Do “maracas” have anything to do with the country morocco?
Maracas, Percussion Instrument With a name that means, “the hitting of one body against another,” instruments in the percussion family are played by being struck, shaken, or scraped. In the orchestra, the percussion section provides a variety of rhythms, textures and tone colors. Percussion instruments are classified as tuned or untuned. Tuned instruments play specific pitches or notes, just like the woodwind, brass and string instruments. Untuned instruments produce a sound with an indefinite pitch, like the sound of a hand knocking on a door. The percussion instruments are an international family, with ancestors from the Middle East, Asia, Africa, the Americas and Europe representing musical styles from many different cultures. Originally made of gourds filled with dry seeds, the maracas were developed in the Caribbean and South America. Shaking them creates their untuned sound. Modern maracas are made from a variety of different materials including plastic and wood.