Percussion
Music Generator
Djembe rhythms from West Africa, taiko thunder from Japan, kit grooves driving rock and jazz, and mallet instruments ringing with melodic precision. Describe the rhythm and let AI craft an original percussion composition.
Drum Circle
Percussion AI
Percussion DNA
The four dimensions of percussion — cultural roots, instruments, rhythmic theory, and modern evolution.
Universal Language
Percussion is the oldest form of music — every culture on Earth developed drums and rhythmic instruments independently. From the djembe of the Mandinka people to the tabla of Hindustani music, from the bodhrán of Ireland to the taiko of Japan, percussion is humanity's shared musical foundation. Rhythm precedes melody in both cultural evolution and child development.
Instrument Families
Percussion divides into membranophones (drums with skins — snare, djembe, tabla), idiophones (vibrating bodies — cymbals, marimba, gongs), and the modern electronic category (drum machines, samplers, pads). Within these families: hand drums, frame drums, stick-struck drums, mallet instruments, shakers, scrapers, and bells each serve distinct musical roles.
Rhythmic Concepts
Polyrhythm — multiple rhythmic patterns layered simultaneously — defines West African and Afro-Cuban percussion. Tala systems in Indian music create complex cyclical structures. Western meters organize beats into 4/4, 3/4, and odd time signatures. Swing, groove, ghost notes, and dynamic accents transform basic patterns into living, breathing rhythms.
Modern Percussion
The modern drum kit fused bass drum, snare, toms, and cymbals into one instrument in the early 1900s. Electronic percussion — TR-808, TR-909, MPC — revolutionized music production from the 1980s onward. Today, hybrid setups combine acoustic drums with triggers and samples. Percussion education programs like STOMP showed the world that anything can be a drum.
Explore the Spectrum
Six percussion traditions and approaches — from ancient hand drums to electronic beat machines.
West African Drumming
Djembe, dunun, and talking drum ensembles playing interlocking polyrhythmic patterns. The Mandinka, Wolof, and Yoruba traditions underpin global popular music rhythm.
Latin Percussion
Congas, bongos, timbales, claves, and güiro driving salsa, samba, Afro-Cuban, and Brazilian rhythms. Clave patterns are the rhythmic backbone of Latin music.
Taiko
Japanese ensemble drumming on massive drums — thunderous, choreographed, and visually spectacular. Kodo and other groups brought taiko to world stages.
Drum Kit Grooves
The modern drum kit across all genres — rock backbeats, jazz ride patterns, funk ghost notes, metal blast beats, and hip-hop boom-bap.
Mallet Percussion
Marimba, vibraphone, xylophone, glockenspiel, and steel drums — tuned percussion that plays melody and harmony alongside rhythm.
Electronic Percussion
Drum machines, samplers, and electronic pads — TR-808, TR-909, SP-1200, and modern controllers that shaped hip-hop, house, techno, and pop.
How It Compares
Compare five percussion traditions across technique, role, and cultural context.
| Feature | World Drums | Drum Kit | Latin Percussion | Mallet Instruments | Electronic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Playing Technique | Hands, sticks, varied | Sticks, brushes, mallets | Hands, sticks | Mallets, bows | Pads, triggers, programming |
| Pitch | Unpitched / semi-pitched | Mostly unpitched | Mixed pitched/unpitched | Fully pitched (melodic) | Sampled / synthesized |
| Ensemble Role | Interlocking patterns | Timekeeping, groove | Rhythmic drive, color | Melody, harmony, color | Full rhythm section |
| Complexity | Polyrhythmic layers | Independence, fills | Clave-based patterns | Melodic + rhythmic | Programmable, precise |
| Cultural Context | Ceremony, community | Rock, jazz, pop, metal | Salsa, samba, Afro-Cuban | Orchestra, jazz, solo | Hip-hop, EDM, pop |
| Notable Players | Mamady Keïta, Babatunde | Buddy Rich, Tony Williams | Tito Puente, Airto | Gary Burton, Evelyn Glennie | J Dilla, Timbaland |
Ready-to-Use Prompts
Eight curated percussion prompts spanning world traditions to electronic beats — copy one and start creating instantly.
