What Countries are These World Instruments From?
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- Опубліковано 23 лют 2022
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I wonder if Bret’s flashlight is still on to this day
One can only wonder
Lmaooo
😂😂😂👌🏻👌🏻
Obviously.
LMAO
I love how Brett is making names up for things he doesn't know because he knows there's no way he would get it right, and Eddy's trying his best to get his answer as close as possible. 😆 You guys crack me up!
Dude Brett coming up with random names for the things he doesn’t know is literally me on free response answers on quizzes and tests, glad to know I’m not the only one who did that 😂
I hope you have a good day 🤍
except for Brazil, where Eddy decided that "thiccbooty69" is a legitimate instrument name.
@@RolandsSh True, Eddy went with Brett's philosophy for that, lol! 😄
@@rebeccapaiottidasilva4054 I have to be like Brett more. I'm a bit more like Eddy. If I don't know the answers, I might as well have fun with it! 😁
Did you notice his flashlight was on? Irritating as hell 😖
I loved the part when you said “when manga gives you more education than the actual education itself” lol 😂😂
It's true to an extent ngl
in brett's defense, i think big guitar for "guitarron" would be pretty accurate as a translation since the suffix "-on" generally is used as a way to describe something as being big
In fact, the actual name, which is Guittaron Mexicano literally translates to "Big Mexican Guitar", being used as a bass. Still enourmous😳😳😳
I love how this instrument literally calls "Big Guitar" in spanish hahaha
Music, laughter and cross-cultural communication are extraordinarily important in today's climate. Thanks twoset
True. I needed that video, especially today.
couldn't have said better
Uh oh better be careful nowadays if you celebrate culture you are racist if you hit certain color criteria.
@@grekygrek most people don't think like that but those who do are so loud they seem like the majority
@@tink6225 i hope most don't. It does get really loud with that certain mindset on these platforms and in certain places.
Fun fact: In spanish "Guitarron" is another way to say "Guitarra grande" which means Big Guitar
So Brett got a point then.
Fun fact: Brett doesn’t know how to turn the flashlight on his phone off. 🙃
I was about to say this lol
Justo pense eso jajaja
For the time stamp 5:00. In Turkey, Saz is sometimes used as a generic name for musical instruments. And this instrument is generally called "Bağlama".
6:03 she is Anoushka Shankar, Ravi Shankar's daughter and Norah Jones sister.
I've seen her live!
The weird thing about world instruments is how so many cultures invented effectively the same instruments in different shapes and configurations - sometimes completely independently of each other.
Maybe not so independent. People traveled and probably brought music with them. They would make similar instrument with what was available in the new area. For instance, my interest pipes. All across Europe, there are so many pipes, with a bag and chanter and drones. But as far as I know, pipes aren't in the rest of the world. String instruments seem to have originated in middle East and spread both east and west. Bowed instruments, harp/ zither/ dulcimer type instruments, lute/ guitar like instruments. They are everywhere. Also blowing flute like instruments. Of course drums were most likely first instruments along with singing. The degeredoo of Australia is another interesting one, again not found outside the aboriginal people. Also the music of the aboriginal tribes is extraordinarily unique. Once you start studying world music, it's addictive. So fascinating.
My favourite example of this is the hammered dulcimer. The idea traveled to different countries, resulting in different versions of a similar instrument.
@@materdeimusicd.buckley2974 Pipes are actually pretty common place in South East Asia and South America, albeit without a bag. The Thai Khaen is pretty notable example, and pipes played a pretty crucial role in pre-Columbian music due to the aforementioned lack of string instruments, both having evolved pretty independently.
Yeah, music is universal!
@@materdeimusicd.buckley2974 I'm from Newfoundland, in Canada. The diatonic accordion, what we call a button accordion, is pretty much our cultural instrument. And in the past few decades, many traditional music groups have adopted the bouzouki as well. Not sure why. The Greek community here is tiny. I think it's because it became popular in Irish trad that it became popular here. Our traditional music is rooted in the British Isles and there's still a lot of trading back and forth.
"Is Scotland part of United Kingdom?"
Let's put this to a referendum!
Not again
YES CYMRU
Independence soon 🥰
They be throwing geopolitical questions over there
I just do what Auntie Nicola tells me to.
Are you Nicola?
