Here you can find a Marvelous and Magnificent Musical Instruments. Just have a look on bellow.
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A
 musical instrument is a device created or adapted for the purpose of 
making musical sounds. In principle, any object that produces sound can 
serve as a musical instrument—it is through purpose that the object 
becomes a musical instrument. The history of musical instruments dates 
back to the beginnings of human culture. The academic study of musical 
instruments is called organology.
The date and origin of the first
 device of disputed status as a musical instrument dates back as far as 
67,000 years old; artifacts commonly accepted to be early flutes date 
back as far as about 37,000 years old. However, most historians believe 
determining a specific time of musical instrument invention to be 
impossible due to the subjectivity of the definition.
Musical instruments developed 
independently in many populated regions of the world. However, contact 
among civilizations resulted in the rapid spread and adaptation of most 
instruments in places far from their origin. By the Middle Ages, 
instruments from Mesopotamia could be found in Maritime Southeast Asia 
and Europeans were playing instruments from North Africa. Development in
 the Americas occurred at a slower pace, but cultures of North, Central,
 and South America shared musical instruments.
A HAPI Drum 
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An
 easy to play melodic steel tongue drum, inspired by the Hang Drum, The 
unique tone of the HAPI Drum, available at HapiTones.com is created by a
 tuned vibrating tongue of steel. The concept is similar to a wooden 
tongue drum. When a tongue is quickly and lightly struck with the finger
 or mallet, it vibrates creating sound waves.
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Aeolian Wind Harp
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Played
 by the wind; free of the touch of human hands, Sometimes called 
Harmonic Harps, wind harps originated in ancient Greece (circa 6 BC) and
 flourised throughout the Renaissance era. Aeolian Harps are rare, 
beautiful instruments designed to be played by the wind; free of the 
touch of human hands.
Amazing Pencilina
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Collision
 of dulcimer, bass, koto, slide guitar. Bradford Reed fights and tames 
the idiosyncrasies of the pencilina, an original instrument of his own 
design and construction.The pencilina is an electric board zither played
 primarily by striking the strings with sticks; also by plucking and 
bowing.
Aquaggaswack
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29
 hanging pot lids, a gong tree with a wide sonic palette. he first 
version of the Aquaggaswack, built in 1996, only had about 18 pot lids 
and was narrower (It didn't have the outer sections). This second 
version, revamped in 1998, has 29 pot lids representing a majority of 
the notes in an octave, plus some quarter-tones. The center lids have 
mostly "bell"-like tones and the outer sets have a more "gong"-like 
tone. All the lids were obtained from thrift stores and friends.
Atlantic City Boardwalk Hall Organ
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World's
 largest and loudest musical instrument, 150 tons and 33,112 pipes. The 
Convention Hall Auditorium Organ is the pipe organ in the Main 
Auditorium of the Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey, built by 
the Midmer-Losh Organ Company. The great hall itself is also part of the
 world's largest pipe organ and was formerly known as the Atlantic City 
Convention Hall, which can seat 41,000 people in the main auditorium.
The
 massive organ has 33,112 pipes in 455 ranks, including a full-length 64
 foot Diaphone Profunda, ten 32 foot ranks, and manual and pedal reeds 
that are under 100 inches of wind pressure, while most organs never 
exceed 10 inches of pressure. In total, there are 4 stops on 100 inches 
of wind pressure, and there are 10 stops on 50 inches of wind pressure, 
ear burtsing stuff, but all in order to fill the giant room with sound. 
The electric blowers that power the organ approach 1,000 horsepower, the
 kind of power needed to fill a hall larger than 15 million cubic feet. A
 tour of the entire organ takes 4 1/2 hours.
Balalaika
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3-string
 folk instrument from Russia and the Ukraine. The Balalaika family 
includes, from the highest-pitched to the lowest, the prima, sekunda, 
alto, bass and contrabass balalaika. All have three-sided bodies, spruce
 or fir tops and backs made of from three to nine wooden sections, and 
all have three strings. The most common solo instrument is the prima, 
tuned E-E-A (the two lower strings being tuned to the same pitch). The 
piccolo, prima, and secunda balalaikas are ideally strung with gut (or, 
today, usually nylon) strings on the lower pegs and a wire string on the
 top peg.
Bamboo Saxophones
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Sax's
 crafted by Ángel Sampedro del Rio. Carefully electronically tuned, 
Ángel Sampedro del Rio's Bamboo saxophones consist of segments of bamboo
 successively larger in diameter. This progression has now been 
demonstrated by acoustical studies as the most harmonically effective. 
Bandura
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Ukrainian
 Bandura by Dwight Newton. Ukrainian bandura -- 36 strings, 
walnut/spruce, original modified bracing pattern. The invention of an 
instrument combining the elements of lute and psaltery itself is 
currently creditable to Francesco Landini, an Italian lutenist-composer 
of trecento. Filippo Villani writes in "Liber de civitatis Florentiae": 
"...(Landini) invented a new sort of instrument, a cross between lute 
and psaltery, which he called the serena serenarum, an instrument that 
produces an exquisite sound when its strings are struck." 
Glass Armonica
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Invented
 in 1761 by Benjamin Franklin, the Glass Armonica was one of his 
favorite inventions. The word "Armonica" is the Italian word for 
"Harmony". It is played on the same principle of rubbing a wet finger 
around the rim of a wineglass. The glass bowls are individually tuned, 
so that they do not need to be filled with water, though the players 
fingers do need to be moistened with water. The glass bowls are tuned by
 size, mounted one inside each other with cork on a metal spindle. The 
glasses are made to spin with a flywheel attached to a foot pedal. The 
composer Mozart, being into Oddmusic himself, composed two of his works 
specifically for the Glass Armonica.
Synphonium
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If
 you're ever in Toulouse, France, look out for pianist Philippe Bataille
 and his Synphonium. A year in the making, powered by a car battery, it 
contains 2 synthesizers, and other goodies too secret to be disclosed.
Wheelharp
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While
 adjusting his Hurdy Gurdy one day, Jon Jones of Southeast Missouri 
thought it would be nice to be able to select which string came into 
contact with the wheel, and also have lots and lots of strings!
After about a year and a half of
 working out the idea in his head, he found out about the Geigenwerk, 
which is very similar in principal, though the construction is quite a 
bit different. Jon stuck with his original design, because of all the 
planning he put into it, and like most creative experimenters, he just 
HAD to see if it worked. 
The Javanese Bonang
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The
 Javanese Bonang has a wooden frame on which brass gongs are strung 
together. The brass heads are struck with padded sticks to create the 
desired sound and tone.
Kalimbas
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Kalimbas,
 also called thumb pianos, come from a family of instruments with a wide
 variety of names, Mbira is probably the most well known. They have 
their origin in many parts of Africa. These "Made in Oregon" Kalimbas 
are handcrafted from homegrown gourds and a variety of hardwood tops. 
Each is carefully tuned with two rows of keys tuned an octave apart. The
 lowest note is in the center. To walk up the scale the thumbs alternate
 left-right, left-right etc. To care for the instrument keep it dry and 
protected from long exposure to hot sun.
Best Regards,
Jagdeesh
Oracle SOA Consultant & Corporate Trainer
Email: jagadeesh.ravi4@gmail.com
Skype ID: jagadeesh.ravi
Best Regards,
Jagdeesh
Oracle SOA Consultant & Corporate Trainer
Email: jagadeesh.ravi4@gmail.com
Skype ID: jagadeesh.ravi






















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