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    • Accordion. The accordion might be most associated with polka music, but it's a versatile instrument. You'll find accordions used in all kinds of music, including vaudevillian style old-timey folk music, klezmer, and Cajun music.
    • Banjo. What we call a banjo probably evolved from an instrument brought to America by African slaves. They were called banzas, banjars, or banias. Because the slaves weren't permitted to play drums, they started making banzas.
    • Dobro. A dobro is an acoustic guitar with a metal resonator built into its body. This resonator serves as an amplifier, and you might hear it referred to as a resonator guitar.
    • Fiddle. The fiddle is a mainstay in all styles of traditional and rural music, from classic country to bluegrass, folk, and roots rock. Though it's technically the same instrument as a classical violin, the technique used to play it turns a "violin" into a "fiddle."
  2. A number of instruments played by famous folk artists, along with those of less-known and unknown artists, are housed at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.

  3. The typical instruments played in early American folk music were the fiddle, the guitar, the mandolin, the mouth organ, the fife, and the dulcimer, although guitars went through a significant change as the previously popular English guitar was replaced around the 1830s by the Spanish guitar.

    • Appalachian Fiddle (Violin) Up first we have the Fiddle, another name for the Violin, which is a stringed instrument that came to the Appalachian Mountains when the Europeans settled in Appalachia in the late 1600s and into the 1700s.
    • Mountain Dulcimer. The Mountain Dulcimer or Appalachian Dulcimer appeared for the first time in the Appalachian Mountains. In fact, it’s one of the only folk instruments that was actually invented in the Appalachians.
    • Banjo. The Banjo is a very familiar instrument when it comes to American folk music and it too was popular in the Appalachian mountains. The first name given to this instrument was the “strum-strump” in 1687 when it first came to American on the slave ships from Africa.
    • Spoons. Next, we have the Spoons which are a percussion instrument that are played by hitting two spoons against each other. This makes the distinctive clicking sound that musicians use to keep the rhythm.
    • National Museum of American History American Folk Fiddle.
    • National Portrait Gallery Bob Dylan.
    • National Museum of American History American Five-String Fretless Banjo.
    • National Museum of American History Doc Watson and Merle Watson.
  4. A number of instruments played by famous folk artists, along with those of less-known and unknown artists, are housed at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.

  5. 5 days ago · Folk music, type of traditional and generally rural music that originally was passed down through families and other small social groups. Typically, folk music, like folk literature, lives in oral tradition; it is learned through hearing rather than reading. It is functional in the sense that it is.

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