja  

Basic Information - How is a yidaki made?

       
 

Mirarra begins stripping the bark and carving the thick wood down to thin walls around the natural bore.

 

Djalu' having another play on a large yidaki he is working on.

 

Sometimes there is rubble or protrusions that need clearing with iron bars, long chisels, or as Djalu' is doing here in the bush, a sapling.

 
       
 

Datjirri carving down the mouthpiece end in the bush.

 

And chiselling the mouthpiece a bit because the natural shape is irregular and hard to play.

 

Djalu' filing the inside of the mouthpiece to open it up a little and make it comfortable to play.

 
       
 

Sometimes some clearing from the bottom is necessary.

 

Sometimes there's an amazingly clear natural bore, as Djalu' has found here.

 

Djalu' back home with a big haul of yidaki, continuing to carve them down.

 
       
 

A row of nearly finished yidaki, carved by hand.

 

Most Yol\u today will use power tools to give their yidaki a finer finish.

 

It is also now common to glue the wood so it is less likely to split when sent overseas.

 
       
 

Painting is a family effort. Here Djalu's wife Dopiya Yunupi\u paints a yidaki.

 

Djalu's sister Dh^\gal Gurruwiwi painting fine white lines with a brush made of human hair.

 

Rather than glue and paint, Yol\u-owned instruments are sometimes sealed with electrical or other tape, like the one Yomunu Yunupi\u plays here.

 

Many didjeridus in Australia and around the world have yellow beeswax added to form a mouthpiece, usually because the mouthpiece end of the instrument is too large or uncomfortable to play. Yol\u prefer trees with a natural conical bore provided by the termites, so that the mouthpiece can be shaped from the wood rather than beeswax. The Top End of Australia doesn't even have bees that make yellow wax. Native bees here make a black or brown gummy substance called gunydju which Yol\u use as a fixative. Sometimes this is used to shape mouthpieces a bit, but is only extremely rarely used for large built-up mouthpieces as you will see done with yellow beeswax elsewhere.

Two yidaki by Burr\upurr\u Wunu\murra, one with a natural wood mouthpiece up to 30mm across, the other filled in with a small amount of gunydju to make a similar mouthpiece up to 33mm in diameter.

Older yidaki made from Gunga (Pandanus yirrkalaensis) and bamboo are also known. Milkay\u Munu\gurr called the pandanus instrument the ideal yidaki because of its extreme light weight and full sound. It however is not naturally hollow, so can be labour intensive to craft, and due to the softness of the wood, must be kept very wet while playing to maintain its solidity and full sound. These instruments are not made anymore, but the knowledge remains.


NEXT PAGE - PLAYING THE DIDJERIDU

all material copyright 2006 Buku-Larr\gay Mulka Centre & the Yol\u individuals and clans concerned