Install
openclaw skills install play-physical-instrumentGet-started-fast guides for accessible physical instruments. Use when someone wants to learn an instrument, needs a stress relief practice, wants to play music with others, or is looking for an embodied creative skill.
openclaw skills install play-physical-instrumentMaking music with your hands is one of the oldest human stress relievers, social connectors, and sources of simple joy. You don't need talent, lessons, or years of practice to start. You need an instrument, 30 minutes, and willingness to sound bad for a little while. This skill covers four accessible instruments -- ukulele, guitar, harmonica, and hand drum -- each as a self-contained module. The goal is not mastery. The goal is playing something recognizable in your first session and building from there.
# Localization note
- Instrument pricing and availability vary by country and region
- Music traditions and social contexts for playing vary by culture
(e.g., guitars are universal; harmonicas are more Western/blues-centric;
hand drums have different forms globally -- djembe in West Africa,
cajon in Peru, tabla in India, bodhran in Ireland)
- Adjust instrument recommendations for cultural relevance
(suggest the djembe if user is in West Africa, cajon in Latin America, etc.)
- Songbook examples should include locally recognizable songs when possible
- Online learning platforms may have region-restricted content
- Currency conversion for budget recommendations
Agent action: Help the user choose an instrument based on their budget, goals, and what appeals to them. If they already have one in mind, skip to that module.
INSTRUMENT COMPARISON -- PICK ONE
UKULELE
- Entry cost: $30-60 (Makala Dolphin or Kala KA-15S)
- Difficulty: Easiest of the four. 4 strings, soft nylon, small neck.
- Time to first song: 15-20 minutes
- Best for: Absolute beginners, kids, people with small hands,
anyone who wants quick wins
- Social use: Campfires, sing-alongs, casual jams
- Downside: Limited sound range, not taken as seriously (unfairly)
GUITAR
- Entry cost: $80-150 (Yamaha FG800 acoustic, or used)
- Difficulty: Moderate. 6 strings, steel strings hurt at first.
- Time to first song: 30-45 minutes (simplified chords)
- Best for: Widest repertoire, most social versatility, most
learning resources available
- Social use: Everything -- campfires, bands, worship, open mics
- Downside: Finger pain for first 2-3 weeks. Higher dropout rate.
HARMONICA
- Entry cost: $10-20 (Hohner Special 20 in key of C)
- Difficulty: Easy to make sound, moderate to play melodies
- Time to first song: 10-15 minutes (simple melodies)
- Best for: Portability (fits in pocket), blues, folk, solo play
- Social use: Jam sessions, campfires, pairs well with guitar
- Downside: Key-specific (C harmonica plays in C and G easily,
other keys need more harmonicas)
HAND DRUM (CAJON or DJEMBE)
- Entry cost: $40-80 (budget cajon), $50-100 (djembe)
- Difficulty: Easy to start, infinite depth
- Time to first rhythm: 5-10 minutes
- Best for: Stress relief, rhythm development, playing with others
- Social use: Drum circles, band accompaniment, community events
- Downside: Loud. Neighbors may have opinions.
DON'T OVERTHINK THIS. Pick the one that makes you most excited.
If nothing stands out, start with the ukulele -- lowest cost,
fastest payoff, easiest on the hands.
Agent action: If the user picks ukulele, walk them through setup to first songs in one session.
UKULELE -- FROM ZERO TO PLAYING IN 30 MINUTES
WHAT TO BUY:
- Soprano or concert ukulele ($30-60)
Recommended: Kala KA-15S ($55) or Makala Dolphin ($35)
- Clip-on tuner ($5-10) or use a free tuner app (GuitarTuna)
- No other accessories needed to start
TUNING (do this first, every time):
Strings from top (closest to your face) to bottom:
G - C - E - A
Memory trick: "Good Cats Eat Apples" or "My Dog Has Fleas"
Use the clip-on tuner -- pluck string, turn peg until tuner shows green.
