Mine’s a bit of a strange one…
Music box/celeste
🧚♂️
Cello. No idea why. Yo-Yo Ma slays me.
HE may play the cello but YOU the one that gets played ;)
For a bit of fun, find the YT of Sulek & Hauser “Welcome to the Jungle”
a hurdy gurdy
A trumpet properly played cuts directly to that bittersweet, blue part of my soul.
Accordion… I love the sound of it, especially the Italian ones with chambers.
Accordion is an unusual choice, but in Karla Bonoff’s “Water is Wide” the accordion is essential and beautiful. James Taylor sings back up.
The sax
I played Alto in school, never really got into it. Then switched up to baritone, loved it.
Bari sax is best sax
Hammond organ played well really makes me feel warm to the core
Do synthesizers count?
Dont let anyone ever tell you
theyitthey don’t ;)
pedal steel or any sort of slide guitar
Here if you haven’t heard Blind Willie Johnson you are going to die when you hear this song
I find the speculum to be excellent at letting me see deep inside myself. Instruments like ribcage spreaders are too infrequently used to count I think. A good seasonal look with the speculum could save you a lot of heartache.
OP didn’t say “musical”…
Oh man a nice cold speculum, nothing better
Singing, although I guess it’s kind of cheating since it can be emotionally charged (I get goose bumps from certain songs).
Instrumental… Cello or bass guitar, depending on mood. Give me a good bass line and it’ll get me going.
instrumental music can also be emotionally charged, no?
Certainly, but if you hear a crying person, for instance, many (though, not all) people will instinctively feel for that person. Instrumental music can invoke similar feelings, either through associatation or because certain sounds hit those same chords, so to speak (I’m thinking the difference between major and minor chords, or when something is off key).
Vocals, like acting, can have that more direct line to your empathy. At least, that’s my thinking. A really good song can give me goosebumps too, though.
Pipe Organ. The only instrument with the versatility of an orchestra at your fingertips. It can make the room shake or fill it with quiet whispers.
Sadly, Churches are one of the few places, in the US at least, where you can hear the organ regularly. Ones that can afford to maintain such a large instrument and pay an organist.
I posted a similar response. There is a huge Casavant in KC at Helzberg Hall. I heard it when Dr Jan Kraybill was the conservator; may still be, and it was incredible. Worth a trip, and not a church.
I’d go to church if… Cory Henry played the organ.
A Kora! It’s an African instrument that is considered a guitar harp, with 21 strings ranging from the size of bass guitar string to fishing wire. The way it is played allows you to play the bass, lead, and rhythm at the same time. Here is a short example of a master kora player Toumani Diabate showcasing the instrument: https://youtu.be/8luhdxS2KuM?si=llpa2YVyIOf77_Nd
As a guitarist I found this guy who transcribed Toumani’s work onto a classical guitar, very interesting listen https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=55QnOlXckOk
My other thing would be trippy out there instruments that seem to put you in a different state of mind like the Yaybahar or “The Beam” that the grateful dead likes to break out sometimes
Yaybahar example: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_aY6TxC1ojA&pp=ygUWeWVoYWJhciBhdCBpbnN0cnVtZW50IA%3D%3D
The Beam example: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=0h8o-1IQ5G0&pp=ygUSZ3JhdGVmdWwgZGVhZCBiZWFt
🔥🔥🔥😍
Drums, but I may be slightly biased because I play them
Clarinets. Absolutely love those when played right.
synths, especially when using longer stretched out notes like in Kavinsky’s Outsider