Yes the sound wasn't great in this first try. I have added the bottom of the case since then, the sound is much better. I have also put 7 piezo pickups in the bass tongue drum (on per note), connected to a good amplifier the sound is awesome !
Yes, I have build a bass tongue drum which you can see on the music sample at the end of the video. But the overall size of this bass tongue drum is too small, it is not resonant enough, I had to add some piezo pickup to make it usable. But since the Paduk is a very expensive wood, I didn't want to make large instruments at first...
The one that has a single row? I can see it being expensive but worth it! Theres a store near me that has large pieces of exotic slab wood and its definitely expensive!
It does. I think the sound will be very bad with coniferous wood, I could have tried with oak but since this is a long process to make a drum, I tried with the best wood possible. I could have spare 10$ with a cheaper wood, but I don't regret to have bought paduk for this project. All marimbas and xylophone of the world are build with exotic dense woods, I guess it's for a reason !
@@narnodel2 Several reasons actually but most importantly, longevity. There are some lovely light, soft woods that have amazing tone and resonance but they get absolutely destroyed after a very short time. Tuning goes out as the fibers compress and the tone shifts a lot more with humidity changes. This is according to a traditional Marimba maker I spoke with in Africa. He showed me Marimbas made of anything from pine to tortoise shell. Hearing a marimba band of 34 people was truly breathtaking.
and you'd be correct! there are specific types of wood used for African Slit Drums. Density is the main requirement along with others like:flexibility and tensile strength, how much moisture a wood will absorb or repel, how much resistance a wood will endure under hot & cold temperatures all of which will affect the resonance of the body as a whole.Btw the top or Head should not be permanently affixed to it's other 4 sides since all heads will either be damaged over a period of time due to playing, cracking and/or wear and plus the heads need to be able to be interchangable, because heads have different distinctive tones of tuned musical scales!
Yikes, what a shame there's so many silly comments by people who think 'common tools' only refers to a hammer and some glue. Fascinating to see the process behind making one of these, I hope to try making one myself one day!
Straight up stealing the idea for the "high end table saw", that's genius. And being a musician, I guess this would be a pretty nice project to start with. Thanks for the video!
@@Asdayasman Suicidal? Stop clutching your pearls mate, it's a bloody jigsaw. I've been using power tools since my late teens (I'm 41). I've been taught the correct way to use most of them, and the rest I taught myself by watching professionals online. Yes, I was also taught that you should never modify a power tool, and I'd never attempt something like this with a grinder, circ saw, recipro saw, cold cut saw, drop saw, or anything like that. But in this case, wearing safety goggles and a pair of suitable gloves mitigates about 99% of the risk in this clever modification, as long as you're not a moron and you engineer it correctly. I've fabricated enough stuff in my time to be fairly confident that I'll be able to use this without dying and with all my digits intact when I'm done. 😉
Aftertune They play 21 samples across 3 octaves starting at 4:05. You could record the audio from this video using AudioHijack, then slice up the audio, each to a different white key (7 diatonic notes per octave) spanning 3 octaves. It would take a bit of prep, but if you trimmed the slices to the start of each transient and added some fades, I'm sure you could have an "instrument" in about an hour. Define a velocity range + compression, maybe some reverb with a short decay time. Hope this helps!
I wonder how a much softer wood like fir, spruce, Cedar or pine would sound as the resonant top? I imagine not near as resonant as the dense woods I see are typically used on these.
There would be a sound, but I don't think coniferous wood will give you a nice tone, they are way too soft. If you want to try to build one without buying exotic woods, maybe try with beech or oak which have a harder wood.
En effet ça fait longtemps, j'ai en ai tellement à faire, mais le temps file toujours trop vite... On a rejoué Vaki Kosovar à St Chéron vendredi soir dernier au fait ! Tu as raté quelque chose...
This is really cool, I'd love to try and build one of these myself (which I want to try sometime in the future) but I lack pretty much all the fancy tools that I see people using lol XD
Very nice! It took me several tries to get a drum that sounds good. You do a few things differently than me so it is nice to see you can still get a great result!