YOUR FIRST 4 CHORDS (these play hundreds of songs):
Diagrams show strings left to right: G C E A
Dots show where to press. Numbers = which finger.
C CHORD: Press string A at fret 3 (ring finger). Strum all strings.
That's it. One finger. You just played a chord.
Am CHORD: Press string E at fret 2 (middle finger). Strum all.
F CHORD: Press string E at fret 1 (index), string G at fret 2 (middle).
G CHORD: Press string C at fret 2 (index), string E at fret 3 (ring),
string A at fret 2 (middle).
PRACTICE SWITCHING:
Set a timer for 5 minutes. Switch between C and Am on every
4 strums. Then Am to F. Then F to G. Speed will come with time.
FIRST SESSION SONGS (C, Am, F, G in various orders):
1. "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" -- C, Em, Am, F (the ukulele classic)
2. "I'm Yours" (Jason Mraz) -- C, G, Am, F
3. "Riptide" (Vance Joy) -- Am, G, C (just 3 chords)
STRUMMING PATTERN (start here):
Down, down, up, up, down, up
(Say it out loud while strumming: "down, down, up, up, down, up")
This pattern works for 80% of pop songs.
15 MIN/DAY PRACTICE ROUTINE:
- 2 min: tuning
- 3 min: chord switching practice
- 10 min: play through one song (badly is fine -- keep the rhythm going)
Agent action: If the user picks guitar, walk them through the realistic first-session experience including finger pain management.
GUITAR -- HONEST BEGINNER GUIDE
WHAT TO BUY:
- Acoustic guitar ($80-150 new, $40-80 used)
Recommended new: Yamaha FG800 ($200), or Fender FA-15 3/4 ($130)
for smaller hands/kids
Used: any name-brand (Yamaha, Fender, Epiphone) acoustic in
decent condition with no buzzing frets
- Clip-on tuner ($5-10) or GuitarTuna app (free)
- Picks, medium gauge ($3 for a bag)
- Optional: capo ($5-10) -- lets you play in different keys easily
TUNING (standard):
Strings thick to thin: E - A - D - G - B - e
Memory trick: "Eddie Ate Dynamite Good Bye Eddie"
THE HONEST TRUTH ABOUT FINGER PAIN:
Your fingertips will hurt for the first 2-3 weeks. This is normal.
Calluses build up and the pain stops completely. Strategies:
- Practice 15-20 min max per session at first
- Take breaks when it hurts
- Press strings firmly but don't death-grip the neck
- Nylon string (classical) guitars hurt less but have wider necks
- It WILL get better. Every guitarist went through this.
5 ESSENTIAL CHORDS:
Em: Middle and ring finger on 2nd fret of A and D strings
(easiest guitar chord -- start here)
C: Index on 1st fret B string, middle on 2nd fret D, ring on 3rd fret A
Am: Index on 1st fret B, middle on 2nd fret D, ring on 2nd fret G
G: Multiple fingerings exist -- start with the 3-finger version
D: Index on 2nd fret G, ring on 3rd fret B, middle on 2nd fret e
(Look up chord diagrams on justinguitar.com -- visual diagrams are
easier to follow than text descriptions.)
FIRST SESSION SONGS:
1. "Horse With No Name" (America) -- Em, D6 (2 chords, 1 strumming pattern)
2. "Knockin' on Heaven's Door" (Bob Dylan) -- G, D, Am, C
3. "Wish You Were Here" (Pink Floyd) -- Em, G, A (simplified)
STRUMMING (start simple):
All downstrokes, one strum per beat. Count: 1, 2, 3, 4.
When that's comfortable, add upstrokes: down, down-up, down, down-up.
15 MIN/DAY PRACTICE ROUTINE:
- 2 min: tuning
- 3 min: chord switching (2 chords at a time, switch on beat 1)
- 10 min: play through one song (focus on rhythm, not perfection)
THE BEST FREE RESOURCE: justinguitar.com
Justin Sandercoe's free beginner course has taught more people guitar
than any other resource in history. Follow his structured course.
