Spin the wheel to randomly land on one of 16 iconic musical instruments! Discover the instrument's family (String, Brass, Woodwind, Percussion, Keyboard, Reed, Wind), its origin, and a surprising historical fact.
Click the spinning wheel in the center of the page
Watch the concert wheel spin through 16 musical instruments
The wheel slows and lands on a random instrument
A music card reveals the instrument family, origin, and an amazing fact
Click 'Encore!' to dismiss and spin again
16 iconic instruments spanning 7 families: String, Brass, Woodwind, Percussion, Keyboard, Reed, and Wind
Color-coded by instrument family for easy identification
Country or culture of origin revealed for each instrument
Surprising historical, acoustic, or cultural fact for every instrument
Rich concert hall burgundy and gold theme
The Musical Instruments Spinner Wheel is an interactive music education tool that randomly selects one of 16 iconic instruments from around the world. From the ancient Flute (40,000 years old) and the Egyptian Trumpet found in Tutankhamun's tomb, to the modern Saxophone and the accordion-driven tango, each spin reveals the instrument's family classification, its geographic origin, and a fascinating piece of musical history. Perfect for music students, teachers, trivia lovers, and anyone who enjoys discovering the stories behind the sounds.
The wheel includes Piano, Violin, Trumpet, Guitar, Drums, Saxophone, Cello, Flute, Sitar, Bagpipes, Organ, Harp, French Horn, Banjo, Accordion, and Didgeridoo — spanning 7 instrument families.
String (Violin, Guitar, Cello, Sitar, Harp, Banjo), Brass (Trumpet, French Horn), Woodwind (Saxophone, Flute), Percussion (Drums), Keyboard (Piano, Organ), Reed (Accordion), and Wind (Bagpipes, Didgeridoo).
Instrument families are determined by how sound is produced, not the material. The Saxophone uses a reed to vibrate air — the same mechanism as a clarinet or oboe — so it's classified as a woodwind despite its brass body.
The Flute — a vulture-bone flute found in Germany dates to approximately 40,000 years ago, making it the oldest confirmed musical instrument ever discovered. The Didgeridoo is also ancient, with Aboriginal Australians playing it for over 40,000 years.
Absolutely! Spin the wheel and ask students to name the family, guess the origin country, or recall a fact. It's a great low-prep activity for making music history and theory engaging for students of any age.