Music is everywhere; even in fences and brooms

Xavi Lozano proves that even a metal rail can be an instrument

Performers Bufa & Sons host musical adventures using instruments you could find in your garden, refrigerator or even in a pile of scrap metal.

In a video posted this week, member Xavi Lozano proves a flute doesn't have to be a flute, in the traditional sense, it can also be a fence. When he lifts the corner of the yellow fence to his lips, it's confusing. But then suddenly, magically, there's music coming from that rusty metal.

It isn't the strangest instrument ever to feature in his performances with colleagues Guillem Aguilar and Marc Vila. Images on their website show them playing lamps and in a past video, Lozano chose a watering can.

The fence flute is more than a novelty. It accompanies guitar and drums in Bufa and Sons' song, Tanca, and to hear it, you wouldn't know it was a recycled instrument.

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Other tales of recycled music have emerged recently, including those from the 2012 documentary entitled Landfill Harmonic, about youth in Paraguay who build instruments from trash and play them, often beautifully.

They play their cardboard and scrap metal instruments in the Orchestra of Recycled Instruments, which performed for Former President Jimmy Carter, according to Hispanically Speaking News.

One person's trash is another's harmony.

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