I like how brett says sitar is from Greece
I was in pure shock 😭
and then from india💀
@@justt.tiya17 I mean, Sitar is from India, isn't it?
@@Mika-rg9nl yeah it is
5:20 all applauses from Türkiye for you Brett Good job 🎉👏❤🇹🇷
Popular opinion:
You guys should do another video like this. It’s super fascinating 😊
Someone needs to study these two
It would be great adding instruments as Hungarian tarogato, Peruvian quena, Portuguese sistro, French concertina, American steel guitar, Austrian citar, etc.
Yes please 😁
Yes, and please add the Bulgarian gaida!
@@antoniong1449 or guitarra portuguese
You instantly summoned all Filipino LingLing wannabes with that thumbnail
YES HAHAHAHA
No
Really enjoyed this video. Had fun playing along. Learned a few new instruments. :)
As a Scot, Eddy accurately represented my reaction when Bret said United Kingdom for the bagpipes!
Why aren’t I surprised that brett has his flashlight during the whole video
I didn’t even notice until I saw this comment 😭
When I saw the Kulintang, I hesitated to guess it was from the Philippines because I remembered that there are similar instruments with the gongs that went by other names in Indonesia and Malaysia (like caklempong and talempong) there's also the khong wong yai and khong wong lek from Thailand, but that one has a circular frame with it and is a little different.. What gave it away for me was the name Tboli Museum on the bottom. The T'boli people are one of the indigenous groups from Mindanao, Philippines in South Cotabato. We had influences from Indonesia, Brunei and other Southeast Asian cultures prior to the Spanish colonizing. Those influences are more apparent in the South. There are many other instrument names too and types of gongs that are suspended while playing- like the agung and gandingan??, but I admit that I don't know that much about the instruments. I have family living near the region (in Davao) but I live far from them now.
I think South East Asia countries influence each other in a lot of things, including musical instruments. As a Malaysian I played the gamelan back when I was in secondary school and I was surprised that the kulintang looked a little like the bonang in the gamelan assemble. XDXD
I mean it's not a uniquely Philippine instrument but of something shared of Indo-Malay culture. Yeah the video takes place in the Philippines. A good example of the use of Kulintang and Kutyapi (boat lute) or also called Hegelung by the Tboli is the song, Ang Bayan kong Sinilangan by Asin. The few contemporary Filipino songs where the inclusion of native instruments is especially meaningful.
@@k.3004 yea many cultures in Maritime SE Asia share similar influences. They're neighbors. That's why I brought up Tboli and Mindanao 🙂 There's more Indo/Malay influence in the South due to the proximity to countries like Indonesia 👍🏼 I hear the influence in our language too. The boundaries may be different now compared to what it was centuries ago, but the similarities in culture are there. My school had a gamelan ensemble so I learned about that first. While some aspects are not "unique" to the islands, I appreciate the outside influences that eventually develop a way of life distinct and diverse from my other relatives who live in Central Visayas (Sugbo). All of these instruments in general have a long and rich history 😊 I'm happy that I get to see any Southeast Asian instruments being featured. I looked beyond contemporary boundaries and had that Indo/Malay influence in mind
kulintang in Indonesia is bamboo percussion from Celebes(we believed), like gamelan but not metal, while the metal always called gamelan, Austronesian is just, we love percussion, drum and flute, the string-like instrument is probably west influence, like Arab or India.
I guessed Philippines coz of the thumbnail. But confirmed it when I saw the writings on the façade of the instrument.
10:01 I loved playing this with my brother when i was little 🇳🇵🇳🇵
Thank you so much for this video! :) My music students are going to LOVE trying this challenge with you!!
“Guitarrón” literally means “big guitar”, so you should have given yourselves that point haha
Exactly 🤣🤣🤣
Nope, and it's a completely different instrument, it's a bass one and you play only one note at a time
@@salim5621 but that doesn't change that the word guitarrón literally mean big guitar in Spanish, it's the augmentative of guitarra
Gamelan is the whole group, not just one particular instrument. And the one you watched was Balinese gamelan which has more loud, fast, and festive characteristics than the Javanese gamelan and Sundanese gamelan.
the one that they used the hammer to hit its called gambang? and the round one is called gamelan? the big one is called banong and canang thats what we in malaysia call it
@@1003willy canang and banong is part of gamelan as far as i know.
