The gurmi is a two or three-stringed lute of the Hausa people of northern Nigeria. [1] [2] May also be called gurumi or kumbo. [1] [2] In looking at the two-finger playing style used by musicians who play the gurmi, researchers have listed it as a possible relative to the banjo. [3] [4] Researchers have talked about the gurmi and gurumi as if these are two different but similar instruments. [2] [5]
The instrument is also played by Toubou people and "other peoples of Niger and northern Nigeria." [5]
It has a soundbox made from a half calabash or gourd, the opening covered with hide for a soundboard. [1] [2] The neck pierces the calabash, its end poking out the bottom of the instrument. Strings are secured to the stump of stick at the bottom and run across a bridge on the hide soundboard to the neck. The strings are secured to the neck by tying them to tuning rings, separate strings or bands tied around the neck.
While a member of the xalam family of instruments, the gurmi is specific to the Hausa people. [1] Unlike the xalam, with its oval shaped soundbox, the gurmi's soundbox is round (the shape of the gourd which is its body). [4] They have a rounded dowel neck. [4]
The instrument has been traditionally played by Hausa men to make songs that praise wrestlers. [1] It may be played as a solo instrument or accompany singing. [1]
Researchers have paired the gurmi with a number of African lutes, many with names that may be related to the name gurmi. [2] The instruments are "full-spike lutes" meaning that the neck goes all the way through the instrument, poking through both sides of the gourd or calabash resonator. [2] Another alternative, separating these from other African lutes is the "semi-spike lutes" such as the xalam, in which the end of the neck pokes out through the soundboard (instead of out through the side of the gourd) and acts as a bridge. [2]
These full-spike lutes include: