The music of the Indians living on the prairie and plains is still in the simple period of early music, which can be clearly felt from its rhythm. Generally speaking, songs can be divided into religious songs, poetic songs and high-pitched songs. The accompaniment is mainly single drum (an instrument made of rawhide with a diameter of 0.25 mm to 0.5 mm, used for solo singing and small chorus), bass drum, Two-sided drum (used to accompany large-scale dances), etc. When Indians reunite with friends during traditional festivals, they sing the "Welcome Song"; when singing for bears, they sing the religious song "Bear Song" (bears are regarded as the strongest gods and the cutest animals). When people sing religious songs, they gather in a sacred hut made of tree branches to feast, sing all night long, and sacrifice various foods such as pemmican to the bears. "Prairie Dance" is a popular song (first sung by warriors, and later evolved into a travel song by performers); "Ballball", which has about 100 songs, is a song sung by people during games and is also the most popular song. The host of this kind of game is often a witch doctor, an elder or a specialized group. Both men and women can participate, but women can only sing or watch. Participants in the game can be divided into two groups between 2 and 20 people, sitting cross-legged or kneeling face to face, with 10 baseballs standing in the middle of both sides, and one person from one side holding two balls in his hand. The cylindrical bone objects (one of which has a black line that is invisible when held in the hand) keep rotating around the opponent, asking the other person to guess which hand the grain with the black line is in, and the remaining people, co-authored "Sticks and Sticks" To the beat of "Music", he slapped the long board in front of the other party with a stick. If the guess is correct, the opponent will win a stick and two bones; if the opponent fails to guess correctly (within a certain time), the person holding the bones will win two sticks, and the game will continue as before until there is a Until one side loses all its sticks. Different "stick songs" have different fast and slow rhythms.
For the Indians who live close to the Arctic, drums are their main instrument (drums are also played when singing); they also have flutes made of bird bones, whistles made of tree bark, and grass sticks. A flute made from stems. Songs (often only used as accompaniments to dances) can be divided into love songs, carols, celebration songs, war songs, etc. in terms of content. Almost everyone among the Tuqiong people likes to sing love songs to express the romance of their love or the longing between lovers; carols are mainly about nature or praise of one's hometown; congratulatory songs are mainly sung at wedding banquets and mourning gatherings The Hahn people sing a war song during battle to encourage soldiers to bravely kill the enemy.