Monastic Instruments Collection
Monastic Instruments Collection
Sacred Tibetan & Himalayan Monastic Instruments: Monastery Ceremony, Buddhist Ritual & Sacred Sound
The sacred monastic instruments of Tibetan Buddhism are integral to the architecture of ritual, shaping a meticulously crafted sonic environment of a monastery puja, a Cham dance performance, or a major drubchen ceremony, parallel to the visual and spatial elements of the space. Each instrument is utilized at specific moments within ritual sequences, fulfilling designated functions and embodying deep symbolism rooted in monastic tradition. Collectively, they form a sonic mandala, dissolving the boundaries between ordinary perception and enlightenment, inviting deities, and amplifying communal merit. The instruments, ranging from the resonant gong to the piercing Gyaling and rhythmic Damaru drum, express the Dharma in sound, representing an authoritative form of teaching. The artisans who craft these instruments in the workshops of Kathmandu and Patan are understood to be engaged in a sacred act of transmission as much as a technical craft.
Our Collection Highlights
Each instrument in our Monastic Instruments collection is hand-crafted in Nepal by skilled artisans using traditional materials, construction techniques, and decorative conventions passed down through generations of Himalayan instrument-making lineages. Available in a range of materials, sizes, and levels of elaboration, they are suited for active monastic use, personal practice, sound healing, and significant collecting.
- Damaru (Hand Drum): The small double-headed drum of the Vajrayana tradition, used in Chöd, sadhana, and tantric ritual to invoke dakinis, mark rhythmic transitions in practice, and express the alternating play of appearance and emptiness through the beat of its two faces. The Damaru is simultaneously the most cosmologically charged instrument in the Tibetan Buddhist sonic world, small enough to hold in one hand, vast enough in symbolism to contain the entire path. Hand-crafted in traditional materials including skull-form, wood, and mixed-metal construction with fabric and leather detailing.
- Dhyangro (Shamanic Frame Drum): A large, single-headed frame drum used in Tibetan and Himalayan ritual contexts for purification, healing, and the summoning of protective presences, a powerful instrument bridging the Buddhist and Bön traditions of the Himalayan world. The Dhyangro's deep, resonant boom creates the sonic ground of the ritual space, establishing the practitioner's connection to the earth, the spirits of place, and the vast field of protective awareness invoked through its sound.
- Gangsa & Ganglu (Ritual Gong Cymbals): Hand-cast ceremonial cymbals used in monastic puja and Cham dance performances to mark ritual transitions, provide rhythmic accompaniment to chanting and liturgical recitation, and signal the opening and closing of formal ceremony. The paired Gangsa and Ganglu produce a bright, cutting sound that cuts through the ambient noise of the assembly and marks each moment of the ritual's unfolding with crisp, authoritative precision.
- Gong: The deep, resonant ceremonial gong of the monastery hall, its sound carrying the call of all practitioners to assembly, the opening of formal puja, and the offering of sacred sound to the Buddhas and protectors across vast distances. Mounted on a traditional black lacquered stand, the monastery Gong produces a sound of extraordinary depth and sustain, a sonic expression of the all-pervading quality of the Dharma itself.
- Gyaling: The piercing, double-reed wind instrument of the Tibetan monastery, sounded during major empowerment ceremonies, Cham dance festivals, and deity invocations, its distinctive, penetrating tone cutting through ordinary perception and signaling with unmistakable authority the arrival of the sacred. The Gyaling's sound is understood as the voice of the enlightened beings themselves, otherworldly, commanding, and impossible to ignore. Hand-crafted in brass and mixed metal with traditional decorative ornamentation.
- Jhyamta (Large Ritual Cymbals): Heavy, broad-faced brass cymbals used in formal monastic ceremonies and processional contexts, producing a rich, crashing resonance that fills the monastery hall and marks the peak moments of puja and ritual performance. Unlike the smaller Tingshas of personal practice, the Jhyamta is an instrument of the assembly, its sound designed to be heard across the full extent of the monastery hall and to unite the gathered community in a single moment of sonic offering.
- Kangling (Thighbone Trumpet): In the monastic context, the Kangling is sounded at the opening of major tantric rituals, cremation ceremonies, and large-scale puja assemblies, its haunting, penetrating call announcing the beginning of formal sacred activity and summoning the assembly of dakas, dakinis, and wisdom beings to the ritual space. Hand-crafted from ethically sourced bone and composite materials with traditional copper, silver, and gold-plated metal fittings.
Why Choose Our Monastic Instruments Collection?
- Authentically Hand-Crafted in Nepal: Every instrument is produced by Himalayan artisans preserving the living traditions of Tibetan and Newari sacred instrument making.
- Complete Monastic Coverage: A single, curated collection spanning the full complement of instruments used in formal Tibetan Buddhist monastic ceremony and ritual.
- Traditional Materials & Construction: Each instrument crafted using the materials, proportions, and construction techniques specific to its individual tradition.
- Active Ceremony & Practice Grade: Each instrument suited for immediate use in monastic ceremony, personal sadhana, and professional sound healing contexts.
- Multiple Sizes & Price Ranges: From accessible personal practice instruments to large monastery-grade ceremonial pieces for shrine halls and assembly rooms.
- Rich Cultural Significance: Each instrument is a living carrier of centuries of Himalayan monastic tradition, as meaningful to collect and display as to play.
- Worldwide Shipping: Secure, insured delivery to your doorstep.















































































































































































































































































































