A worker sands an oud with the help of a machine at a workshop in Damascus. —AFP
DAMASCUS: Antoun Tawil, one of Syria’s last traditional lute-makers, waits in vain in his Damascus workshop for orders of the oud, an instrument his country was once renowned for producing.
While the conflict that has ravaged Syria over the past six years has devastated many of its historic crafts, the production of the oud, the oriental lute, has been particularly hard hit.
Lute-makers have emigrated in large numbers, and the Damascene wood used to build the instruments has also become rare.
“There were around 20 workshops before the crisis, between Damascus, Aleppo and Hama... Now there are no more than six,” four of them in Damascus, said Tawil.
The slender 57-year-old is one of them.
In his tiny nine-square-metre shop in Tekkiyeh Sulamaniyeh, an Ottoman complex made up of a mosque and a crafts market, Tawil contemplates the ouds hung around him.
Some are richly decorated, delicately inlaid with mother-of-pearl and ivory.
Named after the Arabic word meaning a piece of wood, the oud is a key instrument in Middle Eastern music.
It is related to the guitar, the Russian balalika and the Greek bouzouki, and the instrument is characterised by its short neck and large, full body that gives the instrument a pear shape.
‘Beautiful as a Persian rug’
All six craftsmen that used to work in Tawil’s two workshops have fled Syria.
“Before the crisis, we opened at five in the morning and worked all day long because there was so much demand,” he said wistfully.
In a single month, Tawil used to sell a dozen ouds, many of them destined for abroad, including Europe and Canada.
“Nowadays, a month goes by without selling anything.”
With the Syrian pound’s devaluation, prices have also plummeted.
“I used to sell an oud for 5,000 Syrian pounds ($100). Today, I sell them for 35,000 ($70).”
Still, he talks passionately about the Syrian — specifically Damascene — oud, which he describes as both the most exquisite but also the most durable of Arab lutes.
“Our ouds can last 70 years without needing maintenance,” he said with a proud smile.
“I’ve made pieces as beautiful as a Persian rug.”
The secret to its durability lies in the first steps of the craft, according to Issa Michel Awad, an expert in the oud and other stringed instruments at the Higher Institute for Music in Damascus.
“It’s the way the Damascene wood is chosen, the way it is dried and cured,” he explained.
“That is why you can still play a Damascene oud dating from 1990 today without a single false note.”