Agent action: If the user picks harmonica, cover the essentials for immediate blues playing.
HARMONICA -- BLUES IN 10 MINUTES
WHAT TO BUY:
- Diatonic harmonica in the key of C ($10-20)
Recommended: Hohner Special 20 ($20) or Lee Oskar ($20)
Avoid no-name brands under $10 (poor response, frustrating)
- Key of C plays in the keys of C major and G major
- That covers most beginner songs and jam sessions
HOLDING IT:
- Cup both hands around the harmonica
- Left hand grips the harmonica, right hand cups underneath
- Create a chamber with your hands -- opening and closing the
right hand creates the classic "wah-wah" effect
BASIC TECHNIQUE:
- SINGLE NOTES: Pucker your lips to isolate one hole
(most beginners blow/draw across multiple holes -- that's fine
for chords, but learn to isolate single holes for melodies)
- BLOW: Blow gently into a hole (exhale)
- DRAW: Pull air through a hole (inhale)
- Each hole makes a different note blowing vs drawing
THE BLUES SCALE ON A C HARMONICA (key of G):
Play these holes in sequence:
2 draw, 3 draw (bend), 4 blow, 4 draw, 5 draw, 6 blow
Don't worry about bending yet. Just play:
2 draw, 3 draw, 4 blow, 4 draw, 5 draw, 6 blow
That's a pentatonic scale. It sounds bluesy no matter what
order you play it in. Mess around with those 6 notes.
BREATHING TECHNIQUE:
- Breathe from your diaphragm, not your throat
- Relax your jaw and mouth
- Think of it as breathing THROUGH the harmonica, not AT it
- If you get dizzy, you're trying too hard. Ease up.
FIRST SONGS:
1. "Oh Susanna" -- holes 4-5-6-6-6-5-4-4-5 (all blow)
with 4-5 draw mixed in
2. "Mary Had a Little Lamb" -- 5 blow, 4 draw, 4 blow, 4 draw,
5 blow, 5 blow, 5 blow
3. Free-form blues: play any combination of the blues scale notes
over a 12-bar blues backing track (search YouTube for
"12 bar blues backing track in G")
THE 10-MINUTE BLUES SESSION:
1. Put on a 12-bar blues backing track (YouTube, key of G)
2. Play any draw notes between holes 2-6
3. Breathe naturally -- alternate blowing and drawing
4. Cup your hands and open/close for wah effect
5. You're playing blues. It doesn't matter if it's "right."
Agent action: If the user picks a hand drum, cover basic rhythm and technique.
HAND DRUM -- RHYTHM IN 5 MINUTES
WHAT TO BUY:
- CAJON: $40-80 (Meinl Headliner series is solid budget option)
You sit on it and play the front face. Versatile, compact.
- DJEMBE: $50-100 (Remo key-tuned for beginners)
Traditional goblet drum, played with hands. Deeper sound range.
- BONGOS: $30-60 (pair of small drums, very portable)
If choosing between them: cajon is most versatile for playing along
with Western music, djembe has the richest sound, bongos are most portable.
THREE BASIC SOUNDS (applicable to all hand drums):
BASS (low tone): Strike the center of the drum head with a flat,
relaxed hand. Let the hand bounce off. Full, deep sound.
TONE (mid tone): Strike near the edge of the drum head with
fingers together and flat. Keep fingers on the surface briefly
then lift. Clear, ringing mid-tone.
SLAP (high, sharp): Strike the edge with relaxed fingers that
snap against the surface. Quick, sharp pop sound.
FIRST RHYTHM PATTERN (works everywhere):
Count: 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and
Play: B T B B T
(B = bass, T = tone)
This is a basic rock beat translated to hand drum.
Practice it until it's automatic (5-10 minutes).
SECOND PATTERN (basic Latin/clave):
Count: 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and
Play: B B B T T
PLAYING WITH OTHERS:
- Lock into one pattern and repeat it. Consistency is more
important than complexity.
