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Weird 'novelty' musical instruments.

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So I was browsing around looking for musical ideas for my Prog-Rock Indie Folk New Age Grass Roots Jugband that I am starting as a sort of joke with my friends. Now with some Jugbands they normally have a core set of instruments that play but every so often another instrument like a slide whistle will come in and play for a few bars, maybe someone will start tap dancing or whip out a kazoo, just something new to keep things fresh and "whacky".

So I was looking through kazoos and bird whistles and bones when something caught my eye. It was.... it was a musical note.

86120_A2_Otamatone_Musical_Instrument.jpg


It is called an Otamatone. You control the pitch by running your fingers up and down its spine and you squeeze its head to allow it to let out the note. Adorbs!

It's easier if you just see it for yourself.

So all of this got me to thinking. Are there any other weird instruments out there that I don't know about? Common knowledge these days seem to extend to guitars, piano and the like but are there hidden gems like these that never caught on be it because it was too abstract to play or people didn't like the sound or a whole myriad of other reasons?


Another example of a weird musical instrument I can come up with off the top of my head is of course the theremin which apparently uses black magic to work

moog_etherwave_theremin.jpg



So what say you GAF? Are there any other crazy instruments like the Otamatone or Theremin out there?
Do any of you play them? Are any of you masters?
Have we reached the point that it is difficult to invent a new type of instrument because everything has been done already and it'll just be labelled as weird and viewed as a novelty item?
 
Well of course I came in here to suggest a theremin, but it looks like I'm not needed. (I used to be in a band that used one on ocassion).

Maybe check out a hurdy gurdy?
 
Gamelan isn't a damn novelty lol. His band should definitely have someone who plays sawblade though. I remember seeing the lead singer of Man Man using a big straw to make though crazy laser sounds.
 
Gamelan isn't a damn novelty lol. His band should definitely have someone who plays sawblade though. I remember seeing the lead singer of Man Man using a big straw to make though crazy laser sounds.

Every jug band needs a saw, that is an indisputable fact.
 
Some of the examples given are nowhere near novelty instruments. The array mbira is simply an ancient African instrument converted to current-day use. The hurdy-gurdy is a Medieval West-Central European instrument. The theremin is one of the first purely electronic musical instruments (it was invented about 100 years ago).

You want novelty? The hong (or hang, can't remember the correct form) drum. Resembles a South Asian traditional pan drum, is made by some Swiss guys.
 
not really what you're asking, but I'm a fan of taking random objects and using them for something other than their intended purpose, e.g. hitting a bag of rice and using that noise in a song
 
Every jug band needs a saw, that is an indisputable fact.

Man, it always amazes me whenever someone whips out a saw and starts playing it.
It shouldn't be able to make those notes!
You use saws for cutting! Not for playing!


The flexatone sounds hilarious. I'll definitely make a note and the Array Mbira, is that basically just a board with lots of stuff that you plink and plonk on it?
 
Gamelan isn't a damn novelty lol.
Well I certainly stand corrected. I guess I just don't hear it that much, which really doesn't make it a novelty, it just means I don't listen to the type of music that would utilize it as much as other genres. Thanks.

You want novelty? The hong (or hang, can't remember the correct form) drum. Resembles a South Asian traditional pan drum, is made by some Swiss guys.
Manu Delago - Two handsful of sound - Easily the most amazing hang drum composition I have ever heard.

Also - see Moondog
 
Whamola
The Whamola is a bass instrument used in funk-jazz styles of music. The name is a portmanteau of whammy bar and viola.

The Whamola is a direct descendant of the washtub bass, an American folk instrument popular with skiffle and jug bands, and features a single string which is manipulated via a pulley-and-lever system. The pulley mechanism is mounted in place of the tuning pegs at the top of a double-bass-style neck, which is attached to a wooden or metal body featuring a bridge, pickup and stand. The Whamola is played by hitting the string with a drum stick and either fretting it against the neck with the other hand or using the lever to alter its tension and change the pitch.

Les Claypool - Whamola
 
Never seen an Otamatone, I thought it was cello-sized until I clicked the video.

