Yes, both.
harp, reed pipes,drums,and the lyre.
In Mesopotamia, the instruments used were the drums, lyre, the harp, the reed pipes and the Oud
In one word, wind instruments look like 'pipes'. They produce sound when air is blown into the instrument. There are wind instruments with no reeds, single reed and double reed.
The sound is created by air passing through pipes. There are two main classes of organ pipes; flue pipes and reed pipes. Flue pipes are like whistles. There are no moving parts. There are both open and closed (stopped) flue pipes. Reed pipes produce their sound with a thin brass tongue that vibrates against a tube with a closed end called a shallot. This is attached to a larger pipe called a resonator. Depending on the shape of the pipe and the metal combinations used during the manufacturing of the organ pipe, various types of sound will be heard. Each pipe is tuned to a certain pitch ... middle A for instance is tuned (under ideal conditions) to 440 Hz, or 440 cycles per second.
A bagpipe has four reeds-three in the drones and one in the chanter.
i think reed pipes
You go into the music temple and at the of the room there will a box of reed pipes and a sign above reading "Free Reed Pipes"
The reed pipes used by a satyr can bend the forces of nature thus making it able to disarm there opponents
you press these buttons on it.
you ask the goddess with the reed to help you with your quest.She will teach you a song.
reed pipes i think
Duple.
Bag pipes and crumhorns have an enclosed reed and produce a buzzing sound.
The "Pan pipes", otherwise known, as, I believe, "reed pipes".
harp, reed pipes,drums,and the lyre.
They used Lyres, reed pipes, drums, and tamborines
The harmonica is regarded as a wind instrument and free reed instrument. Free reed instruments produce sound as air flows past a vibrating reed, and other examples include pitch pipes and accordions.