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Vibraphone

The vibraphone is a percussion instrument in the metallophone family. It consists of tuned metal bars and is typically played by using mallets to strike the bars. A person who plays the vibraphone is called a vibraphonist, vibraharpist, or vibist.

Vibraphone
A Musser vibraphone
Percussion instrument
Other names
  • Vibes
  • vibraharp
  • vibraceleste
  • vibratone
Classification Keyboard percussion
Hornbostel–Sachs classification111.222
(Sets of percussion plaques)
Inventor(s)Herman E. Winterhoff
Developed1916
Playing range
Related instruments
Musicians
See list of vibraphonists
Builders

The vibraphone resembles the steel marimba, which it superseded. One of the main differences between the vibraphone and other keyboard percussion instruments is that each bar suspends over a resonator tube containing a flat metal disc. These discs are attached together by a common axle and spin when the motor is turned on. This causes the instrument to produce its namesake tremolo or vibrato effect. The vibraphone also has a sustain pedal similar to a piano. When the pedal is up, the bars produce a muted sound; when the pedal is down, the bars sustain for several seconds or until again muted with the pedal.

The vibraphone is commonly used in jazz music, in which it often plays a featured role, and was a defining element of the sound of mid-20th-century "Tiki lounge" exotica, as popularized by Arthur Lyman.[1] It is the second most popular solo keyboard percussion instrument in classical music, after the marimba, and is part of the standard college-level percussion performance education. It is a standard instrument in the modern percussion section for orchestras, concert bands, and in the marching arts (typically as part of the front ensemble).

History

 
A 1928 ad for the Deagan vibraharp.

Invention

Around 1916, instrument maker Herman Winterhoff of the Leedy Manufacturing Company began experimenting with vox humana effects on a three octave (F3 to F6) steel marimba. His original design attempted to produce this effect by raising and lowering the resonators which caused a noticeable vibrato.[2] In 1921, Winterhoff perfected the design by instead attaching a motor that rotated small discs underneath the bars to achieve the same effect.[3] After sales manager George H. Way termed this instrument the "vibraphone", it was marketed by Leedy starting in 1924.[4] The Leedy vibraphone managed to achieve a decent degree of popularity after it was used in the novelty recordings of "Aloha 'Oe" and "Gypsy Love Song" in 1924 by vaudeville performer Louis Frank Chiha.[5]

However, this instrument differed significantly from the instrument now called the "vibraphone". The Leedy vibraphone did not have a pedal mechanism, and it had bars made of steel rather than aluminum. The growing popularity of Leedy's instrument led competitor J.C. Deagan, Inc., the inventor of the original steel marimba of which Leedy's design was based on, to ask its chief tuner, Henry Schluter, to develop a similar instrument in 1927. Instead of just copying the Leedy design, Schluter introduced several significant improvements. He made the bars from aluminum instead of steel for a mellower tone, adjusted the dimensions and tuning of the bars to eliminate the dissonant harmonics present in the Leedy design, and introduced a foot-controlled damper bar. Schluter's design became more popular than the Leedy design and has become the template for all instruments now called "vibraphone".[6]

Both the terms "vibraphone" and "vibraharp" were trademarked by Leedy and Deagan, respectively. Other manufacturers were forced to use the generic name "vibes" or devise new trade names such as "vibraceleste" for their instruments incorporating the newer design.[7]

Use

 
Lionel Hampton playing the vibraphone in 1946.

While the initial purpose of the vibraphone was as a novelty instrument for vaudeville orchestras, that use was quickly overwhelmed in the 1930s by its development in jazz music.[8] The use of the vibraphone in jazz was popularized by Lionel Hampton, a jazz drummer from California.[9] At one recording session with bandleader Louis Armstrong, Hampton was asked to play a vibraphone that had been left behind in the studio. This resulted in the recording of the song "Memories of You" in 1930, containing what is often considered to be the first instance of an improvised vibraphone solo.[10]

In its early history, the vibraphone was often used in classical music to give compositions a jazz influence.[11] The first known composer to use the vibraphone was Havergal Brian in his 1917 opera, The Tigers, which called for two of them.[12][13] However, since the piece was lost and did not premiere until 1983, Ferde Grofé's Grand Canyon Suite, completed in 1931, is sometimes considered to be the first piece to use a vibraphone instead.[14] Other early classical composers to use the vibraphone were Alban Berg, who used it prominently in his opera Lulu in 1935,[15] and William Grant Still, who used it in his Afro-American Symphony that same year.[16] While the vibraphone has not been used quite as extensively in the realm of classical music as it has with jazz, it can often be heard in theatre or film music, such as in Leonard Bernstein's West Side Story.[17]

Characteristics

Range

The standard modern instrument has a range of 3 octaves, starting from the F below middle C (F3 to F6 in scientific pitch notation). Larger 3+12 or 4 octave models from the C below middle C are also becoming more common (C3 to F6 or C7). Unlike its cousin, the glockenspiel, the vibraphone is generally a non-transposing instrument, written at concert pitch.[18]

Mallets

 
An overhead view of a 3 octave vibraphone with different mallets of varying hardness.

Vibraphone mallets usually consist of a rubber ball core wrapped in yarn or cord and attached to a narrow dowel, most commonly made of rattan or birch and sometimes of fiberglass or nylon. Mallets suitable for the vibraphone are also generally suitable for the marimba.[19]

The mallets can have a great effect on the timbre, ranging from a bright metallic clang to a mellow ring with no obvious initial attack. Consequently a wide array of mallets is available, offering variations in hardness, head size, weight, shaft length and flexibility.[20]

Classical players must carry a wide range of mallet types to accommodate the changing demands of composers who are looking for particular sounds. Jazz players, on the other hand, often make use of multi-purpose mallets to allow for improvisation.[21]

Construction

Bars

 
The underside of the low F3 bar is exposed, showing the tuning marks, a disc, and the pins and cord used to hold the bar.

Vibraphone bars are made from aluminum bar stock, cut into blanks of predetermined length. Holes are drilled through the width of the bars, so they can be suspended by a cord (typically paracord). To maximize the sustain of the bars, the holes are placed at approximately the nodal points of the bar (i.e., the points of minimum amplitude around which the bar vibrates). For a uniform bar, the nodal points are located 22.4% from each end of the bar.[22][23]

Material is ground away from the underside of the bars in an arch shape to lower the pitch. This allows the lower-pitched bars to be a manageable length. It is also the key to the mellow sound of the vibraphone (and marimba, which uses the same deep arch) compared with the brighter xylophone, which uses a shallower arch, and the glockenspiel, which has no arch at all. These rectangular bars have three primary modes of vibration.[24] The deep arch causes these modes to align and create a consonant arrangement of intervals: a fundamental pitch, a pitch two octaves above that, and a third pitch an octave and a major third above the second. For the F3 bar that usually forms the lowest note on a vibraphone, there would be F3 as the fundamental, F5 as the first overtone, and A6 as the second overtone. As a side effect, the arch causes the nodal points of the fundamental vibration to shift closer towards the ends of the bar.[25]

After beveling or rounding the edges, fine-tuning adjustments are made. If a bar is flat, its overall pitch structure can be raised by removing material from the ends of the bar. Once this slightly sharp bar is created, the secondary and tertiary tones can be lowered by removing material from specific locations of the bar. Vibraphones are tuned to a standard of A = 442 Hz or A = 440 Hz, depending on the manufacturer or the customer's preference. While concert pitch is generally A = 440 Hz, the sharper tuning of A = 442 Hz is used to give the vibraphone a slightly brighter sound to cut through the ensemble.[26]

Like marimbas, professional vibraphones have bars of graduated width. Lower bars are made from wider stock, and higher notes from narrower stock, to help balance volume and tone across the range of the instrument.[27] The bars are anodized after fine-tuning (typically in a silver or gold color) and may have a glossy or matte finish. These are cosmetic features with a negligible effect on the sound.[28]

The bed for the bars is made by laying down four wooden rails onto each end of the frame. Each rail has a series of pins with rubber spacers. As the cord passes through the holes of the bar, they rest on the pins to suspend the bars. On each outer side, the ends of the cord attach together with a spring to provide tension and flex.[29]

Resonators

Resonators are thin-walled tubes, typically made of aluminum, but any suitably strong material can be used. They are open at one end and closed at the other. Each bar is paired with a resonator whose diameter is slightly wider than the width of the bar and whose length to the closure is one-quarter of the wavelength of the fundamental frequency of the bar. When the bar and resonator are properly in tune with each other, the vibrating air beneath the bar travels down the resonator and is reflected from the closure at the bottom, then returns to the top and is reflected back by the bar, over and over, creating a much stronger standing wave and increasing the amplitude of the fundamental frequency.[30] The resonators, besides raising the upper end of the vibraphone's dynamic range, also affect the overall tone of the vibraphone, since they amplify the fundamental frequency, but not the upper partials.[31]

There is a trade-off between the amplifying effect of the resonators and the length of sustain of a ringing bar. The energy in a ringing bar comes from the initial mallet strike, and that energy can either be used to make the bar ring louder initially, or not as loudly but for a longer period of time. This is not an issue with marimbas and xylophones, where the natural sustain time of the wooden bars is short, but vibraphone bars can ring for many seconds after being struck, and this effect is highly desirable in many circumstances. Therefore, the resonators in a vibraphone are usually tuned slightly off-pitch to create a balance between loudness and sustain.[32]

A unique feature of vibraphone resonators is the shaft of rotating discs, commonly called fans, across the top. When the fans are open, the resonators have full function. When the fans are closed, the resonators are partially occluded, reducing the resonance of the fundamental pitch. A drive belt connects the shafts to an electric motor beneath the playing surface and rotates the fans. This rotation of the fans creates a tremolo effect and a slight vibrato.[33]

Oftentimes, vibraphones, and other mallet instruments, will include non-functional, decorative resonator tubes with no corresponding bar above to make the instrument look more complete.[34]

In 1970, Deagan introduced the ElectraVibe, which dispensed with resonator tubes entirely and took a signal directly from the bars, adding a tremolo in a preamplifier. This sought to improve the portability of the instrument and solve the problem inherent in all tuned mallet instruments: miking the bars evenly.[35]

Damper mechanism

For the first few years of production, the original Leedy vibraphone did not include a mechanism for damping, or stopping, the sustaining tones. In 1927, the J.C. Deagan company introduced a pedal mechanism that has not changed substantially since. A rigid bar beneath the center of the instrument is pressed upward by an adjustable spring and engages a long felt pad against the sharps and the naturals. A foot pedal lowers the bar and allows notes to ring freely; releasing the pedal engages the damper and stops any vibrating notes. One common flaw of this damping mechanism is that the bar is often supported at one point in the middle, causing it to damp the instrument unevenly in the upper and lower registers. To combat this, some manufacturers have made silicone- or liquid-filled damper pads whose fluid shape can conform evenly around the bars.[36][37]

Motor

 
The exposed mechanism of the motor and rubber pulley is shown.

Vibraphones usually have an electric motor and pulley assembly mounted on one side or the other to drive the disks in the resonators. Often, especially within classical music, the vibraphone is played with the motor off. Certain models for outdoor use as part of a front ensemble have the motor removed entirely.[38] In those cases having the motor off is the norm and is not used unless specifically called for.[39][40]

The early vibraphones used motors that were intended to power record-player turntables and had limited to no speed-adjustment capabilities. Whatever speed adjustments were possible were made by moving the drive belt among a small number of pulleys (usually three) of varying diameters. Later, variable-speed AC motors became available at reasonable prices. These motors allow the adjustment of the rotating speed by a potentiometer mounted on a control panel near the motor. They typically support rotation rates in the range of 1–12 Hz.[41]

Technique

Two-mallet style

 
Milt Jackson playing at Parnell's jazz club in Seattle, Washington. Note his characteristic palms-inward two-mallet grip.

