thumb|180px|right|Chancay 1000-1450 AD Lombards Museum The tinya (Quechua) or kirki (Quechua) is a percussion instrument, a small handmade drum of leather which is used in the traditional music of the Andean region, particularly Peru. The drum dates to the pre-Columbian era, and is used in traditional Peruvian dances, notably in Los Danzantes de Levanto where it is played by one person simultaneously with the antara, a type of panflute; that instrument combination is similar to the worldwide tradition of the pipe and tabor. File:Pinkullo flute.jpg|Musician plays Pinkullo flute with one hand a
thumb|180px|right|Chancay 1000-1450 AD Lombards Museum The tinya (Quechua) or kirki (Quechua) is a percussion instrument, a small handmade drum of leather which is used in the traditional music of the Andean region, particularly Peru. The drum dates to the pre-Columbian era, and is used in traditional Peruvian dances, notably in Los Danzantes de Levanto where it is played by one person simultaneously with the antara, a type of panflute; that instrument combination is similar to the worldwide tradition of the pipe and tabor.
File:Pinkullo flute.jpg|Musician plays Pinkullo flute with one hand and drums a tinya with the other at a Huari Danza in Peru.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).