Mine (Zimbabwean 🇿🇼) is the mbira.
For a feel of the sound: https://youtu.be/R5RMYh-n3LU
Jah Prayzah the guy singing is a renowned musician.
They seem to be using the mbira in modernized covers, but the metal pestle order seem the same as the more traditional looking ones.
P/S I’m not self promoting the YouTube link. It just shows how the mbira sounds unedited.
I remember hearing a mbira recording as a young child and loving it. (I didn’t know that word, though, people called it a « thumb piano ».) Then at some point I had the opportunity to try one, but I didn’t know how to play so the result was disappointing, and the metal things made my tiny fingers hurt, ha ha. The video sounds really nice!
Wow, that’s awesome.
Had I only heard it I would’ve thought some kind of spinet.
Thanks for the link, those young ladies can play!
Nice! Which country is this and what’s the name of the instrument the 2 ladies are playing?
This is Switzerland.
And the instrument is actually called Hackbrett (translates to hacking board).Why is it called Salzburg but is from Switzerland? Or is there a Salzburg in Switzerland, I am only aware of the one in Austria.
Sorry, the type of instrument is from Salzburg.
The recorded concert and the musicians are from Switzerland.
That’s excellent, and those two in particular look to be extremely talented!
It’s an ancient instrument, first depictions are from 600BC Assyria, arrived via Greek and Roman culture to Europe. Common name is hammered dulcimer and it has countless versions for each region of the world, with more or less distinctive features. E.g. Hungarian cimbalom had a pedal, in some regions the strings are vertical,etc.
nyckelharpa 🇸🇪
That’s a great sound.
yeah they really fill the room when harmonising.
Lovely!
Ah, beat me to it! It’s a great instrument.
The Valiha ; it’s basically a tube guitar lol

Madagascar 🇲🇬!
Didgeridoo
Australia! 🇦🇺
USA alone is too easy, so I’m gonna go with Ohio. Edison invented the phonograph, which made listening to music anytime and anywhere a reality. The Wurlitzer organ was from Cincinnati, but i should be fair and say that while it was developed in Cincinnati, production was done in New York.
You could also add the Fender strat and the Gibson Les Paul to that list
Wait how are those ohioan
If you’ve listened to Nordic metal at all I’m sure you’ve heard it in some song
One of my faves so far
Thanks. It’s very folk-y, I feel like.
The drum kit or set - USA:
Also electric guitar, electric bass, and synthesizer are all from the US also
I didn’t realize the drum set originated in the U.S. but it makes sense with jazz.
And I believe the electric guitar as well! George Beauchamp, along with Adolph Rickenbacker developed the first electromagnetic pickups.
Another unrelated U.S. one that comes to mind is the sousaphone
It has 120 strings and you play it with sticks and a foot: the cimbalom.
A guy in the 19th century Budapest modernized the ancient hammered dulcimer by adding a dampening pedal and rearranging the strings.
The cajon in Peru is emblematic of traditional Creole music that is often played in songs during lunch or party meals. Just hearing it makes me hungry!!
Btw the mbira has a beautiful sound, do you know if it’s difficult to learn?Thank you! I think the mbira requires similar dexterity to a piano if I’m not mistaken.
Makes sense. Cool!!
Canada gave us the Ugly Stick and the Sackbut.
Saxophone!
The Trautonium.
Wow reminds me of The Hobbit
Lot’s a of kids learn to play a 5-string version, but it goes up to dozens of strings, and some have a pedal to control sustain.
The origins of the instrument are finnish, but it’s also popular in Japan, which is why you’ll see a lot of stuff online about it in Japanese. Including the video I linked.
🇫🇮!! Nice
It seems like the local version of the Zither. You can have wildly different playing style on that:
Well yes. There’s only so many ways to suspend strings for musical purposes.
From the Kanteles Wikipedia:
It belongs to the southeast Baltic box zither family known as the Baltic psaltery, along with the Estonian kannel, the Latvian kokles, the Lithuanian kanklės, and the Russian gusli.
Plenty of versions of the same thing all over the world.
The Drumbone was invented in my country.
You asked for one, but I’ll try to sneak this in because it actually predates my country by 15 years: the Glass Armonica. Invented in 1761 by Benjamin Franklin himself.
Interesting!