The two-mallet approach to vibes is traditionally linear, playing like a horn rather than comping like a guitar or piano. Two-mallet players usually concentrate on playing a single melodic line and rely on other musicians to provide accompaniment. Double stops (two notes played simultaneously) are sometimes used, but mostly as a reinforcement of the main melodic line, similar to the use of double stops in solo violin music. In jazz groups, two-mallet vibraphonists are usually considered part of the "front line" with the horn players, contributing solos of their own but contributing very little in the way of accompaniment to other soloists.[42]

Two-mallet players use several different grips, the most common being a matched grip called German grip, in which the mallets are played palms down, with the thumbs facing each other. In this grip, the mallets are held between the thumb and index finger of each hand, with the remaining three fingers of each hand supporting the shafts. This grip uses a combination of wrist movement and fingertip control to manipulate the mallet.[43] Another popular grip is French grip, a grip also commonly used on timpani. The mallets are again held between the thumb and index fingers and controlled with the remaining three fingers, but the palms are held vertically, with the thumbs pointed upward. Most of the stroke action comes from the fingertip control of the shafts, with the wrists contributing slightly less than they do with the German grip.[44]

Reg Kehoe and his Marimba Queens playing in the early 1940s. Reg Kehoe (center) switches to the vibraphone part way through for a solo using two mallets.

Passages are usually played with alternating sticking, but double strokes (playing two notes in a row with the same hand) are used when convenient to minimize crossing the hands.[45]

The player must pay close attention to the damper pedal to avoid multiple notes ringing unintentionally at the same time. Because the notes ring for a considerable fraction of a second when struck with the damper pad up, and ringing bars do not stop ringing immediately when contacted by the pad, players use a technique called "after pedaling". In this technique, the player presses the damper pedal slightly after striking the bar—shortly enough after so the recently struck note continues to ring, but long enough after so that the previous note stops ringing.[46]

In another damper technique—"half pedaling"—the player depresses the pedal just enough to remove the spring pressure from the bars, but not enough to make the pad lose contact with the bars. This lets the bars ring slightly longer than with the pad fully up and can make a medium-fast passage sound more legato without pedaling every note.[47]

Four-mallet style

 
Gary Burton, using his namesake grip, with guitarist Julian Lage.

The four-mallet vibraphone style is multi-linear, like a piano. In jazz groups, four-mallet vibraphonists are often considered part of the rhythm section, typically substituting for piano or guitar and providing accompaniment for other soloists in addition to soloing themselves.[48] Furthermore, the four-mallet style has led to a significant body of unaccompanied solo vibes playing.[49] One notable example is Gary Burton’s performance of "Chega de Saudade (No More Blues)" from his Grammy-winning 1971 album, Alone at Last.[50]

The most popular four-mallet grip for vibraphone is the Burton grip, named for Gary Burton. One mallet is held between the thumb and index finger and the other is held between the index and middle fingers. The shafts cross in the middle of the palm and extend past the heel of the hand. For wide intervals, the thumb often moves in between the two mallets, and the inside mallet is held in the crook of the fingers. Unlike many other grips, the outer right mallet is the leading mallet rather than the inside two. Although some early vibes players made use of four mallets, notably Red Norvo, Adrian Rollini, and sometimes Lionel Hampton, the fully pianistic four-mallet approach to jazz on the vibraphone is almost entirely the creation of Burton.[51][52]

Practitioners of Burton grip tend to make more use of double strokes as compared to two-mallet players. This is done not only to avoid crossing the hands, but also to help minimize the motions between the two bar rows. For example, an ascending E major scale could be played by keeping the left hand on the upper bars and the right hand on the lower. For linear passages with leaps, all four mallets are often used sequentially.[53]

Also popular is the Stevens grip, named for marimbist Leigh Howard Stevens. Many other grips are in use, some variations on the Burton or Stevens, others idiosyncratic creations of individual vibes players.[54]

Dampening

Pedaling techniques are at least as important for the four-mallet vibraphonist as for two-mallet players, but the all-or-nothing damping system of the sustain pedal presents many obstacles to multi-linear playing, since each line normally has its own damping requirements independent of the other lines. To overcome this, four-mallet players also use "mallet dampening" and "hand dampening".[55] There are many benefits of being proficient in these techniques, as it allows the player to transition between chords much more smoothly and play new notes without having them affect the quality of the chord when the pedal is down.[56]

The most common form of mallet dampening occurs when the vibraphonist plays a note with one mallet before pressing another mallet into the ringing bar to stop it from sounding. Usually the damping mallet and the original striking mallet are held in different hands, but advanced players can, in some circumstances, use the same hand.[57] Mallet dampening also includes "dead strokes", where a player strikes a bar and then, instead of drawing the mallet back, directly presses the head of the mallet onto the bar, causing the ringing to stop immediately. This produces a fairly distinctive "choked" sound, and dead strokes are often used just for that particular sound in addition to the damping aspects.[58]

Hand dampening (also known as "finger dampening") can be used to damp a note on the lower bars while striking a nearby upper bar. As the player strikes the upper bar with a mallet, they simultaneously press the heel of their hand or the side of their finger into the ringing lower bar, using the same hand to strike the upper bar and damp the lower one. Using both hands, it's possible to damp and strike two bars at once.[59]

Extended techniques

Five to six mallets

To achieve a denser sound and richer chord voicings, some vibraphonists have experimented with three mallets per hand, either in both hands for a total of six mallets or in just the left hand for a total of five.[60]

Bowing

 
A vibraphonist using two double bass bows to play "Mourning Dove Sonnet" by Christopher Deane.