Do these follow any standard note pattern so that any player can always know where the notes are, or will you be stuck with the one that you made because your notes were randomly placed, and once you get used to it you will find difficult to play one made by someone else?
That is a good question, I checked yesterday with my tuner, the pitch hasn't changed 4 years later. But the instrument stayed at home, maybe it wouldn't have been as stable if I've had played it outside every day.
@@narnodel2 thanks for the update...it's an interesting instrument to consider building. I was trying to think of a clever way to make it fine tune-able....maybe a sliding bar weight underneath? But maybe your results shows that detail is not needed!
@@jasonpillingmusic Yes you can fine-tune it with sticking some weights at the end of the bars. On my first tries, before removing wood at the base of the bar, I used this method which is reliable (unless you try to drop the pitch a fifth down !). It could be a solution if you are afraid that your drum won't stay in tune, first tune it slightly too sharp by scraping the wood, the finish the tuning by sticking metal weights. So later you will be able to tune the bars up of down if the drum is out of tune.
That sounds great! Gotta say, your jigsaw table is very nifty, I do not have a bandsaw, so using a jig saw like that could help in same situations. Your handplane might need a bit of sharpening I think :-)
Yes, that is a very cheap plane, and I’m not very good at sharpening. You can use the tool you want to cut the frame, I used my bandsaw but there is other ways !
About 15cm on the bass side, and 8cm on the treble side. But as I said the precise length is not very important, the most important is how you tune it with the router and the gouge.
You probably won't have to tune it more than once every ten years. I have done mine two years ago and it is still in tune. I haven't glued the bottom board so it is still possible to access the tongues from below and scrape some wood if necessary.
Don't be depressed, if you don't have any power tool, it is possible to make it with hand tools (good chisels, a saw, a fretsaw, and a plane). But instead of being able to make a drum in one day, you will spend one week. The most useful tools for this project (the router and the jigsaw) are not expensive tools, I you want to do some woodwork you will need them one day.
@@narnodel2 sure, it's the same in almost every hobby. Even if you want drive radio control car you'll still need strange tools and parts. For a stranger who hits such a world for the first time, the amount of tools and various crap is overwhelming. But the sounds made by the wood are dazzling 👍🙃
That tune in the end sounds like a ringtone I'd install.
You could make it one, I know how on apple devices
@@squidguy7907Well I should deposit this tune, if I get royalties every time a phone rings I will be a millionaire soon.
@@narnodel2 id use it if i could
Arnaud Delannoy can you upload it somewhere, I really want it as a ring tone
Привет! Посублимируем вместе весну??? 5 минут и она всю ночь будет крутиться у вас в голове,🌸🌿🌸🥰🎹🎹
“I use a very high-end table saw”
XD
I saw one of ryobi's chop saws break on the arm and the blade section went flying.
NimsChannel yikes! Gotta wear protection for a reason
Protection won't help with that. lol. Better build quality might. He's lucky it landed into his chest blade side away.
That IS pretty lucky! :O
The tune at the end sounds like an early 2000s playstation game song
I immediately thought I was playing Jak and Daxter
The Crash Bandicoot soundtrack has some of these vibes too.
I was thinking every zoo/safari based shows sound track ever
@@robbe73 Haha heck jeah. Instant Jungle feel
Dark Cloud vibes 100%
never have i been so excited about wood
Liar
I love your tablesaw man cutting edge tech right there.
Plays each note separately - me: yeaa idunno dude... sounds off
Plays final tune - me O_O *changes to loincloth** im feeling this one
Yes the sound wasn't great in this first try. I have added the bottom of the case since then, the sound is much better. I have also put 7 piezo pickups in the bass tongue drum (on per note), connected to a good amplifier the sound is awesome !
@@narnodel2 Im lovin it man, excellent work :D
lmfaooooo
Me already in my loincloth... THIS IS MY FUCKING JAM!
This is incredible. I want to try this project myself. Fantastic job.
The outro has me straight up vibin
I want to see the bass version of these, just a huge slab of wood
Yes, I have build a bass tongue drum which you can see on the music sample at the end of the video. But the overall size of this bass tongue drum is too small, it is not resonant enough, I had to add some piezo pickup to make it usable. But since the Paduk is a very expensive wood, I didn't want to make large instruments at first...
