Steel Tongue Drum
The tongue drum is a percussion instrument that produces sound when the musician strikes one of its tongue-shaped cutouts with a pair of mallets or their hands. When you do this, the metal tongue vibrates, and the note you hear depends on its surface area. Also known as a tank drum, hank drum, steel tongue drum, or tambour à langues, the tongue drum was invented in the early 20th century by an amateur musician inspired by many other instruments.
Blue Tongue Drum
329 €
Tongue Drum Mandala
79 €
Minor Tongue Drum
359 €
Tank Drum 432 Hz
599 €
Tank drum Hluru
329 €
Dreampad Instrument
319 €
11-Note Steel Tongue Drum
299 €
Steel Tongue Drum Yoga
569 €
Affordable tongue drum
69 €
6-Note Tongue Drum
59 €
Metal Tongue Drum
199 €
Tongue Drum Pickup
39 €
Electro-Acoustic Tongue Drum Kit
49 €
Neodymium tongue drum magnets
19 €
18-inch tongue drum
449 €
Original Tongue Drum
499 €
15-Note Tongue Drum
249 €
Handmade tongue drum
349 €
Handcrafted Tongue Drum
529 €
Log Drum
319 €
Wooden Tongue Drum
389 €
Tongue Drum Wood
359 €
Slit Drum
289 €
10-Note Tongue Drum
149 €
Tongue Drum Booklet
6 €
Tongue drum stickers
6 €
Tongue Drum Bag
14 €
What is a tongue drum?

This instrument belongs to the percussion family, and more specifically to idiophones—instrument types that produce sound through the vibration of the material itself. For example, maracas, cymbals, and vibraphones are all idiophones.
The tongue drum consists of two convex metal shells made of steel, copper, or bronze that are welded together to form a flying saucer–shaped instrument, as shown in the photograph on the left. One of the two shells features tongue-shaped cutouts of different sizes (hence the name "tongue drum"), though a few rare tongue drums have tongues on both shells.
Each tongue corresponds to a musical note that can be played by striking it directly with your hands, with mallets, or with silicone finger protectors. On one of the two shells, usually the bottom one where there are no tongue cutouts, a hole is drilled so the body of the tongue drum acts as a resonance chamber.
What does a steel tongue drum sound like?
To get a sense of the gorgeous, melodic tones this instrument can produce, watch the video below featuring a soloist playing a modern tongue drum. Since the American instrument was invented in 2007 by Dennis Havlena using a gas cylinder, manufacturing techniques have evolved tremendously, especially in terms of design and the number of notes you can play.