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Ksink Ksink
Sold in a set of three, the Ksink Ksink are placed around the djembe head and provide a shaker-like sound while playing your drum. The Ksink Ksink are representative of the shields which were used to protect drummers during battle as they oversaw the battlefield and drummed messages to the soldiers. Available from Africa Alive.

Also, Ksink Ksinks were made in shiny metal so as to collect the sun's rays and reflect onto the drum head to tune it up, making a bright sound.

From: "Adam Rugo" <amrugo@artsci.wustl.edu> (reprinted with permission of the author)

Hi,

the jingles are called ksink-ksink, or kashink-kashink (Guinea), or segeh-segeh (Mali), or nyang-nyama (Senegal). Usually three jingle plates are placed on each drum, but fewer work if that's all you have.

Here in America I have seen them made from galvanized metal sheet, like that used in duct work, and also from shiny brass sheet stock.  The African models I have seen were made from pieces of old food or fuel cans. These kinds of cans in Africa have the labels printed directly on the metal, so the jingle plate has writing on it something about tomatoes or oil. These look really cool. They can be cut in all kinds of shapes, from squares and rectangles to flower-petal shapes and even the
silhouette of the African continent.  Different ethnic groups seems to shape theirs differently. The Yakuba (who we call the Dan) of Ivory Coast cut theirs rectangular and very long - two feet long!

The purpose of the ksink ksink is to add a gentle metal rattle sound to the drum notes. This is a common device - doubling the sound an instrument produces by adding sympathetic rattling or buzzing elements - which appears across the African continent. The Mande people put buzzing plates on stringed instruments like the kora and nkoni. The Shone put them on the mbira. I have heard it claimed that the large ksink ksinks are designed to the player's hands so master drummers can protect their
secret techniques, but this sounds apocryphal to me.

Hope this helps!
Peace,
Adam.