Citations:adufe


 * 1934, The Monthly Musical Record
 * The majority, however, went straight to one of the booths, purchased an &#39; adufe &#39; and forthwith burst into song. The &#39;adufe&#39; is a musical instrument sufficiently  curious to warrant a short digression. Introduced into the Peninsula by the Moors,  as appears from its Arabic name, it is a square hand-drum or tambourine,  consisting of a wooden frame covered on either side with tight-drawn goatskin.  To add to its resonance, metal spangles are fastened to interior wires carried  across the frame ...
 * 2017, Mark Brill, Music of Latin America and the Caribbean, Routledge (ISBN 9781351682305)
 * Mark Brill. zarabandas are also popular, deriving their name from the colonial dance that was popular in the region. Zarabandas are played by (often) home- made rudimentary violins (or their archaic antecedent called rebecs), tiples, and  guitars of different shapes and sizes, and a harp. The ensemble is accompanied  by an adufe, a square double-headed frame drum of Portuguese origin, which  contains objects within it that rattle. (The adufe is sometimes substituted with a  snare drum.) ...