@@yuliarizkyrahmadani9411 That sounds right. I played in a gamelan ensemble, but I don't remember the names of all the instruments, but I played one like the one shown in the video.
It sounds to me they just called a "Violin" "String". XD
the ensemble they showed is called gamelan gong kebyar, and is unique to Bali, the instrument you saw in the foreground are called Gangsa, or Gangsa Pemade to be precise.
I'm from Madagascar and I'm so proud of our valiha!
it looks awesome. I would to play it.
Azafady-gang, yay! 😊
Great selection. The musicians were not just talented but visually stunning.
Some of Brett's masterworks:
0:42 clickaflicka
2:40 hamoninano
3:34 taka
4:37 ukuletriangle
5:02 papapira
5:34 jinchuriki
6:37 stringadoo
7:26 big guitar
8:33 awesome
9:42 The big boss
10:35 violinini
11:08 the circular sixth
also 2:58 bagpipe from UNITED KINGDOM
You learn something new every day
Someone should paint instruments from that and see if anyone can figure it out. Would be a nice post at r/LingLing 40hrs
7:26 In a way, "ón" is an augmentative suffix that forms derived nouns in Spanish (hombre->hombrón / man->big man)
So "guitarrÓN" is close enough to "big guitar"
He was kinda right 😂😂
@@carlaandressa2473 Mr. Yang is a genius withoug knowing it. I had a bit of Spanish in Uni, but didn't know about that -ón thing. Thanks for teaching me something new😍.
Hey Eddy, I'm from Jamaica. I'm not offended by the "is Jamaica in Africa" question I'm just surprised, and a bit amazed, that the question could asked.
the translucent "no" at the end killed me 😂😂
You really shouldn't be surprised.
-a guy who always gets "Is Singapore in China" questions
Two Chinese guys living in Australia...
Makes you wonder huh?
No one could ever be offended by TSV. Amazed on so many levels... Yes.
Hahahah I love this response so much. “Im not offended, merely concerned for your intellect” 🤣
At least he didn't ask if Jamaica was a state in Africa.
Another great video!! Thank you guys! 💕
Debussy was influenced by Javanese gamelan using the slendro scale via siah pitu in his piece, Pagodes from Estampes. What we have here is a Balinese gamelan that’s using the pelog scale via siah pitu. Good for Eddy for trying to explain it, he was close.
Hate to be all nerdy and stuff but I majored in world music at CalArts before I became a piano technician.
Great.
bitch i learned that from school then forgot WHAA
“When manga gives you more education that the whole education system” cells at work helped me through med school, sooo sounds about right
I use a recipe from food wars to help me get through my cooking class, so yeah anime do help you with school sometimes
@@hanikazuha also helps u destress after an exam 😅
@@confusednerd4693 I agree 😂
Cells at Work and Dr. Stone were the best ones Ive watched.
To be fair, "guitarrón" translates as "big guitar", although in a Mariachi ensemble it works as a bass and provides rhythm.
Idk why but I've always know it as "Tololoche", maybe because I live in the north of Mexico???
This was a wonderful way to learn about other very exotic instruments. It's fascinating to see what other countries use as instruments. It's just to show you that music is in everything no matter in what form it is drawn out of.
Brett’s flashlight: Hi!
Brett: *Implies that the sitar is from Greece*
Eddy: *Calls an instrument a vindaloo*
Me: *laughs in Indian*
(P.S. The sitar is Indian and the vindaloo is a dish)
I know right..But atleast they guessed india with sitar correctly later😊.. I was like 'What?' When they said guitar is from Greece..
Edit: Sitar* not guitar... Why did I just see this mistake I made 2 weeks back , Well Greece guitar...
ikr when I heard vindaloo I lost it XD
oh god same, i died 🤣
LOL IKR
I died at Vindaloo 🤣🤣🤣
0:21 Castanets, Spain
0:57 Bandoneón, Argentina
1:38 Bouzouki, Greece
2:18 Sheng, China
2:51 Bagpipes, Scotland
3:18 Shamisen, Japan
3:53 Balalaika, Russia
4:45 Bağlama, Turkey
5:25 Gamelan, Indonesia
5:58 Sitar, India
6:25 Nyckelharpa, Sweden
7:06 Guitarrón, Mexico
7:36 Kulintang, Philippines
8:05 Didgeridoo, Australia
8:18 Berimbau, Brazil
8:49 Kantele, Finland
9:23 Nyatiti, Kenya
10:01 Madal, Nepal
10:22 Hardingfele, Norway
10:49 Valiha, Madagascar
Thx 🙏
Thank you for the list! I think you should correct “saz” to “baglama” since I think the original translation for “saz” is “instrument.” Baglama is the real name for that specific instrument. It’s a common mistake that many people make.
