Tarota (shawm) | Unknown maker | Possibly c 1850
Tarota (shawm) | Unknown maker | Possibly c 1850
Sometimes the ideas of identity and traditions can resurrect a forgotten instrument. That is the case of the tarota, which was commonly played in Catalonia before it became obsolete in the second half of the 18th century. Recently it has had a revival through a surge and interest in maintaining Catalan traditions. Now the tarota is even played by a number of rock bands in the region.
The tarota is a shawm historically played in Catalonia, in the tradition of Mediterranean shawms such as the Catalan gralla, the Spanish dulzaina, the Italian piffero, etc. The primitive tarota called tarota seca has no keys though makers have often added them to their instruments. The tarota fell out of favour in the second half of the 18th century as the instrumentation of the cobla orchestras mutated from the cobla de tres quartans (pipe and tabor, treble shawm such as tarota, bagpipe) to the modern cobla (flabiol, tible I and II, tenora I and II, trumpet I and II, tenor valved trombone, fiscorn I and II, string bass). However, it has seen something of a revival in recent decades through a surge in interest for certain Catalan traditions.