The one that has a single row? I can see it being expensive but worth it! Theres a store near me that has large pieces of exotic slab wood and its definitely expensive!
Let's make a subcontrabass version the size of Kansas
Thanks for the tutorial I made it and everything went fine.
You're welcome ! Have you made the same note pattern or have you tried your own one ?
love the table saw!!
I just found my new favourite instrumental!
Nice mellow sounds. Great work
Genial!!! El sonido que produce ese instrumento es muy parecido al de una marimba...
4:20 - put it on spotify! :D
John-T. Lypsilon It sounds like a future standard iPhone ringtone.
@@AnnoDominiMCMXCV I hope they will pay him well then
This is literally the ambient music from planet zoo its not original lol
@@CuroxX lol
John-T. Lypsilon look it up
Creativity at its best.. Hats off guys
..awesome 🙂
sound amazing
Brilliant. Just terrific.
Very nice, and very good.
this is amazing dude
Wow very talented
Does the type of wood have an immense effect on the instrument? I figure density will probably play a bit of a role in it
It does. I think the sound will be very bad with coniferous wood, I could have tried with oak but since this is a long process to make a drum, I tried with the best wood possible. I could have spare 10$ with a cheaper wood, but I don't regret to have bought paduk for this project. All marimbas and xylophone of the world are build with exotic dense woods, I guess it's for a reason !
@@narnodel2 Several reasons actually but most importantly, longevity. There are some lovely light, soft woods that have amazing tone and resonance but they get absolutely destroyed after a very short time. Tuning goes out as the fibers compress and the tone shifts a lot more with humidity changes. This is according to a traditional Marimba maker I spoke with in Africa. He showed me Marimbas made of anything from pine to tortoise shell. Hearing a marimba band of 34 people was truly breathtaking.
and you'd be correct! there are specific types of wood used for African Slit Drums. Density is the main requirement along with others like:flexibility and tensile strength, how much moisture a wood will absorb or repel, how much resistance a wood will endure under hot & cold temperatures all of which will affect the resonance of the body as a whole.Btw the top or Head should not be permanently affixed to it's other 4 sides since all heads will either be damaged over a period of time due to playing, cracking and/or wear and plus the heads need to be able to be interchangable, because heads have different distinctive tones of tuned musical scales!
Yikes, what a shame there's so many silly comments by people who think 'common tools' only refers to a hammer and some glue.
Fascinating to see the process behind making one of these, I hope to try making one myself one day!
Beautiful and Great.
Very inspiring and well shot. Thanks for sharing
beautiful
Excellent
I def heard that song on the last part in the Discovery channel.
wow ! really amazing work !
Very cool.
Straight up stealing the idea for the "high end table saw", that's genius.
And being a musician, I guess this would be a pretty nice project to start with. Thanks for the video!
Yes I'm a musician too, not a woodworker, and this project is not too complicated to start with. Good luck !
It's not genius, it's suicidal. The blade is meant to be on the opposite side of the workpiece to your important parts.
@@Asdayasman Suicidal? Stop clutching your pearls mate, it's a bloody jigsaw. I've been using power tools since my late teens (I'm 41). I've been taught the correct way to use most of them, and the rest I taught myself by watching professionals online. Yes, I was also taught that you should never modify a power tool, and I'd never attempt something like this with a grinder, circ saw, recipro saw, cold cut saw, drop saw, or anything like that. But in this case, wearing safety goggles and a pair of suitable gloves mitigates about 99% of the risk in this clever modification, as long as you're not a moron and you engineer it correctly. I've fabricated enough stuff in my time to be fairly confident that I'll be able to use this without dying and with all my digits intact when I'm done. 😉
Yes, it is just a jigsaw, and a small, weak battery powered jigsaw. I would choose another tool if I wanted to commit suicide.
incredible sound
This gives me safari vibes.
amazing work!
Привет! Посублимируем вместе весну??? 5 минут и она всю ночь будет крутиться у вас в голове,🌸🌿🌸🥰🎹🎹
Thank you for sharing, it's very interesting!
