ITFRESEN Track order Free Shipping
— Clay Darbuka

Clay Bass Darbuka (Dohola) – Handcrafted Egyptian Goblet Drum

Original price was: €565,16.Current price is: €499,15. Save 66,01

Bass clay darbuka (Dohola) — the deep-voiced anchor of the darbuka familyHand-shaped clay body with a natural goatskin head, 30 cm playing surfaceIntegrated Tuning Light System; ships with a padded gig bag

Made by this luthier: ,

SKU: CLY1 Categories: , , Brand:

Description

The clay bass darbuka — known across the Arabic world as the Dohola (also spelled Doholla or Duhulla) — is the deep-voiced anchor of the goblet-drum family. Where a solo darbuka speaks bright and articulate, the Dohola sits beneath it, laying down the low doum that gives Egyptian and Middle Eastern rhythm sections their weight. Hand-shaped at Tapadum’s İzmir workshop, this is a large bass instrument built for ensemble foundation and recorded low end.

Clay Body & Egyptian Heritage

The shell is formed from high-fired natural clay, hand-shaped and finished in a deep green glaze with a copper decorative band around the base. Clay is acoustically distinct from aluminum: its density rounds off the attack and reinforces the low frequencies, which is exactly what a bass drum needs. On a body this size — 50 cm tall with a 37 cm rim — the wide resonance chamber turns the goblet profile into a genuine amplification chamber, projecting a doum you feel as much as hear. This is the traditional Egyptian bass voice, unchanged in principle for generations.

Natural Goatskin Head & Tuning Light System

The 30 cm playing surface is tensioned natural goatskin, which responds to the hand with the depth and dynamic range synthetic heads cannot match. Because natural skin shifts with humidity, the drum carries Tapadum’s integrated Tuning Light System — an internal lamp with an adjustable dimmer that gently warms the head to hold a stable pitch through practice and performance, with no external heat source.

Technical Specifications

TypeBass Clay Darbuka (Dohola)
Body materialHigh-fired natural clay
Head materialNatural goatskin
Head (skin) diameter30 cm
Total (rim) diameter37 cm
Height50 cm
Weight7.2 kg
DecorationDeep green glaze with copper band, hand-laced head
TuningIntegrated Tuning Light System (dimmer-controlled)
IncludesPadded gig bag
Handcrafted inİzmir, Turkey

Who This Darbuka Is For

The Dohola is an ensemble and recording instrument. It suits percussionists who need a dedicated bass voice beneath a solo clay darbuka or a Sumbati mid-bass, and players building the full traditional doum-tek pair. At 7.2 kg it is a seated instrument for stage and studio rather than travel — for the road, a metal-bodied travel darbuka is the practical choice.

Music Genres & Traditions

The bass darbuka anchors Egyptian classical and folk repertoire — saidi, malfuf, masmoudi, and baladi rhythms — and appears throughout Arabic raqs sharqi ensembles, Turkish fasıl, and Levantine and Maghrebi music. In world-fusion projects its earthy low end grounds metal and synthetic percussion, giving the whole section a foundation to sit on.

Care & Maintenance

Store the darbuka at moderate humidity (45–55%) and never submerge the body in water. Wipe the skin gently with a dry cloth after playing. If the head loses tension, warm it with the Tuning Light System rather than a radiator or hair dryer. Clay is durable but will chip if dropped, so always transport the instrument in the included padded gig bag.

Explore the Clay Darbuka Collection

Browse the full Clay Darbuka range within our wider Darbuka collection. Every clay shell is hand-shaped by master potter Ahmet Tashomcu and completed by Mehmet Nihat San, who selects and tensions every head. Each drum is sound-tested at our Brisighella, Italy showroom before shipping. Worldwide shipping & 15-day return.

Additional information

Weight7,2 kg
What is a clay bass darbuka?
A clay bass darbuka, called the Dohola (also spelled Doholla or Duhulla), is the largest and lowest-voiced member of the darbuka family. It has a fired-clay body and a wide natural head — roughly 27-32 cm across — that produces a deep doum, giving Egyptian and Middle Eastern rhythm sections their bass foundation.
What is the difference between a Dohola, a Sombati, and a solo darbuka?
The three are the same instrument in different sizes, named by head diameter. Solo darbukas have a head around 19-23 cm and voice bright and articulate for lead playing; Sombati (mid-bass) sits around 24-26 cm; the Dohola (bass) runs 27-32 cm and delivers the deepest tone. This drum's 30 cm head places it firmly in the Dohola bass range.
How does the Tuning Light System work on a bass darbuka?
An internal lamp with an adjustable dimmer gently warms the underside of the goatskin head, expanding the skin until it reaches the tension and pitch you want. It replaces the traditional method of holding a flame near the drum and keeps a large bass head stable as humidity changes during practice or performance.
Is a clay bass darbuka suitable for beginners?
It can be, but the Dohola is primarily an ensemble and recording instrument played beneath a solo or Sombati darbuka. At 7.2 kg it is a seated drum for stage and studio. Beginners who mainly want a lead voice usually start on a smaller solo darbuka and add a bass later for the full doum-tek pair.
How do I care for the goatskin head?
Keep the drum at moderate humidity (45-55%) and never submerge the body. Wipe the skin with a dry cloth after playing. If tension drops, warm the head with the Tuning Light System rather than a radiator or hair dryer, and always transport the instrument in the included padded gig bag to protect the clay shell.