Description"Bagabo Musicians." Philippine Reservation, Department of Anthropology, 1904 World's Fair.jpg
English: Title: "Bagabo Musicians." Philippine Reservation, Department of Anthropology, 1904 World's Fair.
English: A Bagobo man holds a kutiyapi and two Bagobo women or girls hold tube zithers. These tube zithers have been labeled "s'ludoys" (see caption from original upload on French-language Wikipedia), which is a name used by the Tboli people and Blaan people who share Mindanao with the Bagobo.[1] The Bagobo word is taw-go, tugo, or padang.[1] However the Banobo have been considered part of the Manobo people (see Manobo languages), and that group uses the word or a variation: "salorai, saluray, saluroy, saw-ray."[2] Additionally, among the "Bilaan, Ata Matigsalog, and T’boli polychordal zithers are played in combination with the two-stringed lute."[2] The Bagabo/Manobo and Ata Matigsalog have been considered together as a linguistic group, though now it is understood that they share a language but are not genetically related).
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Captions
In a 1904 exhibit by the Department of Anthropology at the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis, Bagabo natives are displayed, a man holding a kutiyapi and two women or girls holding sludoy tube-zithers.