- Listen more than you play. Leave space.
- Match the tempo of whoever started first
- Start soft. You can always get louder.
- A consistent simple pattern is 10x more useful to a group
than a complicated pattern you can't sustain
FINDING DRUM CIRCLES:
- Search "drum circle [your city]" or "community drumming [your city]"
- Check community centers, parks departments, music stores
- Most drum circles welcome complete beginners and often have
spare drums to lend
- Show up, sit down, start with the basic pattern. Listen.
15 MIN/DAY PRACTICE ROUTINE:
- 5 min: practice the three sounds (bass, tone, slap) individually
- 5 min: play pattern 1 to a metronome or music (start at 80 bpm)
- 5 min: play along with a song you like (just keep time)
Agent action: Provide the user with a realistic practice framework that prevents quitting.
WHY PEOPLE QUIT AND HOW NOT TO
PEOPLE QUIT BECAUSE:
1. They expect too much too fast
2. Practice feels like homework
3. They practice technique instead of music
4. They practice alone and never play with others
THE FIX:
RULE 1: PLAY SONGS FROM DAY ONE.
Even badly. Even simplified. The point is music, not exercises.
Play the worst version of a song you love rather than the
perfect version of a scale you don't care about.
RULE 2: 15 MINUTES IS ENOUGH.
15 min/day beats 2 hours on Saturday. Consistency builds muscle
memory. Set a daily alarm. Don't negotiate with yourself.
RULE 3: ALLOW IT TO SOUND BAD.
Beginners who tolerate sounding bad for 2 weeks become intermediate
players. Beginners who can't tolerate it quit in 3 days.
RULE 4: PLAY WITH OTHER HUMANS.
You're "ready" to play with others after 2 weeks of daily practice.
Not because you're good, but because ensemble playing is where
the magic happens. It's a social activity.
MILESTONES (realistic):
- Day 1: Play your first chord/rhythm/notes
- Week 1: Play a simplified version of one song
- Week 2: Play 2-3 songs with basic rhythm
- Month 1: Play 5+ songs, switch chords/patterns reasonably smooth
- Month 3: Play along with recordings, jam with others
- Month 6: Play for people without apologizing first
MENTAL HEALTH NOTE:
Playing an instrument for 15 minutes reduces cortisol (stress hormone)
measurably. It's not a metaphor. Music-making is one of the most
evidence-backed stress relief practices that exists. It works
whether you're good at it or not.
instrument:
chosen_instrument: null
purchased: false
budget: null
tuned: false
first_chord_played: false
first_song_played: false
songs_learned: []
practice_routine_set: false
practice_days_this_week: 0
played_with_others: false
weeks_since_start: 0
current_skill_level: null
triggers:
- name: first_week_check
condition: "first_chord_played IS true AND weeks_since_start >= 1"
action: "You've been at it for a week. How's it going? Can you switch between your first chords without looking? If yes, time to learn a second song. If it still feels clunky, that's normal -- keep at it. The switch gets smoother around day 10."
- name: practice_nudge
condition: "practice_routine_set IS true AND practice_days_this_week < 3"
schedule: "weekly"
action: "Practice check-in: you've played less than 3 days this week. Even 5 minutes counts. Pick up the instrument, play one song, put it down. Consistency matters more than duration."
- name: social_playing_prompt
condition: "weeks_since_start >= 3 AND played_with_others IS false"
action: "You've been playing for 3+ weeks. Time to play with another human. This doesn't mean performing -- it means sitting with someone who plays and making sounds together. Look for a local jam session, drum circle, or just ask a friend who plays to mess around for 20 minutes."
- name: month_milestone
condition: "weeks_since_start >= 4 AND songs_learned LENGTH >= 3"
action: "One month in and you know multiple songs. You're past the point where most people quit. Consider expanding your repertoire, learning a new technique, or exploring a different style. What kind of music do you want to play next?"