The genus is used as tropical hardwood
timber and is traded under the common names
Bubinga,
African rosewood,
Amazoue,
Amazique,
Aevazingo, and
Avangkol. The timber is also used for
inlays and in the manufacture of high-end furniture (especially by contemporary
Arts and Crafts artists), on high-end woodworking tools such as the front knobs and rear handles of smooth planes, knife handles and medium-end tobacco pipes. The timber is often used by
luthiers for
harps and other instruments, such as
bass guitars, because of its mellow and well-rounded sound and the various range of grain patterns.
Warwick Bass and
Ibanez are known to use bubinga and ovangkol. It has been used in
drum shells as well. Drum companies such as
Tama offer various high-end
drum kits with plies of Bubinga in the shells. Crafter also uses Bubinga on some instruments. Bubinga is also used in both acoustic and electric guitars for its figure and hardness. Bubinga is also commonly used for the manufacture of some woodwind instruments, particularly high end recorders, because of its fine appearance and physical density. Species of
Guibourtia also produce Congo
copal. ==References==