Jim Trantham, 78, shows visitors the details of a mountain dulcimer that he made.
From the newsobserver.com
Can't get enough of the cimbalom, that exotic Eastern European hammer dulcimer?
From the sltrib.com
The frets of the Appalachian dulcimer are typically arranged in a diatonic scale.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Ritchie's father played a traditional stringed instrument called the lap dulcimer.
From the kentucky.com
Lauper took up the Appalachian dulcimer, taking lessons from David Schnauffer.
From the en.wikipedia.org
He is considered a Grandmaster or Ostad of the santur a Persian hammered dulcimer.
From the en.wikipedia.org
So I decided to play the Persian dulcimer just because it has a great effect on me.
From the voanews.com
Folk band Myakka and dulcimer musician Jean Becker will providing live music.
From the heraldtribune.com
Kyle Meadows will play the dulcimer for the classical Saturday night series.
From the kentucky.com
More examples
A stringed instrument used in American folk music; an elliptical body and a fretted fingerboard and three strings
A trapezoidal zither whose metal strings are struck with light hammers
Isaac Baker Woodbury (23 October 1819, Beverly, Massachusetts - 1858) was a 19th-century composer and publisher of church music.
A stringed instrument, with strings stretched across a sounding board, usually trapezoidal. It's played on the lap or horizontally on a table. Some have their own legs. ...
To dream of a dulcimer, denotes that the highest wishes in life will be attained by exalted qualities of mind. To women, this is significant of a life free from those petty jealousies which usually make women unhappy.
A stringed instrument that came to Europe from the East during the Middle Ages. Its strings are struck with hammers held in the hands.
A family of stringed instruments, with two very different branches: Hammer Dulcimers and Appalachian, or Mountain Dulcimers. Hammer Dulcimers, including the Cimbalom and the Chinese Yang Ch'in, are trapezoidal boxes with strings stretched between tuning pegs on two sides. ...
(Heb. sumphoniah ), a musical instrument mentioned in Dan 3:5, Dan 3:15, along with other instruments there named, as sounded before the golden image. It was not a Jewish instrument. In the margin of the Revised Version it is styled the "bag-pipe. ...
An instrument with strings stretched over a soundboard. Sound is produced by small mallets which hammer strikes the string causing it to vibrate at the corresponding pitch.