Oud Instrument Electric or Acoustic

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    The oud is the fretless, short-necked lute at the heart of Arabic, Turkish, Persian and Greek music and the direct ancestor of the European lute. Its deep, resonant voice and smooth fretless fingerboard have carried more than a thousand years of maqam melody and taksim improvisation. At Sala Muzik we source and set up the full oud family β€” Arabic, Turkish, Syrian, Iraqi and electric β€” handpicked from luthiers we have worked with for over fifteen years, every instrument inspected and tuned before it ships.

    Quick Recommendation β€” Beginners: start with the Arabic Handmade Walnut Oud AAO-108 ($399) β€” walnut bowl, spruce face, an easy and forgiving player. Prefer the Turkish sound: Turkish Mahogany Oud AO-101M ($399). Travel, practice and stage: Professional Arabic Electric Oud OUDE EA5 ($699). Professional, master-built: Special Arabic Oud UNQ-2A by Miras ($1,999).

    Quick picks by player type

    Best for beginners
    Arabic Handmade Walnut Oud AAO-108$399 Β· Walnut bowl, spruce face, Arabic tuning
    Best Turkish tone
    Turkish Mahogany Oud AO-101M$399 Β· Handmade Turkish oud, ebony pegs
    Best for stage and travel
    Professional Arabic Electric Oud OUDE EA5$699 Β· Pickup-equipped β€” amp-ready, quiet practice
    Best for professionals
    Special Arabic Oud UNQ-2A by Miras$1,999 Β· Master-built by Miras Lute

    The oud family β€” pick the right shape

    "Oud" covers several regional traditions. The body size, scale length and tuning change the tone and the music each one is built for. Browse by type:

    Arabic vs Turkish oud β€” which one to start with?

    The two main oud traditions sound and feel different. An Arabic oud is larger and tuned lower for a deep, full voice; a Turkish oud is slightly smaller and tuned about a step higher, giving a brighter, more articulate tone. Choose by the music you want to play.

    Feature Arabic Oud Turkish Oud
    Body Larger bowl Slightly smaller bowl
    Tuning Lower, deeper About a step higher
    Tone Deep, full, bassy Bright, focused, articulate
    Scale length Longer (~60-62 cm) Shorter (~58-59 cm)
    Best music Arabic maqam, classical takht Turkish classical and folk
    Best for Players of Arabic repertoire Players of Turkish repertoire

    Full breakdown in our blog: Choosing the Right Oud β€” A Guide to Types, Styles and What to Look For.

    What makes a quality oud

    Four things separate a starter oud from a professional instrument: tonewoods, the bowl, the fretless neck, and setup.

    • Tonewoods β€” a solid spruce face over a walnut or mahogany bowl ages and resonates far better than laminate. Tight, even grain matters more than a flawless look.
    • The bowl β€” built from many thin ribs. Clean, gapless joinery and consistent rib colour are the marks of careful work and long-term stability.
    • Fretless fingerboard β€” usually ebony, and it must be true and smooth. There are no frets to hide an uneven neck, so the fingerboard quality directly shapes intonation.
    • Pegs and setup β€” smooth, well-fitted ebony pegs hold tune; accurate string action makes the oud comfortable to play. Every oud we ship is set up and tuned first.

    A short history

    The oud's name comes from the Arabic al-ud β€” "the wood." Its ancestors reach back to ancient Mesopotamia and Persia, but the instrument as we know it took shape across the medieval Arab world and spread with it: east into Persia and Anatolia, west through North Africa into Andalusian Spain, where it became the direct ancestor of the European lute. For centuries the oud has been the lead voice of the Arabic takht ensemble and Turkish classical music, the instrument of choice for the improvised taksim. Twentieth-century masters such as Serif Muhiddin Targan and Munir Bashir reshaped it as a solo concert instrument, and today players from Istanbul to Los Angeles keep that tradition moving forward.

    FAQ

    Is the oud a good instrument for beginners?

    Yes. Because the oud is fretless, beginners develop ear and intonation naturally from the first lesson. A well-set-up beginner oud such as the Arabic Handmade Walnut AAO-108 is comfortable to fret and already sounds genuinely musical, so early practice is rewarding rather than frustrating.

    Should I buy an Arabic or a Turkish oud?

    Choose by the tradition you want to play. An Arabic oud is larger and tuned lower for a deep, full sound suited to Arabic maqam music; a Turkish oud is smaller and tuned about a step higher for a brighter, more articulate tone suited to Turkish repertoire. Neither is harder to learn β€” the choice is musical.

    How much does a good oud cost?

    A reliable, well-set-up beginner oud starts around $350-$450. Electric and silent ouds sit near $700, and professional, master-built instruments from named luthiers run roughly $1,900-$2,500 and above. Every tier at Sala Muzik is inspected and tuned before shipping.

    What is the difference between an oud and a lute?

    They are close relatives. The European lute descends directly from the oud, carried into Spain during the medieval period. The main differences are that the oud is fretless while the lute has tied gut frets, and the oud is tuned and played for the maqam music of the Middle East rather than European repertoire.

    Will my oud need tuning when it arrives?

    Most likely yes β€” and that is completely normal. Every oud is strung, set up and inspected by our specialists before dispatch and ships well protected, but an oud rarely holds its tuning through a long journey; changes in string tension and handling shift it in transit. Re-tuning on arrival is the easy first step of ownership, not a fault or shipping damage β€” see our guide on how to tune your oud, and keep it in a soft or hard case for ongoing travel and storage.

    What is a silent or electric oud for?

    A silent or electric oud has a built-in pickup and a lightweight body, so you can plug into an amp or audio interface for stage and studio work, and practise quietly with headphones without disturbing anyone. It is a practical second oud for travelling and performing players.

    How do I care for my oud?

    Keep the oud in a stable environment β€” sudden changes in humidity are the main risk to a thin spruce face. Store it in its case, loosen string tension slightly for long storage, and change strings when the tone goes dull, typically every few months for regular players.

    Crafted in IstanbulBy trusted luthiers Β· since 2009
    Worldwide shippingCarrier chosen at checkout
    1-year warranty+ direct luthier support
    10-day returnsFrom delivery, original condition