Like many other metallophones, percussionists can use an orchestral bow on the vibraphone to achieve sustained tones that will not decay, nor have a percussive attack. This is done by bowing the bars perpendicular to their outer edges.[61] Due to the different mode of vibration, this also changes the sound of the vibraphone by emphasizing the higher harmonics and giving it a more "glassy" tone.[62] Because changing notes requires large and precise movements, fast passages are not often written for bowed vibraphone.[63]

Pitch bend

Bent notes can be achieved on the vibraphone by sliding a rubber or plastic mallet from the nodal point to the center of the bar. This technique is only able to lower the pitch by about a half step.[64][65]

Repertoire

Classical

As part of the standard percussion section, the use of the vibraphone in classical music has increased over the past fifty years, especially within the collegiate percussion ensemble.[66]

Concertos

Several concertos have been written for the vibraphone, the first of these being Darius Milhaud's Concerto for Marimba, Vibraphone and Orchestra written in 1947.[67] Other prominent concertos for the vibraphone include Ney Rosauro's Concerto No. 1 for Vibraphone written in 1996 and Emmanuel Séjourné's Concerto for Vibraphone and Strings written in 1999.[68][69]

Solos

The vibraphone is the second most popular solo keyboard percussion instrument, after the marimba.[70] Solos may be jazz standards specifically arranged for the instrument or newly composed pieces that are either jazz-oriented or classical in nature. Some of the most performed solo literature includes Mirror from Another by David Friedman, "Mourning Dove Sonnet" by Christopher Deane, Trilogy by Tim Huesgen, and "Blues for Gilbert" by Mark Glentworth.[71][72]

Manufacturers

Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, each manufacturer attracted its own following in various specialties, but the Deagan vibraphones were the models preferred by many of the specialist jazz players. Deagan struck endorsement deals with many of the leading players, including Lionel Hampton and Milt Jackson. However, the Deagan company went out of business in the 1980s, and its trademark and patents were purchased by Yamaha. Yamaha continues to make percussion instruments based on the Deagan designs.[73]

In 1948, the Musser Mallet Company was founded by Clair Omar Musser, who had been a designer at Deagan. The Musser Mallet Company continues to manufacture vibraphones as part of the Ludwig Drum Company after their purchase in 1965. The Leedy Manufacturing Company, the original designers of the vibraphone, had already merged with Ludwig Drums in 1929 under C. G. Conn.[74][75]

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  53. ^ Morales, Andrew (2020). "Sticking Categories: A Practical Application in Contemporary Literature for Four-Mallet Marimba". The University of Arizona. p. 21. OCLC 1194935009. ProQuest 2435175212 – via ProQuest.
  54. ^ Glassock, Lynn (1971). "A Study of Four Mallet Grips Used in Playing Keyboard Percussion Instruments" (PDF). University of North Texas. p. 72. OCLC 849690331.
  55. ^ United States Army (2018). "Percussion Techniques" (PDF). p. 40.
  56. ^ Kuzmich, John; Bash, Lee (1984). Complete Guide to Instrumental Jazz Instruction: Techniques for Developing a Successful School Jazz Program. West Nyack, NY: Parker Pub. Co. p. 195. ISBN 978-0-13-160565-7. OCLC 10023386.
  57. ^ Cheesman, Brian Scott (2012). "An Introductory Guide to Vibraphone: Four Idiomatic Practices and a Survey of Pedagogical Material and Solo Literature". The University of Southern Mississippi. p. 26. OCLC 815679716.
  58. ^ Sevsay, Ertuğrul (2013). "Vibraphone". The Cambridge Guide to Orchestration. para. 10. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107067486.
  59. ^ Lipner, Arthur (1996). The Vibes Real Book. MalletWorks Music. OCLC 837860299.
  60. ^ Porter, Joe (2011). "A New Six-Mallet Marimba Technique and its Pedagogical Approach" (PDF). University of Lethbridge. p. 3. OCLC 1033167255 – via Percussive Arts Society.
  61. ^ Smith, Joshua D. (2008). "Extended Performance Techniques and Compositional Style in the Solo Concert Vibraphone Music of Christopher Deane" (PDF). University of North Texas. p. 14. OCLC 1269351540.
  62. ^ Rossing 2000, p. 186.
  63. ^ Holland, James (2005). Practical Percussion: a Guide to the Instruments and their Sources (Revised ed.). Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-1-4616-7063-6. OCLC 681550519.
  64. ^ Dimpker, Christian (2013). Extended Notation: The Depiction of the Unconventional. Berlin: LIT Verlag. p. 132. ISBN 978-3-643-90302-0. OCLC 830355087.
  65. ^ Dierstein, Christian (2018). The Techniques of Percussion Playing: Mallets, Implements, and Applications. Michel Roth, Jens Ruland, Christiana Nobach, Ellen Fallowfield. Kassel: Bärenreiter-Verlag. p. 152. ISBN 978-3-7618-2406-1. OCLC 1051235045.
  66. ^ Parker, Wesley Grant (2010). "The History and Development of the Percussion Orchestra" (PDF). Florida State University. p. 21. OCLC 756921613.
  67. ^ Roeder, Michael Thomas (1994). A History of the Concerto. Portland, OR: Amadeus Press. p. 365. ISBN 0-931340-61-6. OCLC 27070961.
  68. ^ Barnes, Austin Lee (2012). "Analysis Of Selected Percussion Literature: Concerto For Vibraphone and Orchestra By Ney Rosauro, Surface Tension By Dave Hollinden, Urban Sketches For Percussion Trio By Lon W. Chaffin, Take Five By Paul Desmond, And DT Supreme" (PDF). Kent State University. p. 2. OCLC 806852905.
  69. ^ Chaib, Fernando (2012). "Vibrafone: Uma Fonte de Coloridos Sonoros". Per Musi (in Portuguese) (25): 58. doi:10.1590/S1517-75992012000100006. ISSN 1517-7599.
  70. ^ Siwe, Thomas (1995). Percussion Solo Literature. Media Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-9635891-1-8.
  71. ^ Hewitt, Jeferry Allen (2014). "The Objective Grading of Original Unaccompanied Four-Mallet Solo Vibraphone Literature" (PDF). University of Arizona. p. 114. OCLC 903490514.
  72. ^ Smith, Joshua D. (November 2011). "The Quest for Solo Vibraphone Repertoire" (PDF). Percussive Notes. Percussive Arts Society. 49 (6): 31.
  73. ^ Strain, James Allen. . Hall of Fame. Indianapolis, IN: Percussive Arts Society. Archived from the original on 30 January 2016. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  74. ^ Schmidt, Paul William (1991). History of the Ludwig Drum Company. Fullerton, CA: Centerstream. p. 28. ISBN 0-931759-49-8. OCLC 24811851.
  75. ^ Beck 2007, p. 402.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Burton, Gary (1965). Introduction to Jazz Vibes. Creative Music. ASIN B002V5MLY0.
  • Udow, Michael (2019). Percussion Pedagogy. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-090296-4.
  • Cook, Gary D. (2018). Teaching Percussion. Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-1-337-67222-1.

