Lahute – One-stringed instrument in the lute family, tuned in fifths. A folk instrument of the Kosovar Albanians.

lahute
lahute – Photo courtesy of Angela Selmani

Lajas de piedra – Chips of stone. Used in traditional Andalusian folk music. Spain.

Lali – A slit log pulsate. Lali drums were originally used every bit a grade of communication to denote births, deaths and wars. A smaller version of the lali pulsate called lali ni meke is used to perform music. Fiji.

Lambe – Large Wolof upright bass drum with closed bottom used in a sabar drum set up. Senegal.

Langeleik – Harmonic zither or dulcimer. The langeleik has but one melody string and upwardly to 8 drone strings. It is played with a plectrum. The langeleik tradition has survived in the Valdres region of Norway.

The roots of the Norwegian zither get back to the Middle Ages. This instrument has an ellipsoidal-shaped resonance box with or without a bottom, and a varying number of strings that run from ane end of the box to a fastening at the other terminate. The fingerboard under the uppermost string is fretted, and it is here that the melody is produced. The Norwegian zither is beginning mentioned in sources from 1622, where it is called langspill. The oldest known Norwegian zither was institute at Vardalsåsen by Gjøvik. The yr 1524 is inscribed on it. (Source: Folknett Norway)

Langspil – A bowed drone zither. Information technology consists of an oblong box with two strings, one of which is a drone. Iceland

Laouto – A long-neck fretted lute with merely 1 audio hole. Greece.

Lapas – Limpet shells used equally a percussion musical instrument in the Canary Islands. 2 shells are struck against each other creating a audio like a castanet. Kingdom of spain.

Larchemi – Panpipe with a row of six reed pipes. Besides known as larchemi. Georgia.

Laúd – Laúd ways lute in Spanish. The laud has a flat back, with 12 metal strings in 6 courses and a pear shaped body. Kingdom of spain.

Launeddas – A polyphonic reed musical instrument from Sardinia that is made up of 3 canes. It is as well known as the triple pipe. Given that it requires a constant catamenia of air, it is played using circular breathing. Italy.

Laure – Percussion instrument composed of a 20 cm. bell and a wooden hammer. Ivory Declension.

Lavta – A long-neck fretted lute similar to the Greek laouto. Turkey.

– Pocket-size drum used in Bahian candombles. Brazil.

Leizi bili – Vertical vi-hole flute ethnic to the Naxi ethnic group in Yunnan. China.

Lera – A four-6 finger pigsty cane flute institute in the Niger River surface area of Nigeria.

Limbe – A side-diddled flute made of hardwood or bamboo. Players employ circular breathing to produce continuous, broad-ranging melodies. Mongolia.

Limbi – A Tuvan side-diddled, open-concluded flute made of woods or bamboo. Russia.

Limbindi – A bow instrument From the Baka woods people of southeast Cameroon. A strong vine is used as the string and a potent, rubberband branch used as the bow. To modify the pitch of the notes the cord is held under the thespian's chin which is slid forward and back raising and lowering the pitch.

Linga – Wooden slit-drum. A tree or a solid cake of wood is hollowed out to leave a longitudinal opening on the upper side. The edges of this slit are of unequal thickness and produce two sounds of different pitch when struck. They are mostly used in groups of three instruments of unlike size. Each player hammers the edges of the slit with a pair of mallets to produce two different notes. Fundamental African Republic.

Lingbu – Tibetan bamboo transverse flute. Source: Tenzin Choegyal.

Linkwin – Large metal cymbals. Myanmar.

Lirica – Pocket-sized dabble with three strings, held on the knee and bowed like cello, from Dalmatia. Republic of croatia.

Litungu – A traditional 8-string harp or lyre played by the Luhya ethnic grouping. Kenya

Liuqin – A blazon of lute that looks like a smaller version of the pipa. China.

Lo – A modest flat gong, about 20 cm wide (8 inches). China.

Lojki – Wooden spoons used as percussion in traditional music. Russia.

Lokanga – A southern Malagasy three-string fiddle. Madagascar.

Lotar – Pear-shaped lute. Proper noun variations: lothar. Morocco.

Lote – Pygmy notched flute played primarily by elders.

Lumzdelis – Long shepherd's flute fabricated from aspen or willow. Lithuania.

Lunga – A Dagomba talking drum worn effectually the shoulder and struck with a curved stick. Republic of ghana.

Lur – Norwegian wooden horn. The history of the wooden horn can exist traced dorsum to the Bronze Age. The wooden horn was an important tool at sea in ancient times, used as a means of communication betwixt boats. There are three main categories of wooden horns: those carved out of a solid piece of forest, those carved out of a piece of forest that has been separated then bound together, and those that are merely lashed together from a strip of birch bark. Through the technique of overblowing on an ordinary wooden horn, it is possible to produce fractional notes up to the eighth upper fractional of the natural calibration, or upwards to the twelfth partial if the horn is very long. (Source: Folknett Kingdom of norway)

Lusheng – A oral fissure organ used past ethnic groups in southwestern China (Yunnan, Guizhou), with pipes of varying lengths.

Lute – A class of string instruments that can be plucked or bowed. They are made out of wood and have a pear shaped body. The European lute was very popular during the Renaissance.

Lyre – A small harp that was used throughout the Classical Antiquity menstruum of Hellenic republic. Also known equally lyra.