Someone recently showed me a photo of this instrument, called a "no wrong note strumstick," in a Hammacher Schlemmer catalog.
Here's the description from the catalog: "Requiring no prior musical training, this is the 29 inches long, three-stringed instrument immediately playable by beginners. It uses the unique, diatonic fretting of an Appalachian dulcimer, tuned in a drone relationship such that there are no wrong notes. A major scale is played by simply fretting just one string and strumming like a guitar. The pitch range is 2 1/2 octaves and the sound is similar to a banjo and mandolin. The included instructional DVD guides players step-by-step through two- and three-string melodies, as well as folk classics such as Will the Circle Be Unbroken and This Land is Your Land. Handmade in the U.S., the body and neck are African padouk hardwood, the soundboard is spruce, and the back is maple."
And here's the link to the strumstick page of the online catalog: http://www.hammacher.com/Product/78682?promo=search
Has anyone ever seen one of these before or know anything about them?
Here's the description from the catalog: "Requiring no prior musical training, this is the 29 inches long, three-stringed instrument immediately playable by beginners. It uses the unique, diatonic fretting of an Appalachian dulcimer, tuned in a drone relationship such that there are no wrong notes. A major scale is played by simply fretting just one string and strumming like a guitar. The pitch range is 2 1/2 octaves and the sound is similar to a banjo and mandolin. The included instructional DVD guides players step-by-step through two- and three-string melodies, as well as folk classics such as Will the Circle Be Unbroken and This Land is Your Land. Handmade in the U.S., the body and neck are African padouk hardwood, the soundboard is spruce, and the back is maple."
And here's the link to the strumstick page of the online catalog: http://www.hammacher.com/Product/78682?promo=search
Has anyone ever seen one of these before or know anything about them?