External links

  •   Media related to Vibraphones at Wikimedia Commons
  • A Demonstration of Mallet Dampening by Gary Burton
  • Vibraharps from The Deagan Resource
  • "Mourning Dove Sonnet" performed by Doug Perry

vibraphone, confused, with, vibraslap, vibraphone, percussion, instrument, metallophone, family, consists, tuned, metal, bars, typically, played, using, mallets, strike, bars, person, plays, vibraphone, called, vibraphonist, vibraharpist, vibist, musser, vibra. Not to be confused with Vibraslap The vibraphone is a percussion instrument in the metallophone family It consists of tuned metal bars and is typically played by using mallets to strike the bars A person who plays the vibraphone is called a vibraphonist vibraharpist or vibist VibraphoneA Musser vibraphonePercussion instrumentOther namesVibesvibraharpvibracelestevibratoneClassificationKeyboard percussionHornbostel Sachs classification111 222 Sets of percussion plaques Inventor s Herman E WinterhoffDeveloped1916Playing rangeRelated instrumentsSteel marimbasong bellsglockenspielMusiciansSee list of vibraphonistsBuildersMusserYamahaAdams Musical InstrumentsSaitoMarimba OnePremier PercussionMajestic PercussionBergeraultDynastyVibraphone sound sample source An F major scale played on a vibraphone with the motors on Problems playing this file See media help The vibraphone resembles the steel marimba which it superseded One of the main differences between the vibraphone and other keyboard percussion instruments is that each bar suspends over a resonator tube containing a flat metal disc These discs are attached together by a common axle and spin when the motor is turned on This causes the instrument to produce its namesake tremolo or vibrato effect The vibraphone also has a sustain pedal similar to a piano When the pedal is up the bars produce a muted sound when the pedal is down the bars sustain for several seconds or until again muted with the pedal The vibraphone is commonly used in jazz music in which it often plays a featured role and was a defining element of the sound of mid 20th century Tiki lounge exotica as popularized by Arthur Lyman 1 It is the second most popular solo keyboard percussion instrument in classical music after the marimba and is part of the standard college level percussion performance education It is a standard instrument in the modern percussion section for orchestras concert bands and in the marching arts typically as part of the front ensemble Contents 1 History 1 1 Invention 1 2 Use 2 Characteristics 2 1 Range 2 2 Mallets 3 Construction 3 1 Bars 3 2 Resonators 3 3 Damper mechanism 3 4 Motor 4 Technique 4 1 Two mallet style 4 2 Four mallet style 4 2 1 Dampening 4 3 Extended techniques 4 3 1 Five to six mallets 4 3 2 Bowing 4 3 3 Pitch bend 5 Repertoire 5 1 Classical 5 1 1 Concertos 5 1 2 Solos 6 Manufacturers 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory Edit A 1928 ad for the Deagan vibraharp Invention Edit Around 1916 instrument maker Herman Winterhoff of the Leedy Manufacturing Company began experimenting with vox humana effects on a three octave F3 to F6 steel marimba His original design attempted to produce this effect by raising and lowering the resonators which caused a noticeable vibrato 2 In 1921 Winterhoff perfected the design by instead attaching a motor that rotated small discs underneath the bars to achieve the same effect 3 After sales manager George H Way termed this instrument the vibraphone it was marketed by Leedy starting in 1924 4 The Leedy vibraphone managed to achieve a decent degree of popularity after it was used in the novelty recordings of Aloha Oe and Gypsy Love Song in 1924 by vaudeville performer Louis Frank Chiha 5 However this instrument differed significantly from the instrument now called the vibraphone The Leedy vibraphone did not have a pedal mechanism and it had bars made of steel rather than aluminum The growing popularity of Leedy s instrument led competitor J C Deagan Inc the inventor of the original steel marimba of which Leedy s design was based on to ask its chief tuner Henry Schluter to develop a similar instrument in 1927 Instead of just copying the Leedy design Schluter introduced several significant improvements He made the bars from aluminum instead of steel for a mellower tone adjusted the dimensions and tuning of the bars to eliminate the dissonant harmonics present in the Leedy design and introduced a foot controlled damper bar Schluter s design became more popular than the Leedy design and has become the template for all instruments now called vibraphone 6 Both the terms vibraphone and vibraharp were trademarked by Leedy and Deagan respectively Other manufacturers were forced to use the generic name vibes or devise new trade names such as vibraceleste for their instruments incorporating the newer design 7 Use Edit Lionel Hampton playing the vibraphone in 1946 While the initial purpose of the vibraphone was as a novelty instrument for vaudeville orchestras that use was quickly overwhelmed in the 1930s by its development in jazz music 8 The use of the vibraphone in jazz was popularized by Lionel Hampton a jazz drummer from California 9 At one recording session with bandleader Louis Armstrong Hampton was asked to play a vibraphone that had been left behind in the studio This resulted in the recording of the song Memories of You in 1930 containing what is often considered to be the first instance of an improvised vibraphone solo 10 In its early history the vibraphone was often used in classical music to give compositions a jazz influence 11 The first known composer to use the vibraphone was Havergal Brian in his 1917 opera The Tigers which called for two of them 12 13 However since the piece was lost and did not premiere until 1983 Ferde Grofe s Grand Canyon Suite completed in 1931 is sometimes considered to be the first piece to use a vibraphone instead 14 Other early classical composers to use the vibraphone were Alban Berg who used it prominently in his opera Lulu in 1935 15 and William Grant Still who used it in his Afro American Symphony that same year 16 While the vibraphone has not been used quite as extensively in the realm of classical music as it has with jazz it can often be heard in theatre or film music such as in Leonard Bernstein s West Side Story 17 Characteristics EditRange Edit The standard modern instrument has a range of 3 octaves starting from the F below middle C F3 to F6 in scientific pitch notation Larger 3 1 2 or 4 octave models from the C below middle C are also becoming more common C3 to F6 or C7 Unlike its cousin the glockenspiel the vibraphone is generally a non transposing instrument written at concert pitch 18 Mallets Edit Main article Percussion mallet An overhead view of