Create a mini tabletop concert by building simple instruments, arranging a setlist, and performing with friends to practice rhythm and teamwork.



Step-by-step guide to create a mini tabletop concert
Step 1
Gather all Materials Needed and bring them to your work table.
Step 2
Choose three simple instruments to build such as a shaker a drum and a rubber-band guitar.
Step 3
Make a shaker by filling the plastic bottle one-third full with rice or beans then close and tape the lid tightly.
Step 4
Make a drum by stretching a balloon over the open top of a small box and taping it so it is tight.
Step 5
Make a rubber-band guitar by stretching rubber bands around the box over the opening so they act like strings.
Step 6
Decorate each instrument using coloring materials and stickers to make them look fantastic.
Step 7
Clear a small tabletop area to use as your concert stage.
Step 8
Arrange your instruments on the tabletop stage so each player has room to play.
Step 9
Write a short setlist of three songs and number them in the order you will play.
Step 10
Assign each friend a role such as which instrument to play who will sing and who will count the beat.
Step 11
Rehearse your set while keeping a steady beat by counting aloud and playing through the songs for two minutes.
Step 12
Perform your mini tabletop concert for friends or family and have fun showing your teamwork.
Step 13
Share your finished creation on DIY.org
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!


Help!?
What can I use if I don't have a plastic bottle, balloon, or rubber bands?
If you don't have a plastic bottle use a small sealed jar or a paper cup with a taped lid and still fill it one-third with rice or beans for the shaker, for the drum stretch a plastic bowl or tin over the box opening instead of a balloon, and for the guitar use hair ties or elastic bands stretched around the box like the rubber-band strings.
My drum balloon keeps slipping or the shaker is too quiet—how can I fix that?
If the balloon slips or the shaker is quiet, re-stretch the balloon so it's tight before taping the box rim, add extra tape around the bottle lid so it can't open, and adjust the shaker filling (about one-third full) to change the sound.
How can I adapt this tabletop concert for different age groups?
For preschoolers have an adult pre-fill and tape the bottle and pre-stretch the balloon while they decorate and play very short songs, for school-age kids let them build the shaker/drum/guitar, write the three-song setlist and rehearse the two-minute set to keep a steady beat, and for older kids add more instruments or complex parts and assign roles like singer, beat counter, and lead.
How can we make the mini concert more creative or shareable?
Enhance the activity by decorating a cardboard backdrop and the tabletop stage with coloring materials and stickers, tune rubber bands to different pitches on the box, record the performance on a phone, and then share the finished creation on DIY.org.
Watch videos on how to create a mini tabletop concert
Facts about music performance and teamwork for kids
🎶 Babies move to steady beats before they can speak, showing humans are wired for rhythm from early on.
📋 Bands use setlists to keep the show on track; some famous acts tweak theirs every night for fun.
🎸 Many pop songs hover around 120 beats per minute, which feels great for sing-alongs and tabletop sets.
👯 Playing music together boosts teamwork and social bonding — groups who make music cooperate more!
🥁 You can make a working drum from a coffee can and a stretched balloon — simple materials can make big beats!


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