@@arturoromero951 okee, noted
I was wondering, wasn't the Bandoneon a German-built instrument, that got popular in Tango later, when it was exported to Argentina?
@@alina.dalsegno Yes, it actually is a German instrument in its origin. But just like you said, it became so massively popular during the inception of Tango in Argentina (particularly in Buenos Aires), that it became inextricably associated with Tango and the Rioplatense culture.
Other parts of the country received the other instrument Brett mentioned as a gift from the european immigration, the accordion, far more popular in use on a local folk genre known as chamamé from the north eastern side of the country.
Please make it as series.. so fun to watch.. kinda educational as well
Wow, there is a sitar in Greece too!
An episode of Brett naming intruments whatever he wants to name them, lmao
so adorable
x'D
Luckily Brett isn't a luthier. If he's a luthier, I'm afraid he'll give every violin he made a weird name. He had a knack for coming up with "magical" names out of nowhere.
@토끼 The Screwdriver I can imagine that. Brett's way of thinking is too out of the box at sometimes. I think when playing that "instrument", the sound that comes out is his famous Lo-fi. It's kinda cool, but also kinda scary at the same time.
Thiccboi69 😂
No one noticed his flashlight was on the WHOLE time?
@@coralreeves4276 thiccbooty69 🤣 Yeah, it's super duper weird name
@토끼 The Screwdriver I guess maybe Kachikawawa, Linglingguini, Kochikawawa Tonanini were originaly his idea
Love how you guys had to completely make up the most random names for the instruments when you didn’t know. So funny and such a good vid.
as a Greek person, the second i saw the bouzouki i was like "come on, they HAVE to find it", but it's fine that they didn't. also, the way Eddy pronounced "bouzouki" lmao😭
nobody:
brett’s phone:
📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸
I’m from Turkey! 🙋🏻♀️ Did you know that musicians from Turkey do not like to call that instrument “Saz”? Saz is actually a general name for Turkish musical instruments. It’s name is actually “Baglama”. ( btw thanks for honoring us Brett😁) And where is Eddy’s local Turk restaurant? I’m really curious😅
It's actually Brett honouring Turkey, and Eddy's the one who mentions his local Turkish restaurant. I just wanna correct you😅.
The restaurant is in Australia not Turkey lol. He cant fly across the world just for food or maybe he would
Ayoo , i finally found a turkish twosetter
I am also turkish LOL
@@danimater7431 @Selin oh be abi koskoca türkiyede bir ben varım sanıyodum
@@ninarances9074 oh really? I often confuse people’s name in my daily life too 😅
When I was in Phoenix, Arizona last year I visited the Musical Instrument Museum. It had these instruments on display along with video similar to these of them being played. A must see for any music lover!
These instruments, the performers, and the traditions behind them are significant cultural treasures, in danger of being lost and forgotten. Thank you, TwoSetViolin, for highlighting this music, which flies under the radar in the algorithm-based streaming era.
Music students: Excellent examples of traditional world music abound on UA-cam. Start with the names of instruments and countries, surf around, you won't be disappointed.
Twoset: Guessing with the help of music
Me: Guessing the country looking at the musicians' faces and trying to see if I can guess their nationality
Same for me ! 😅
In indonesia, we also have kulintang. It is written Kolintang. Percussion like xylophone made from wood. The instrument similar to Kulintang from Philippines is called Talempong from West Sumatra, Indonesia.
I think in Malaysia is called Caklempong, brought over by the Minangkabau people 🤔
@@daisuke910 yes. In the age of kingdom before European colonisation, some part of Malaysia did once part of Minangkabau kingdom, Pagaruyung
@@daisuke910 In Brunei its called Gulingtangan but there's more than 1 row
@@jentayushinigami9544 is that because playing it makes you ber-guling tangan? 🤔😆😅
@@daisuke910 lmao perhaps something like that or of the techniques i think, never played it b4😂
I knew very few of these (gamelan and sitar were the easiest ones for me) but I'm actually very proud that I knew the Hardanger fiddle (hardingfele). I was lucky enough to visit Norway a few years ago and the group I was with was able to get a presentation about the instrument and it was pretty cool.
