The original classical song was released in 2011 on YouTube by user C418 and got over 3.2 million views and more than 1,900 comments. Supporters shared that it brings back nostalgic memories of playing the tutorial worlds in Minecraft's console edition. Enjoy playing this memorable piece with the kalimba tab below.
And if you're looking for more easy-to-play kalimba songs, check out the Complete Kalimba Player eBook, where you'll find 37 songs, along with helpful tuning guides and diagrams to guide you on your kalimba journey.
Letter notes
(C° G) D C (C° G) D C A
(C° G) D C (C° G) D C
(C° G) D C (C° G) D C A
(C° G) D C (C° G) D C
(C° G) B G (C° G) (B G) E A
(C° G) B G (C° G) B C
(C° G E) B G (C° G E) B G
(D° A) (E° G) G° C°
(E° G) G° C° (C° G) D C
(C° G) D C A (C° G) D C
Tip: Consider adding a rest after every four lines to help with rhythm and make the song easier to play!
The Only Songbook You'll Ever Need
The fastest way to build confidence and technique is by playing real music, and the Kalimba Songbook is designed for exactly that. This focused collection of 80 clean, easy-to-read kalimba tabs lets beginners and developing players skip long theory sections and start making music immediately, using clear tablature that removes frustration and builds skill naturally. By learning through real songs, reading kalimba notation becomes intuitive, progress feels effortless, and playing becomes far more enjoyable as your confidence grows.






2 comments
Sean Hunt
This song kinda fire
Ray
Me personally, I would add a rest between every four lines! ^^