I have a lenke with a goat and an old dialla with a cow.
Even when using the same species of wood, there are still significant differences in age, density, and color of wood, all of which
would presumable make a difference in the tonal quality. one lenke djembe isn't the same as another lenke djembe if they come from difference parts of the forest and different parts of separate trees, which grew up with different levels of sunlight and varying levels of nutrients in the soil
Welcome....good point! There's also another million factors in drum building that will alter the sound of drum too..
I'm told that Lenke was the original wood used for djembes - not only for its acoustic properties but also because the lenke tree has traditionally been viewed as a spiritually charged tree. Anyone know more about this?
Famoudou told me that for him it's lenke, lenke, lenke.
It is a spiritual tree.
If somone has a problem they go the the lenke and they make it an offering and ask it for guidance.
I believe there is usually 1 person in the villlage who's job it is to speak to the tree.
They seem to ask a series of yes and no questions and then toss an open cola nut. If the nut lands both round sides of the cola down it means yes.
One up, one down means the answer is unclear, you need talk more and ask again.
Both round sides up means no.
When I was in Sangbrala we were taken to the lenke to observe an offering (a chicken) being made and a problem being resolved. I was not crystal on what was happening and my French is decidedly dodgey so this is my understanding of what was going on and I may wrong on many counts.
I think it would have been Famoudou's job to talk to the tree but because he was away all the time it fell to a this chap.

So with all this there cetainly is a deeper meaning in the use of the lenke for a djembe. I mean there was one lenke near famoudou's village, I don't know how many have been cut down over the years, but I wouldn't say many...
In case anyone's interested, here's a photo of a lenke tree.

Apparently it was difficult to get lenke djembes in Conakry 2 years but there was loads last year, they must have had to go further into the forests...
i like heavy drums.
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