Where can i find music like this. Is there any on Spotify? Great video! Sounds amazing!! Just like donkey kong country for SNES 🙂
brilliant
if i had any woodworking skill i'd make one in a heartbeat.
Awesome! I’m going to make one for my little son 😄
Did you make it?
wow. this is so amazing
Nuce work... Keep it up... Already parked here... God bless
There is some kontakt libraries for this sound? Everyone know something about it?
Aftertune They play 21 samples across 3 octaves starting at 4:05. You could record the audio from this video using AudioHijack, then slice up the audio, each to a different white key (7 diatonic notes per octave) spanning 3 octaves. It would take a bit of prep, but if you trimmed the slices to the start of each transient and added some fades, I'm sure you could have an "instrument" in about an hour. Define a velocity range + compression, maybe some reverb with a short decay time. Hope this helps!
*GRANDIOSO TRABAJO...FELICITACIONES!!!!!!..SALUDOS DESDE CHILE*
Great job! Fantástic. Subscribed.
I wonder how a much softer wood like fir, spruce, Cedar or pine would sound as the resonant top? I imagine not near as resonant as the dense woods I see are typically used on these.
There would be a sound, but I don't think coniferous wood will give you a nice tone, they are way too soft. If you want to try to build one without buying exotic woods, maybe try with beech or oak which have a harder wood.
That upside down jigsaw setup is fucking terrifying. Lemme just fire a hot saw blade into my eyeball and cook it when it fails.
Use a scrollsaw.
I don’t have a scrollsaw, otherwise I would have use it !
Une nouvelle vidéo! ça fait plaisir. Ça fait longtemps💪🏻
En effet ça fait longtemps, j'ai en ai tellement à faire, mais le temps file toujours trop vite... On a rejoué Vaki Kosovar à St Chéron vendredi soir dernier au fait ! Tu as raté quelque chose...
Arnaud Delannoy Oh génial, j’aurais aimé voir ça, mais je ne suis plus à Saint Chéron :(
Do you know if there’s a specific spot where I should drill into the bars when tuning them. Under where you strike? in the middle of the bar?
This is really cool, I'd love to try and build one of these myself (which I want to try sometime in the future) but I lack pretty much all the fancy tools that I see people using lol XD
You lack a jigsaw, a router, sand paper and some chisels? What kind of workshop do you have??
@@rainerzufall689 just no workshop like the majority of ppl i guess
@@korok2619 Excuse me but if you have no tools you don't have a workshop I guess?
@@rainerzufall689 yep, thats what i said
Veeerrryy good !
great sound!!
Very nice! It took me several tries to get a drum that sounds good. You do a few things differently than me so it is nice to see you can still get a great result!
@4:20 Is that an actual song or you just going along to the rhythm?
It's just an improvisation.
@@narnodel2 when I first heard it I replayed it 5 times its an amazing tune 🙌
Bravo!
Tanks 👍👍👍
Amazing!
Do these follow any standard note pattern so that any player can always know where the notes are, or will you be stuck with the one that you made because your notes were randomly placed, and once you get used to it you will find difficult to play one made by someone else?
There is no standard pattern for tongue drums, they are different from one brand to another, and mine is unique too...
I'm curious if it stays in tune...4yrs later? e.g. moisture in wood may change pitch of things?
That is a good question, I checked yesterday with my tuner, the pitch hasn't changed 4 years later. But the instrument stayed at home, maybe it wouldn't have been as stable if I've had played it outside every day.
@@narnodel2 thanks for the update...it's an interesting instrument to consider building. I was trying to think of a clever way to make it fine tune-able....maybe a sliding bar weight underneath? But maybe your results shows that detail is not needed!
@@jasonpillingmusic Yes you can fine-tune it with sticking some weights at the end of the bars. On my first tries, before removing wood at the base of the bar, I used this method which is reliable (unless you try to drop the pitch a fifth down !). It could be a solution if you are afraid that your drum won't stay in tune, first tune it slightly too sharp by scraping the wood, the finish the tuning by sticking metal weights. So later you will be able to tune the bars up of down if the drum is out of tune.
