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Building a Kora — The West African Harp-Lute
Woody

Created by

Woody

3. July 2026NO
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Building a Kora — The West African Harp-Lute

Build a kora: the great 21-string harp-lute of the Mande griots — a huge calabash gourd faced with skin, a tall notched bridge, and strings running in TWO parallel rows up a long neck, plucked with the thumbs and forefingers. A serious maker build in the harp-lute, part harp and part lute.
Intermediate
Several hours over several sessions

Instructions

1

Half harp, half lute

The kora is a 21-string harp-lute of the West African griots. A huge gourd faced with skin is the body; a long neck holds the strings, which run in two parallel rows and are plucked with the thumbs and forefingers.
2

Prepare the gourd body

Take a large calabash gourd and cut a wide flat opening across one side — the biggest gourd you can find, for a deep, full sound.

Materials for this step:

Mature Bottle GourdMature Bottle Gourd1 piece

Tools needed:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
3

Face it with skin

Stretch cow-skin rawhide drum-tight over the flat opening and lash it down. This skin is the soundboard that radiates the strings.

Materials for this step:

RawhideRawhide1 piece
Abaca Tying TwineAbaca Tying Twine1 piece
4

Fit the neck

Drive a long, straight hardwood neck right through the gourd, sticking out both ends. Two hand-posts either side of the neck give the player something to hold.

Materials for this step:

Dowel RodDowel Rod1 piece

Tools needed:

AwlAwl
5

Stand the tall bridge

Stand a tall wooden bridge upright on the skin with a row of notches down EACH edge — the strings will split into two rows, left and right, one for each thumb.

Tools needed:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
6

String it in two rows

Run twenty-one strings from the base up over the notched bridge and to the neck, eleven in the left row and ten in the right, each held by a sliding leather tuning ring or a peg.

Materials for this step:

Steel Music Wire 0.032"Steel Music Wire 0.032"1 piece
Tuning PegsTuning Pegs9 pieces
7

Tune and play

Tune the two rows so they interleave into a scale, then pluck with the thumbs and forefingers of both hands, the left and right rows answering each other.
8

Compendium — the harp-lute

The kora is a 'harp-lute', and its clever bridge is why. On a true harp, each string runs at its own angle straight from a soundboard to a neck, one string per note; on a lute, a few strings run parallel over a bridge and along a neck. The kora does both at once: its strings run parallel like a lute, but they pass over a TALL bridge notched down both edges, so they leave the bridge in two flat planes, one on the left and one on the right — effectively two little harps sharing one body, one for each thumb. Each string is a single fixed note (the kora, like a harp, is not stopped or fretted — you simply pluck the string you want), and the two interleaved rows let the player weave fast, rippling patterns with just thumbs and forefingers. The sound is radiated by a stretched skin over a giant calabash gourd, exactly the drum-like resonator idea of the ektara and the banjo, scaled up. Strings obey the same rule as the musical bow — tension, length and mass set the pitch — and the kora belongs with the lyre of Ur and every soundbox-and-strings instrument, the branch of the family that keeps one string per note. It is the instrument of the Mande griots (jeliw), the hereditary musician-historians of West Africa.

Materials

6

Tools Required

2

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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