a 3 octave vibraphone with different mallets of varying hardness Vibraphone mallets usually consist of a rubber ball core wrapped in yarn or cord and attached to a narrow dowel most commonly made of rattan or birch and sometimes of fiberglass or nylon Mallets suitable for the vibraphone are also generally suitable for the marimba 19 The mallets can have a great effect on the timbre ranging from a bright metallic clang to a mellow ring with no obvious initial attack Consequently a wide array of mallets is available offering variations in hardness head size weight shaft length and flexibility 20 Classical players must carry a wide range of mallet types to accommodate the changing demands of composers who are looking for particular sounds Jazz players on the other hand often make use of multi purpose mallets to allow for improvisation 21 Construction EditBars Edit The underside of the low F3 bar is exposed showing the tuning marks a disc and the pins and cord used to hold the bar Vibraphone bars are made from aluminum bar stock cut into blanks of predetermined length Holes are drilled through the width of the bars so they can be suspended by a cord typically paracord To maximize the sustain of the bars the holes are placed at approximately the nodal points of the bar i e the points of minimum amplitude around which the bar vibrates For a uniform bar the nodal points are located 22 4 from each end of the bar 22 23 Material is ground away from the underside of the bars in an arch shape to lower the pitch This allows the lower pitched bars to be a manageable length It is also the key to the mellow sound of the vibraphone and marimba which uses the same deep arch compared with the brighter xylophone which uses a shallower arch and the glockenspiel which has no arch at all These rectangular bars have three primary modes of vibration 24 The deep arch causes these modes to align and create a consonant arrangement of intervals a fundamental pitch a pitch two octaves above that and a third pitch an octave and a major third above the second For the F3 bar that usually forms the lowest note on a vibraphone there would be F3 as the fundamental F5 as the first overtone and A6 as the second overtone As a side effect the arch causes the nodal points of the fundamental vibration to shift closer towards the ends of the bar 25 After beveling or rounding the edges fine tuning adjustments are made If a bar is flat its overall pitch structure can be raised by removing material from the ends of the bar Once this slightly sharp bar is created the secondary and tertiary tones can be lowered by removing material from specific locations of the bar Vibraphones are tuned to a standard of A 442 Hz or A 440 Hz depending on the manufacturer or the customer s preference While concert pitch is generally A 440 Hz the sharper tuning of A 442 Hz is used to give the vibraphone a slightly brighter sound to cut through the ensemble 26 Like marimbas professional vibraphones have bars of graduated width Lower bars are made from wider stock and higher notes from narrower stock to help balance volume and tone across the range of the instrument 27 The bars are anodized after fine tuning typically in a silver or gold color and may have a glossy or matte finish These are cosmetic features with a negligible effect on the sound 28 The bed for the bars is made by laying down four wooden rails onto each end of the frame Each rail has a series of pins with rubber spacers As the cord passes through the holes of the bar they rest on the pins to suspend the bars On each outer side the ends of the cord attach together with a spring to provide tension and flex 29 Resonators Edit Resonators are thin walled tubes typically made of aluminum but any suitably strong material can be used They are open at one end and closed at the other Each bar is paired with a resonator whose diameter is slightly wider than the width of the bar and whose length to the closure is one quarter of the wavelength of the fundamental frequency of the bar When the bar and resonator are properly in tune with each other the vibrating air beneath the bar travels down the resonator and is reflected from the closure at the bottom then returns to the top and is reflected back by the bar over and over creating a much stronger standing wave and increasing the amplitude of the fundamental frequency 30 The resonators besides raising the upper end of the vibraphone s dynamic range also affect the overall tone of the vibraphone since they amplify the fundamental frequency but not the upper partials 31 There is a trade off between the amplifying effect of the resonators and the length of sustain of a ringing bar The energy in a ringing bar comes from the initial mallet strike and that energy can either be used to make the bar ring louder initially or not as loudly but for a longer period of time This is not an issue with marimbas and xylophones where the natural sustain time of the wooden bars is short but vibraphone bars can ring for many seconds after being struck and this effect is highly desirable in many circumstances Therefore the resonators in a vibraphone are usually tuned slightly off pitch to create a balance between loudness and sustain 32 A unique feature of vibraphone resonators is the shaft of rotating discs commonly called fans across the top When the fans are open the resonators have full function When the fans are closed the resonators are partially occluded reducing the resonance of the fundamental pitch A drive belt connects the shafts to an electric motor beneath the playing surface and rotates the fans This rotation of the fans creates a tremolo effect and a slight vibrato 33 Oftentimes vibraphones and other mallet instruments will include non functional decorative resonator tubes with no corresponding bar above to make the instrument look more complete 34 In 1970 Deagan introduced the ElectraVibe which dispensed with resonator tubes entirely and took a signal directly from the bars adding a tremolo in a preamplifier This sought to improve the portability of the instrument and solve the problem inherent in all tuned mallet instruments miking the bars evenly 35 Damper mechanism Edit For the first few years of production the original Leedy vibraphone did not include a mechanism for damping or stopping the sustaining tones In 1927 the J C Deagan company introduced a pedal mechanism that has not changed substantially since A rigid bar beneath the center of the instrument is pressed upward by an adjustable spring and engages a long felt pad against the sharps and the naturals A foot pedal lowers the bar and allows notes to ring freely releasing the pedal engages the damper and stops any vibrating notes One common flaw of this damping