LIST
FEGURÐ OG VELLÍÐAN
HANDVERK
MENNING OG SAGA
SKEMMTUN
UMHVERFI
MATUR OG DRYKKUR
GRÆN FRAMTÍÐ
ÖFUGVERKFRÆÐI
VÍSINDI
ÍÞRÓTTIR
TÆKNI
KLÆÐANLEG TÆKNI
Building a Talking Drum — West Africa's Squeeze-to-Speak Dùndún
Woody

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Woody

3. júlí 2026NO
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Building a Talking Drum — West Africa's Squeeze-to-Speak Dùndún

Build a dùndún talking drum: an hourglass drum with a skin at each end joined by long lacing you SQUEEZE to bend the pitch up and down, gliding it to imitate the tones of speech. Carve the hourglass body, head both ends, lace the tension cords, and play with a curved beater. A serious maker build in the variable-tension pressure drum — the drum that talks.
Miðlungs
Several hours over a couple of sessions

Leiðbeiningar

1

A drum you can squeeze to talk

The dùndún is shaped like an hourglass with a drum skin at BOTH ends, joined by long cords down the sides. Tuck it under your arm and squeeze the cords — the heads tighten and the pitch rises; release and it falls. Slide that pitch and the drum seems to speak.
2

Carve the hourglass body

Shape a hollow hourglass — wide and open at both ends, pinched to a narrow waist in the middle, bored right through. Traditionally carved from a single log; built up from wood, keep the bore open end to end and the walls even.

Efni fyrir þetta skref:

Dry Softwood BoardDry Softwood Board1 piece
PVA Wood GluePVA Wood Glue1 piece

Nauðsynleg verkfæri:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
HacksawHacksaw
3

Cut the two heads

Cut two round rawhide heads, each a bit wider than the drum's open ends. Goat skin is traditional and gives a bright, speaking tone.

Efni fyrir þetta skref:

RawhideRawhide2 piece
4

Make two rings and mount the heads

Bend a ring to fit each open end. Soak each skin, fold it over its ring, and seat one head on each end of the hourglass so both ends are covered.

Efni fyrir þetta skref:

Bronze WireBronze Wire1 piece
5

Lace the tension cords

Lace one long cord back and forth the FULL length of the drum, zig-zagging between the two head rings so the cords run down the outside past the waist. These cords connect the two heads — pulling them shortens the distance and stretches BOTH skins at once. This lacing is the whole secret of the talking drum.

Efni fyrir þetta skref:

Abaca Tying TwineAbaca Tying Twine1 piece

Nauðsynleg verkfæri:

AwlAwl
6

Fit the curved beater

Shape a beater with a hooked, bent tip — the curve lets you strike the head cleanly while your arm is busy squeezing the cords.

Efni fyrir þetta skref:

Dowel RodDowel Rod1 piece
7

Play and make it speak

Hold the drum between your upper arm and ribs with the cords under your arm. Strike a head with the curved beater; SQUEEZE your arm to pull the cords and bend the note UP, relax to let it fall. Glide between pitches to trace the rising and falling tones of spoken words.
8

Compendium — the variable-tension pressure drum

Every drumhead follows one rule: the tighter it is stretched, the higher it sounds. Most drums fix that tension once — a djembe is roped tight and then it stays put, tuned to a single pitch. The talking drum's genius is that it makes tension ADJUSTABLE while you play. Its two heads are tied to each other by cords running the length of the hourglass body, so squeezing the cords inward pulls the two rings together and stretches both skins at once; the pitch leaps up, and the instant you release, it drops back — and because you can squeeze by any amount, the drum doesn't jump between fixed notes but GLIDES smoothly through them. That glide is why it 'talks': the languages of West Africa (Yoruba, Dagbani and others) are tonal, where the up-and-down pitch of a syllable carries meaning, so a skilled player slides the drum's pitch to trace the melody of real spoken phrases — sending proverbs, praise and news across a village, a true drum language. The hourglass-with-two-heads shape and its squeeze-lacing are shared with pressure drums right across Africa and Asia — it is a close cousin of the Korean janggu, another hourglass drum, and it uses the very same rope-tensioned skin as the djembe, only here the ropes are meant to be pulled mid-performance. Carried by griots and by the Yoruba àyàn drummer families for many centuries, the dùndún is the original talking machine.

Efni

6

Nauðsynleg verkfæri

3

You can swap these in

Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.

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