Get a couple Orff instruments. However, they're not for unsupervised play, 'cause they're not indestructible.roymond wrote:I'm challenged to find the right thing for my kids. My 5 year old and I built a little buzzer from those wires-and-capacitor kits and he just loves it. Sort of a conductivity theremin, where when he squeezes the wires between his fingers the pitch goes all crazy.Mostess wrote: I'm not understanding your problem with this device. A colorful plastic computer that makes a wide range of strange, cool sounds: that's practically the definition of half of all children's toys on the market today. This one just makes more, and young users will intuitively learn pretty complex concepts like carrier frequencies, band-pass filters, and the difference between frequency and amplitude. The won't explicitly learn the terms, just gain an intuitive sense of the concepts which will make learning any college-level time series analysis much, much easier.
Then we have this crazy plastic electric double neck guitar thing with samples and beats. Noisy as all hell but he's putting patterns together (finally passing his 3 year old brother's jams).
But most music toys are so crappy, they fall apart after a few months. On the other hand...young boys really beat the shit out of things. I don't want to invest in anything worth much more than $40 for fear of it being wasted in a day.
Aside from the time I do spend with them and my cherished studio equipment, I am always looking for recommendations for decent, cheap-ish kids toys/instruments from other people who have experience. And I'll post mine as well.
Orff instruments are basically small marimbas, xylophones, and vibes-without-the-vibes (they call them "metallophones") that have a limited range... like an octave and a half maybe. And some of them are just one diatonic scale. But the thing about these instruments that's special is that you can remove the bars individually, to create a situation where no matter what a kid hits, it will be part of the chord pattern. And by removing nearby bars, you can eliminate mishits and stuff. So the kids learn a specific piece of information, without other things distracting them. There's a whole method around it.
(And yes, Orff instruments were invented by Karl Orff, who wrote "Carmina Burana" among other things, including an f-ing difficult sightsinging textbook)
http://www.giardinelli.com/srs7/content ... rc=AXMW3EL