Very educational, thanks guys. Loved the Valiha.
Fun fact: the Nickelharpa was inspired by the hurdy gurdy. They tried to recreate its sound after coming back from battles on the continent
* nyckelharpa
No, the Nyckelharpa existed in the medieval ages all over Europe, there are paintings, but it only survived in Sweden. It is not a Swedish invention.
@@gabrielhenschen9665 the oldest known picture of a nyckelharpa (that I am aware of, and I briefly searched again before I wrote this) is from about 1350 and is in a church in Källunge, Gotland, Sweden.
You guys need to listen to Brazil’s most famous composer: Heitor Villa-Lobos. His main work is “Bachianas Brasileiras”, mixing Bach and Brazilian folklore and sounds
yes!!!!!
I love his compositions! 😍😍
Yesssss I’m dying for them to do so!!!! Also, kind of low key hoped they’d show viola caipira for Brazil 🙈 just for some viola content diversity uai
yeah, it would be niiiiice!! I would like them to react to João Bosco, too, and to some other wonderful artists we have here (such as everyone from "Clube da Esquina", or Ivan Lins, or Aldir Blanc, or Nelson Faria, or Caetano Veloso, or Chico Buarque, or Emicida... the list goes on forever)
@@thaissantosrosa I thought of Secos e Molhados and Almir Sater also! By the way, great suggestions
4:15 Doritos guitar
Brett gets more pleasure from making up names than actually playing the game.
Brett naming castanets as “ClickaFlicka” is adorable
Very adorable.
As a Filipino, how they said "Kulintang" just made me laugh rolling on the floor while also dying cause of the fact that it sounded like "Cooling Tang" than "Kuu lin tang"😂 (I tried to type how it sounds while also saying it with a accent, so not 100% accurate, just roughly)
As a fellow Filipino, when they said it sounded like a gang name, I totally lost it🤣 Kulintang gang😭😂
@@kimmiepinkie878 Kulintang Gang LMAO
It is from a tiboli tribe in Mindanao.
Funny how we have the same exact instrument here in Brunei but we call it kulingtangan
its pronounced like "coo-LIN-taNG"
I’d love to see you guys continuing to learn more about musical styles and cultures you are unfamiliar with, and sharing that knowledge with your community! You could do some research on your own, and then where possible make a video with an expert or specialist. I think it could be a meaningful opportunity for growth, for both you and your fans, and would give you another type/series of episodes to build on while also doing a valuable service for spreading the knowledge about how cool and beautiful so many musics outside Western hegemonic boundaries are. 💜🌏🎶
Hard agree! It's an odd flex to be violin educators and know so little even about instruments that are close to the violin like the hardingfele and the nickelharpa (I'm sure there are a whole bunch of things that are right next to the things I know about that I know nothing about too, but I try to find the line between "hah, look at me I don't know stuff" and "hah, look at me who doesn't know stuff but there are cultural reasons why I don't know these things that I should maybe address?")
Bouzouki to Tzatziki 🤣 I never thought of that comparison before🤣
brett’s flashlight on for the whole time is just too funny
Filipinos: see Philippine flag
This comment section is now the property of the Republic of the Philippines. Mabuhay!
I love these vids--it's hilarious AND educational.
I really enjoyed learning about all the entries. Some of them I knew right away, but some of them were completely new to me!
As an Indian, I burst out laughing when Brett first associated Sitar with Greece xD. But I love the fact they they got it right in the other round and also the fact that they had the Hindi writing of Sitar as well!! Really proud TwoSet!
Brett's lofi track but on sitar is the soundtrack of 2022 😌
The person who is playing tabla in 5:58 is my tabla teacher
@@Itzabhboo Oh wow that's amazing!
@@Itzabhboo Really? He played with anushka shankar? no way
@@sephorapiano9602 yup he is Pandit Tanmoy bose
Correct, Eddy. But the Gamelan orchestra that Debussy saw at the oriental festival was the central Javanese style of gamelan playing. While the one shown in this video is the Balinese gamelan. The instruments are the same, but the styles are distinctly different. In fact, many cultures in Indonesia have the gamelan orchestra. But they make different styles that varies from culture to culture.
