The Yorùbá people of Nigeria and West Africa have a rich and sophisticated musical heritage that features a wide variety of traditional instruments, each tied to ceremony, storytelling, and spiritual practice. Here are some of the most significant ones:
(The instruments in bold face type are ones we have in our collection.)
Percussion Instruments
Percussion dominates Yorùbá music, often driving complex polyrhythms and call-and-response singing.
- Dùndún (Talking Drum) – A tension drum shaped like an hourglass, capable of mimicking the tones and inflections of spoken Yorùbá language. Played with a curved stick under the arm, it is the signature instrument of Yorùbá music.
- Bàtá Drums – A family of double-headed drums (ìyá-ìlù, omelè, kònkòn, etc.) traditionally used in worship of Ṣàngó (the thunder deity). Their rhythms carry deep spiritual and communicative meaning.
- Gángan – Another variety of talking drum, smaller and sharper-toned than the dùndún, used in praise-singing and dance music.
- Agbá / Sakara – Frame drums made of goatskin and clay, used in social gatherings and Islamic-influenced music such as Wákà or Sakara styles.
- Agogô – Iron bell or double bell used to mark time and accent beats.
- Shekere – A large gourd covered with a beaded net, shaken or struck for percussive texture.
Melodic Instruments
Although percussion predominates, several Yorùbá instruments carry melodic or harmonic lines:
- Sekere flute (òfà or òpà) – Simple bamboo or wooden flutes used in praise songs.
- Goje – A one-string bowed fiddle used by griots and in folk ensembles.
- Agidigbo – A large box lamellophone (thumb piano), often made of wood and metal tongues, that “talks” rhythmically in dance bands.
- Ekwe – A slit drum carved from wood, used to send messages or mark important community events.
Context and Use
Yorùbá instruments are rarely played in isolation — they function as ensembles accompanying:
- Òrìṣà worship (e.g., drums for Ṣàngó, Ògún, Òṣun)
- Egúngún masquerade ceremonies
- Royal and court music
- Festivals, weddings, and storytelling sessions
Influence on Modern Music
These instruments profoundly shaped modern West African and Afro-diasporic genres:
- Highlife, Afrobeat, and Fuji in Nigeria
- Cuban batá and Brazilian candomblé drumming (via enslaved Yorùbá descendants)
- Jazz and world fusion rhythms worldwide