Spoons can be played as a makeshift percussion instrument, or more specifically, an idiophone related to the castanets. In U.S. culture, "playing the spoons" originated in Ireland as "playing the bones," in which the convex sides of a pair of sheep rib bones were rattled in the same way.
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Spoons as an instrument are associated in the United States with American folk music, minstrelsy, and jug and spasm bands. These musical genres make use of other everyday objects as instruments, such as the washboard and the jug. In addition to common tableware, musical instrument suppliers make spoons that are joined at the handle.
Spoons are often used in ethnic Russian music and are known
as lozhki (Russian: Ло́жки [plural];
Pronunciation:
Ложка (help·info)
[singular]). The use of spoons for music dating
at least from the XVIII century (and probably older).[1]
Typically, three or more wooden spoons are used. The convex
surfaces of the bowls are struck together in different ways. For
example, two spoons are held by their handles in the left hand, and
the third, held in the right hand, is used to hit the two spoons in
the left hand. The hit, in a sliding motion, produces a typical
sound.[2][3] One can
also hold three spoons in the left hand and put a fourth into the
bot or the pocket. A fifth spoon is then held in the right hand and
used to hit the other four. Finally, one can hold the bowl of a
single spoon in the left hand and hit it with another spoon. In
this style, different sounds can be emitted by holding the bowl
more or less tightly.
These wooden spoons are commonly used in performances of Russian folk music and sometimes even in Russian orchestras.[4] A video of a choir performing a Russian folk song with spoon and balalaika accompaniment can be found below.
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