That sounds great!
Gotta say, your jigsaw table is very nifty, I do not have a bandsaw, so using a jig saw like that could help in same situations. Your handplane might need a bit of sharpening I think :-)
Yes, that is a very cheap plane, and I’m not very good at sharpening. You can use the tool you want to cut the frame, I used my bandsaw but there is other ways !
common tools lol. This is advanced wood craft. Some day want to learn this.
No it isn't. It is just basic stuff like he said.
Is there a way to know how long each tongue should be?
About 15cm on the bass side, and 8cm on the treble side. But as I said the precise length is not very important, the most important is how you tune it with the router and the gouge.
What is the starting thickness of the top? As you were trimming it back it looks quite thick (relative to a guitar back or Tom drum)
It is 18mm thick, but I can’t promise it is the best thickness ! Worked well for me
i only have a spoon and a rubber hammer. Can i still build one of these?
I played this and my phone said the song that was playing at the end was "The Patient - Tool"
hey thats a good song
Nice!!
Where did you get the padouk from?
I bought it in a local sawmill
Can you list the order of your notes one this?
Civ3 menu song in the end
Sending full support
what is the wood you used?
I was the 1000th subscriber \:D/
Congratulations ! That is a small step forward thanks to you !
hola por favor plano con medidas en cm, y grosor de la tapa acustica .
Tout est écrit dans les sous-titres
I want to make this, may I have the notes for a standard tongue drum?
There is no "standard" tongue drum, you can choose the notes you want ! Or use the same notes as me.
красивая мелодия в конце видео
why are you using da and sol and mi and all of those instead of letters?
because a lot of (most?) countries use that notation. he's not american probably.
@@GraveUypo oh I didn't know that. Also, Europe uses letters too (I'm European)
Frances Atty i think he is focusing the attention on the scale which is easier with do re mi etc or numbers.
So natural
Me with tongue drum: *Normal Drum Sounds*
*runs into weird wooden mask* HOOKAH-BOOKAH!!!
genius
Did he sell a knidney for that table saw? So high end and not a jig saw.
See comments below
Sounds like tears for fears!
How is made the drumstick?
This is marimba mallets. You can also use timpani mallets, which give a softer sound.
How do you tune it after time?
You probably won't have to tune it more than once every ten years. I have done mine two years ago and it is still in tune. I haven't glued the bottom board so it is still possible to access the tongues from below and scrape some wood if necessary.
Do you sell these?
I should think about it, but I have other priorities for now... but thanks for asking !
it's like a song that would fit in minecraft
It's the minecraft note block
I want to lazercut this, i have no idea how ill manage to tune it
lazercut it if you want, but you will have to tune it by hand !
1:02 some important shit right there
Tfw with common tools
Cool, now let make some NPR music
What tools do you need?
The author: yes
What tools do you need ?
The author : please see video description
@@narnodel2 ok every the carpenter has the right tools, but it's how to video so the amount of specialized tools used depresses me a bit 😉
Don't be depressed, if you don't have any power tool, it is possible to make it with hand tools (good chisels, a saw, a fretsaw, and a plane). But instead of being able to make a drum in one day, you will spend one week. The most useful tools for this project (the router and the jigsaw) are not expensive tools, I you want to do some woodwork you will need them one day.
@@narnodel2 sure, it's the same in almost every hobby. Even if you want drive radio control car you'll still need strange tools and parts.
For a stranger who hits such a world for the first time, the amount of tools and various crap is overwhelming.
But the sounds made by the wood are dazzling 👍🙃
@@narnodel2 that's also great thing, when author response to the comments!
I wish you luck yt algorithm 😉
Haha! This is cool.
Keren
Terima kasih
Is this the iPhone ringtone instrument lol
i'd be 100% unable to do any of that
The "very high-end table saw" is only $60?
The guy was joking
I thought the joke was obvious... I should have written a big flashing LOL on the video.
👏👏👏👏💗
Donkey kong 64 that’s all I’m hearing
Its sounds like i play the sand lvl in old game