mechanism is that the bar is often supported at one point in the middle causing it to damp the instrument unevenly in the upper and lower registers To combat this some manufacturers have made silicone or liquid filled damper pads whose fluid shape can conform evenly around the bars 36 37 Motor Edit The exposed mechanism of the motor and rubber pulley is shown Vibraphones usually have an electric motor and pulley assembly mounted on one side or the other to drive the disks in the resonators Often especially within classical music the vibraphone is played with the motor off Certain models for outdoor use as part of a front ensemble have the motor removed entirely 38 In those cases having the motor off is the norm and is not used unless specifically called for 39 40 The early vibraphones used motors that were intended to power record player turntables and had limited to no speed adjustment capabilities Whatever speed adjustments were possible were made by moving the drive belt among a small number of pulleys usually three of varying diameters Later variable speed AC motors became available at reasonable prices These motors allow the adjustment of the rotating speed by a potentiometer mounted on a control panel near the motor They typically support rotation rates in the range of 1 12 Hz 41 Technique EditTwo mallet style Edit Milt Jackson playing at Parnell s jazz club in Seattle Washington Note his characteristic palms inward two mallet grip The two mallet approach to vibes is traditionally linear playing like a horn rather than comping like a guitar or piano Two mallet players usually concentrate on playing a single melodic line and rely on other musicians to provide accompaniment Double stops two notes played simultaneously are sometimes used but mostly as a reinforcement of the main melodic line similar to the use of double stops in solo violin music In jazz groups two mallet vibraphonists are usually considered part of the front line with the horn players contributing solos of their own but contributing very little in the way of accompaniment to other soloists 42 Two mallet players use several different grips the most common being a matched grip called German grip in which the mallets are played palms down with the thumbs facing each other In this grip the mallets are held between the thumb and index finger of each hand with the remaining three fingers of each hand supporting the shafts This grip uses a combination of wrist movement and fingertip control to manipulate the mallet 43 Another popular grip is French grip a grip also commonly used on timpani The mallets are again held between the thumb and index fingers and controlled with the remaining three fingers but the palms are held vertically with the thumbs pointed upward Most of the stroke action comes from the fingertip control of the shafts with the wrists contributing slightly less than they do with the German grip 44 source source source source source source Reg Kehoe and his Marimba Queens playing in the early 1940s Reg Kehoe center switches to the vibraphone part way through for a solo using two mallets Passages are usually played with alternating sticking but double strokes playing two notes in a row with the same hand are used when convenient to minimize crossing the hands 45 The player must pay close attention to the damper pedal to avoid multiple notes ringing unintentionally at the same time Because the notes ring for a considerable fraction of a second when struck with the damper pad up and ringing bars do not stop ringing immediately when contacted by the pad players use a technique called after pedaling In this technique the player presses the damper pedal slightly after striking the bar shortly enough after so the recently struck note continues to ring but long enough after so that the previous note stops ringing 46 In another damper technique half pedaling the player depresses the pedal just enough to remove the spring pressure from the bars but not enough to make the pad lose contact with the bars This lets the bars ring slightly longer than with the pad fully up and can make a medium fast passage sound more legato without pedaling every note 47 Four mallet style Edit Gary Burton using his namesake grip with guitarist Julian Lage The four mallet vibraphone style is multi linear like a piano In jazz groups four mallet vibraphonists are often considered part of the rhythm section typically substituting for piano or guitar and providing accompaniment for other soloists in addition to soloing themselves 48 Furthermore the four mallet style has led to a significant body of unaccompanied solo vibes playing 49 One notable example is Gary Burton s performance of Chega de Saudade No More Blues from his Grammy winning 1971 album Alone at Last 50 The most popular four mallet grip for vibraphone is the Burton grip named for Gary Burton One mallet is held between the thumb and index finger and the other is held between the index and middle fingers The shafts cross in the middle of the palm and extend past the heel of the hand For wide intervals the thumb often moves in between the two mallets and the inside mallet is held in the crook of the fingers Unlike many other grips the outer right mallet is the leading mallet rather than the inside two Although some early vibes players made use of four mallets notably Red Norvo Adrian Rollini and sometimes Lionel Hampton the fully pianistic four mallet approach to jazz on the vibraphone is almost entirely the creation of Burton 51 52 Practitioners of Burton grip tend to make more use of double strokes as compared to two mallet players This is done not only to avoid crossing the hands but also to help minimize the motions between the two bar rows For example an ascending E major scale could be played by keeping the left hand on the upper bars and the right hand on the lower For linear passages with leaps all four mallets are often used sequentially 53 Also popular is the Stevens grip named for marimbist Leigh Howard Stevens Many other grips are in use some variations on the Burton or Stevens others idiosyncratic creations of individual vibes players 54 Dampening Edit Vibraphone mallet dampening source source A C major triad is held using the pedal while an ascending C major scale is played The notes of the scale are muted by a mallet while the chord continues to ring The vibraphone is played with the motors off Problems playing this file See media help Pedaling techniques are at least as important for the four mallet vibraphonist as for two mallet players but the all or nothing damping system of the sustain pedal presents many obstacles to multi linear playing since each line normally has its own damping requirements independent of the other lines To overcome