Recently, VoicePlay did a ridiculously theatrical rendition of "Drunken Sailor,"* where their vocal percussionist, Layne Stein, did a moderately impressive reproduction of the sound of the bodhrán (pronounced like "Baron," kinda-sorta).
And that got me a) hungry for the sound of the real thing, and b) wondering how most vocal percussionists (in a cappella bands, at least, not beatboxers who are making careers as solo artists) focus on making the sounds associated with the drum kits used in rock and jazz, and not other drum colors from other cultures.
BTW, as far as folk anthropologists can tell, the bodhrán is not an "ancient Pagan Ritual Instrument, sacred to the druids," but a repurposed household serving tray you'd give to the kids to bang on when they wanted to go out mumming around Christmastime. And it's gained cultural importance among the Irish diaspora, especially in the last hundred years.
Anyway, have a little sample of some fun drumming.
*Since it's a song in the Public Domain, and there's no one composer, or known original performer, I don't think calling it a "cover" is accurate. The song belongs as much to Geoff Castellucci and the others in the band as it does to any of the other 8 billion humans on Earth. That's what folk music is all about.