Drum Circle
Create a West African drum circle at 115 BPM. Djembe lead pattern with slaps and tones, two dunun bass drums interlocking, shekere shaker, and a call-and-response structure. Mood: community celebration.
Latin Fire
Generate a Latin percussion track at 105 BPM. Congas playing tumba pattern, timbales accents, clave rhythm, güiro, and cowbell. Cascara pattern on the shell. Mood: salsa dance floor.
Taiko Thunder
Compose a taiko ensemble piece at 90 BPM. Massive o-daiko center, multiple shime-daiko patterns, dramatic crescendos, and breath-synchronized hits. Mood: ceremonial power.
Funk Pocket
Build a drum kit groove at 100 BPM. Deep pocket funk — ghost notes on snare, syncopated kick, half-open hi-hat, and a groove so deep it swings. Mood: head-nodding inevitable.
Marimba Song
Produce a mallet percussion piece at 120 BPM in C major. Marimba melody with four-mallet voicings, vibraphone chords, glockenspiel accents, and a light bass drum pulse. Mood: sunlit clarity.
808 Machine
Create an electronic percussion track at 140 BPM. TR-808 kick, snare, and hi-hats with classic drum machine programming — crisp, punchy, and minimal. Add cowbell. Mood: stripped-down beat.
Frame Drum Meditation
Generate a meditative percussion piece at 70 BPM. Frame drum providing a heartbeat pulse, finger cymbals, rain stick texture, and ocean drum washes. Mood: rhythmic trance.
Percussion Orchestra
Compose a full percussion ensemble at 130 BPM. Snare drum corps, timpani rolls, bass drum hits, cymbal crashes, and a march-like structure with dynamic builds. Mood: cinematic battle march.
Where Percussion Lives
Real-world scenarios where percussion-driven music creates impact and engagement.
Film & Trailer Scoring
Percussion drives cinematic tension, action sequences, and epic trailer moments. Taiko, orchestral percussion, and hybrid electronic beats power Hollywood soundtracks.
Trois Étapes Simples
De l'idée au morceau fini — décrivez, affinez et exportez votre musique percussion.
Décrivez Votre Vision
Dites à Music Agent quel type de morceau vous voulez — référencez une ambiance, un artiste ou une scène. Pas de jargon technique.
Affinez par Chat
Ajustez le BPM, la tonalité, les instruments et la structure par conversation naturelle. Itérez jusqu'à la perfection.
Exportez et Utilisez
Téléchargez votre morceau en audio haute qualité. Entièrement libre de droits — jeux, vidéos, publicités et plus.
Explorez Plus de Genres
Découvrez des genres connexes et élargissez votre palette sonore.
Questions Fréquentes
Tout ce que vous devez savoir sur la création de musique percussion avec Tunee.
Yes. All tracks generated through Tunee are cleared for commercial use — film, games, YouTube, ads, and more. No royalty fees or licensing issues.
Absolutely. Request West African djembe, Latin congas, Japanese taiko, Indian tabla, Middle Eastern darbuka, or any percussion tradition and get genre-authentic rhythmic patterns.
Yes. Request pure percussion ensemble pieces — drums, cymbals, shakers, and hand percussion only. No melodic instruments unless you specifically want them.
Yes. Request specific patterns like clave, paradiddle, or shuffle. Specify time signatures — 4/4, 6/8, 7/8, or polymetric combinations. The AI follows your rhythmic direction.
Absolutely. Request djembe with taiko, tabla with drum kit, or Latin percussion with electronic beats. Cross-cultural percussion fusion creates unique and powerful rhythmic textures.
Ready to Create Your
Percussion Music?
From djembe circles to electronic beats — bring rhythm to life in minutes.
Start Creating Now