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Making an Mbira — The African Thumb Piano
Woody

Created by

Woody

3. July 2026NO
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Making an Mbira — The African Thumb Piano

Make an mbira: a hardwood board fitted with a row of tuned metal tongues you pluck with your thumbs, often set in a gourd with rattling buzzers. Cut and tune the metal keys, mount them over a bridge, and play. A buildable project in the plucked metal tongue — many jaw-harp tongues made into a keyboard.
Intermediate
A few hours over a couple of sessions

Instructions

1

Tongues you pluck with your thumbs

The mbira is a hardwood board carrying a row of tuned metal tongues (keys). You press each key down with a thumb and let it spring back, plucking out the note — many springy tongues laid out like a keyboard.
2

Prepare the soundboard

Shape a flat hardwood soundboard — the harder and more resonant the wood, the brighter the ring.

Materials for this step:

Bloodwood BoardBloodwood Board1 piece

Tools needed:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
3

Make the metal keys

Cut and flatten springy steel into a set of thin tongues (keys) of graduated length — longer keys for low notes, shorter for high. File the tips smooth.

Materials for this step:

Spring Steel Strip (1095, 1x12 inch)Spring Steel Strip (1095, 1x12 inch)2 pieces

Tools needed:

Metal FileMetal File
4

Build the bridge and pressure bar

Fix a hardwood bridge across the board and a straight pressure bar just above it. The keys clamp between them, held down at one end and free to spring at the other.

Materials for this step:

Steel Music Wire 0.032"Steel Music Wire 0.032"1 piece

Tools needed:

AwlAwl
5

Mount and tune the keys

Slide each key under the pressure bar. Push a key IN (shorter free end) to raise its note, or OUT (longer free end) to lower it — that is how you tune an mbira, by sliding not filing.
6

Add a gourd and buzzers

Rest the board in a big hollow gourd to make it louder, and fix loose bottle-caps or shells to the board so they buzz — the shimmering rattle is part of the mbira's voice.

Materials for this step:

Mature Bottle GourdMature Bottle Gourd1 piece
7

Play with your thumbs

Hold the mbira in both hands and pluck the keys downward with your thumbs (and one key up with a finger), weaving the interlocking patterns of Shona music.
8

Compendium — the plucked tongue, multiplied

The mbira is a lamellophone: an instrument of thin tongues (lamellae) fixed at one end and free to vibrate at the other. Pluck a tongue and it springs back and forth at a pitch set by how long, thick and stiff its free part is — short, stiff tongues buzz fast and sound high; long ones vibrate slowly and sound low. That is exactly the tongue of the jaw harp, only here there is a whole tuned SET of them side by side, so instead of one drone you have a keyboard you can play melodies and interlocking parts on. You tune each key not by filing but by sliding it under the pressure bar to lengthen or shorten its free end — longer is lower, shorter is higher. The hardwood board and the gourd it sits in amplify the quiet tongues, and loose buzzers add the shimmering rattle (a deliberate mirliton) that Shona players prize. Made across southern Africa for well over a thousand years — the Shona mbira, the kalimba, the many 'thumb pianos' — it is the ancestor of the modern kalimba, and its cousin is the free reed of the sheng, a tongue set vibrating by breath rather than by a thumb.

Materials

4

Tools Required

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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