[url="http://www.oddmusic.com/gallery/]Here's a listing of weird instruments[/url] with audio clips, some are site-specific or part of an artist's collective works.

Didjibodhrán: Half Didjeridu - Half Bodhrán
The didjibodhrán is an original hybrid instrument. It's an Irish frame drum, called a bodhrán, that has a stretched goatskin head. The ceramic drum frame is also a circular didjeridu. When blowing into the didjibodhrán as a didjeridu, the drum head vibrates sympathetically, creating some eerie pseudo-reverberation effects.
didjbodf7j8b.jpg
 
Well I certainly stand corrected. I guess I just don't hear it that much, which really doesn't make it a novelty, it just means I don't listen to the type of music that would utilize it as much as other genres. Thanks.

I didn't mean for that to come across as mean or anything. It's just a bunch of Indonesian instruments. I played Gamelan in college and it was badass. You could get stoned and then go into this room with 20 other people and it was like Philip Glass drones with reverb set to like 100x. Anyone who likes modern electronic music would probably appreciate it.

I was surprised to see Pitchfork had an article on the genre earlier this year.

http://pitchfork.com/thepitch/298-gamelan-and-electronic-music/
 
Didjibodhrán: Half Didjeridu - Half Bodhrán

Man that looks amazing. It's weird little instruments like these that I never have heard of before that really fascinate me.

And this is the funniest musical instrument. Just listen to it, how could you not feel happy afterwards?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1R8Rx2db9c
My Lord that is hilarious. Someday I wish to build something like that and continuously annoy my family and friends by playing the same song over and over again.
 
The theremin's sorta cousin, the ondes martenot.
The Ondes Martenot is bloody awesome. You can tremolo the keys (they slide laterally on the frame). Needs better pitch control, though. Having one hand busy with the power cartridge is unergonomic.

Oh, and for an old 'novelty' instrument, the trumpet (Stroh) fiddle. Invented for use with mechanical recording apparata which didn't use microphones, fell out of fashion after said peripheral became commonplace.
 
I don't really consider any instrument a novelty unless it's just a simple noisemaker. Some just instruments have a different palette and/or application than others.

That being said, Peter B of Ciat-Lonbarde makes some wonderfully strange and unique instruments. They are synthesizers that work differently from any you might have seen before. They seem intended for people who want to get out of any preexisting or established norms and structure and produce completely unique timbres and sounds.

Cocoquantus
cocoquantus-1.jpg


Plumbutter
459689439_640.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-5Z_cNi1F7w

Rollz-5

And then there's Rob Hordijk's Benjolin.

t_benjolin_knob_labeling_215.jpg


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rHnuK7EVquM
 
First, have a listen to a fucking awesome song:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zw4bxcxjJ0Q

then check the instrumentation credits:
(I've highlighted what I found to be the weirdest musical intsrument)

Nils Frykdahl - guitar, flute, saxophone, insect guitar, percussion-duct, mic, stand, watering can, singing
Chuck Squier - drums, inflatable suits, giant heads, song wheel & much more
Gene Jun - guitar, violin, percussion, percussion guitar, fight with a folding chair in a parking garage, crinkling bag, fruit, ripping tape, saw blades, sleigh bells, bargooma!, beef glutton, singing
Dan Rathbun - bass, cello, trombone, cutting foam, megaphone, singing
Wes Anderson - drums, pan lids, spinning rims, trashcan, ashtray, skillet, drums army, singing
 
Another 'novelty' instrument:

The 6-pounder.

th



Used at the finale of Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture. The sheet specifies that for an authentic rendition actual cannon have to be used.

Which reminds me, I think there is a Satie piece that requires typewriters and chains to be properly performed.
 
The Carnyx
VGd3Gf5.jpg


Not sure the term 'novelty' fits this Celtic horn but as there are no surviving, original, completely intact examples I'd say its rare enough. Examples have been reconstructed though and the sound is terrifying. I can't imagine what mood soldiers would have been in hearing the noise on the opposite end of the battlefield.

The Wikipedia page is a great read and it has an example sound:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnyx

I find there's something ethereal about wind instruments and not many more so than the Carnyx.
 
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