So true. Even in each provinces, depend on the districts, the instrument and styles of the Gamelan may change.
I read it somewhere, it was actually Sundanese Gamelan
@@sekar9901 I see.. Well, it's been mentioned everywhere I could find that he heard specifically the Javanese gamelan music. For us Indonesian (I'm guessing you're also Indonesian), when ppl say "Javanese" it means central Java. But when ppl say Sundanese/just Sunda, then it means West Java.
@@edwardjohn5 Javanese is suku jawa, sundanese is suku sunda. Gamelan jawa sama sunda rada beda.
Saat itu dibawa ke perancis kelompok gamelan sunda "Sari Oneng" dari desa Parakan dan dipertontonkan dengan penari bedoyo mangkunegara dari jawa. Yang kalau di Indonesia gak mungkin dilakukan karena Sunda-Jawa hubunganya kurang bagus.
Debussy 💀 (forgive my immaturity)
brett's flashlight was on for so long lmao
More of this series please!
9:55 props to editor San for putting hungarian dance playing while the globe points to jamaica when eddy asked if it’s in Africa 😃
Talking about Brett's flashlight, I think we also agree that his greeny-lizard-like phonecase is adorable too 🦎
That is a gorgeous bouzouki! I love when instruments are decorated like that!
1:56 man really said sitar 😂😂he HAS to be trolling
Eastern regional of Indonesia also has Kulintang. Recently I found out Philippines also had Gulok, the blade, which is similar to Golok, Indonesian blade. It's amazing how cultures were so widely spread in the past. Maybe Malaysia has it too.
Actually, I first thought Kulintang is from Indonesia. Philippines didn't even cross my mind 😂
Yes Kulintangan and golok is also available in Malaysia.
@@saniaaf2251 That's literally discussed in school. How did you missed that.
@@jrexx2841 uh... which school?
@@saniaaf2251 Oh wait my bad, you're not Filipino?
I was so hoping you'd include the balalaika - and the child playing it was stellar!
Thanks ! Great video!!
The Turkish instrument is actually called ‘Bağlama’ not ‘Saz’. ‘Saz’ means instrument in Turkish. It is a common mistake in Turkey too.
Saz is an instrument in Azerbaijan ( alongside tar-native to the land) and its different from baglama!!!
@@MY-ud6xr öyleler tabi
(Translating the two comments above for anyone who doesn't know Turkish)
"But aren't they so sweet? I'm so happy🥰"
"Sure they are"
One of my Turkish friends calls that instrument a bouzouki. It's listed as Turkish bouzouki on the pages of some international music stores, as well. But, yes, Baglama is the most correct name for that.
@Ugli PurrltatoTM In Azerbaijan we do not speak Persian per se, but our words do have been influenced by Persian and Arab languages.
Brett & Eddy: worrying about their wrong guesses
Me: worrying about Brett's phone battery
What a beautiful video. Music is a universal language indeed!
10:45 I think this is first time seeing Brett without his glasses...
*Sees Filipino flag*
Filipinos: **Let's invade the comment section!!!**
when brett's flashlight is on for at least half the vid😳
Brett's very good at coming up with names. Also, i like the idea of prodigies around the world
Looking forward to the "world prodigies - folk instruments" video you guys mentioned!
This entire video was hilarious xD Eddy's "bull-dog", Brett's flashlight, the editing, everything got me rolling on the floor xD I love TwoSet
i was looking for a comment about Brett's flashlight!
I love how they are like "it looks like he's cooking meals and seeing if they are raw or not" and it turns out it's the Philippines 🤣🤣🤣 (though as half filipino I'm ashamed to say I didn't know that instrument existed 😅)
It’s okay, it’s more common in Indonesia than in the Philippines. Y’all should be more familiar with Bandurria tho
@@limyongjun6826 ohh, Isee. Don't know that one either, I need to get more cultured (twoset is a big help hahaha)
It was from the Mindanao part that is why most of us from Luzon doesn't know Kulintang existed😅 It was usually played together with the performance of singkil dancers. Thanks to PE classes, I was able to perform those
i feel you, full filipino here that can’t speak tagalog fluently (yet) and didn’t know about the instrument either
@@anneoreo4222 lmao I feel better now hahaha
This was fun! Thanks!
Brilliant video and I actually did quite well!!! I got more than you did! YAY! More vids like this please!!! All of your vids are fun ...but this challenge was really fun!!!
7:27 Guitarrón means big guitar in Spanish so Brett is kinda right
Guitarrón literally means "Big Guitar" so Brett should have had one more point
This was really cool!
I died at ”it looks like hes cooking a lot of meals"
5:32
yeah it is gamelan
Indonesia traditional musical instrument, which is famous in Java and Bali islands
Thanks for adding it to your video-! ^^
i guess its famous in Malaysia too☺
@@euyaakim0313 iyaa aja deh biar damai
@@euyaakim0313
Thats cool!
Indonesia and Malaysia do have a lot in common 😭
@@sweetyoghurt yaa,its just i wanna add some infos that ive read somewhere
@@valkyriedra Yeahh😁
this is one of the rare times were i have seen my country Nepal finally being included. btw it's pronounced as 'maadal'
This was fun! I learned quite a lot too!
I played along with my brother we had a blast screamed laughed and guessed the majority🤣🤣😍😍😍 thanks for the content love u guys love from Texas💝
Kudos to Eddy for zeroing on "capoeira" and completely ignoring "Angola", which is, y'know, _the name of a country._ Risky move, but it paid off at the end lmao
Seriously
I immediately guessed Angola because of that but was thrown off when the hint showed South America and proceeded to guess Guyana.
and there's a silhouette of Brazil on there too
the funniest part is that the instrument is actually from angola. It is famous in brazil, but its not brazilian.
this!!!!!
@@hermanndelgado3393
Aw man your comment gave me a good chuckle. Thanks.
"that's a fat guitar!"
"it's a BIG guitar!"
*"ITS A T H I C C GUITAR!"*
Wow, good guess on the berimbau! And thanks for showing us other instruments from so many countries.
In Indonesia, Kulintang is similar with "Caklempong/ Talempong Minangkabau from Sumatera. This Caklempong also can be found In Malay Peninsula especially in Negeri Sembilan, Selangor and Perak cause Minang people already migrated to Malaysia thousand years ago. But, we also have "Kolintang" which is made from wood not Iron and it came from Northern Sulawesi (near Mindanao island)
Bret not getting the bagpipes being from Scotland is so funny to me
As someone who plays the saz, I literally screamed when the saz (baglama) came. Thank you soooo much to the Twoset team, for introducing us to all these InTrEsTiNg instruments.
Fun fact: I were literally playing the saz while watching this video. What a coincidence!
Be de bağlama çalıyorum yeyy
Same
you should be focusing on prACTICING that means no watching UA-cam while you practice smh 🤦
no but jokes aside its a really nice instrument 🤩 I'm glad we all got introduced (or reintroduced) to it through this video 🥺💕
@@amyosullivan8629 Thank you so much, and yes it is an absolutely beautiful instrument.
In music in second year middle school, we were taught about South Asian, east asian, Southeast Asian instruments. And I know Sheng is a Chinese instrument. In fact, Sitar is a South Asian instrument. But I thought gamelan was traditionally played by women so I second guessed. And I'm Filipino so I know kulintang. I saw that T'Boli Museum is written below and in fact T'Boli people are a tribe in Mindanao, Philippines. I don't know how to play any of these instruments though. I just knew them from school.
Gamelan never played by women where did you get this? 😂
I'm Indonesian btw
The way Brett said Nyckelharpa got me cracking up.
As a Brit who lives in Sweden and loves the hurdy gurdy, your answers about the bagpipes and nyckelharpa hurt 😂 Fun fact, the nyckelharpa is actually Sweden's official national instrument!
i’m swedish and i had no idea about this :o
Other fun fact, a Nyckelharpa costs about 1500$
@@seorikkuns Maybe because it's not true. :P We don't have a national instrument.
@@DenDodde that’s what i thought too!
Goddammit, hurdy gurdy is crazy good. People might judge it derpy because of the crank, but there's a girl on YT who plays it, and sometimes she plays covers of famous rock bands. And she can produce such convincing electric guitar and bass guitar sound out of it, I'm at this point completely sure the only reason there was no heavy metal in medieval times is because the church would forbid it.