this four mallet players also use mallet dampening and hand dampening 55 There are many benefits of being proficient in these techniques as it allows the player to transition between chords much more smoothly and play new notes without having them affect the quality of the chord when the pedal is down 56 The most common form of mallet dampening occurs when the vibraphonist plays a note with one mallet before pressing another mallet into the ringing bar to stop it from sounding Usually the damping mallet and the original striking mallet are held in different hands but advanced players can in some circumstances use the same hand 57 Mallet dampening also includes dead strokes where a player strikes a bar and then instead of drawing the mallet back directly presses the head of the mallet onto the bar causing the ringing to stop immediately This produces a fairly distinctive choked sound and dead strokes are often used just for that particular sound in addition to the damping aspects 58 Hand dampening also known as finger dampening can be used to damp a note on the lower bars while striking a nearby upper bar As the player strikes the upper bar with a mallet they simultaneously press the heel of their hand or the side of their finger into the ringing lower bar using the same hand to strike the upper bar and damp the lower one Using both hands it s possible to damp and strike two bars at once 59 Extended techniques Edit Five to six mallets Edit To achieve a denser sound and richer chord voicings some vibraphonists have experimented with three mallets per hand either in both hands for a total of six mallets or in just the left hand for a total of five 60 Bowing Edit A vibraphonist using two double bass bows to play Mourning Dove Sonnet by Christopher Deane Like many other metallophones percussionists can use an orchestral bow on the vibraphone to achieve sustained tones that will not decay nor have a percussive attack This is done by bowing the bars perpendicular to their outer edges 61 Due to the different mode of vibration this also changes the sound of the vibraphone by emphasizing the higher harmonics and giving it a more glassy tone 62 Because changing notes requires large and precise movements fast passages are not often written for bowed vibraphone 63 Pitch bend Edit Bent notes can be achieved on the vibraphone by sliding a rubber or plastic mallet from the nodal point to the center of the bar This technique is only able to lower the pitch by about a half step 64 65 Repertoire EditClassical Edit As part of the standard percussion section the use of the vibraphone in classical music has increased over the past fifty years especially within the collegiate percussion ensemble 66 Concertos Edit Several concertos have been written for the vibraphone the first of these being Darius Milhaud s Concerto for Marimba Vibraphone and Orchestra written in 1947 67 Other prominent concertos for the vibraphone include Ney Rosauro s Concerto No 1 for Vibraphone written in 1996 and Emmanuel Sejourne s Concerto for Vibraphone and Strings written in 1999 68 69 Solos Edit The vibraphone is the second most popular solo keyboard percussion instrument after the marimba 70 Solos may be jazz standards specifically arranged for the instrument or newly composed pieces that are either jazz oriented or classical in nature Some of the most performed solo literature includes Mirror from Another by David Friedman Mourning Dove Sonnet by Christopher Deane Trilogy by Tim Huesgen and Blues for Gilbert by Mark Glentworth 71 72 Manufacturers EditFurther information List of vibraphone manufacturers Throughout the 1930s and 1940s each manufacturer attracted its own following in various specialties but the Deagan vibraphones were the models preferred by many of the specialist jazz players Deagan struck endorsement deals with many of the leading players including Lionel Hampton and Milt Jackson However the Deagan company went out of business in the 1980s and its trademark and patents were purchased by Yamaha Yamaha continues to make percussion instruments based on the Deagan designs 73 In 1948 the Musser Mallet Company was founded by Clair Omar Musser who had been a designer at Deagan The Musser Mallet Company continues to manufacture vibraphones as part of the Ludwig Drum Company after their purchase in 1965 The Leedy Manufacturing Company the original designers of the vibraphone had already merged with Ludwig Drums in 1929 under C G Conn 74 75 References Edit Adinolfi Francesco 2008 Mondo Exotica Sounds Visions Obsessions of the Cocktail Generation Karen Pinkus Jason Vivrette Durham NC Duke University Press p 99 ISBN 978 0 8223 4132 1 OCLC 179838406 Blades 1992 p 408 Graiser Brian February 2021 The Vibraphone At 100 Why 2021 PDF Percussive Notes Percussive Arts Society 59 1 6 9 Strain James Allen 2017 A Dictionary for the Modern Percussionist and Drummer Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield p 222 ISBN 978 0 8108 8692 6 OCLC 972798459 Stallard Carolyn July 2015 The Vibraphone Past Present and Future Percussive Notes Percussive Arts Society 53 3 43 44 via ResearchGate Caroll Barry J 1977 The Story of Mallet Instruments J C Deagan Company film 18 44 Beck 2007 p 399 Stephans Michael 2013 Experiencing Jazz A Listener s Companion Lanham MD Scarecrow Press p 349 ISBN 978 0 8108 8290 4 OCLC 861559432 Horn David Shepard John Seed Michael Laing Dave 2003 Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Volume II London Continuum p 402 ISBN 978 1 84714 472 0 OCLC 276305444 Morrison Nick Francis Nick 17 November 2008 Feeling The Vibes The Short History of a Long Instrument NPR Retrieved 29 August 2020 Keller Renee June 2013 Compositional and Orchestrational Trends in the Orchestral Percussion Section Between the Years of 1960 2009 PDF Northwestern University p 88 OCLC 854371082 via Percussive Arts Society Blades James 2001 Holland James ed Vibraphone Oxford Music Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 29286 Retrieved 15 March 2022 Schaarwachter Jurgen 2018 HB Aspects of Havergal Brian London Taylor amp Francis p 46 ISBN 978 0 429 45187 4 OCLC 1080198398 Tolles Tyler 2020 Vibraphone Orchestral Excerpts amp Adapting J S Bach s Violin Sonata No 1 in G Minor for Vibraphone Florida State University Libraries Florida State University p 4 Blades 1992 p 409 Latshaw Charles William 2014 William Grant Still s Afro American Symphony A Critical Edition PDF Indiana University p 24 OCLC 913961832 Laird Paul R 2021 West Side Story Gypsy and the Art of Broadway Orchestration Abingdon OXF Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 429 66273 7 OCLC 1268686444 Miller R J 2015 Contemporary Orchestration A Practical Guide to Instruments Ensembles and Musicians New York NY Routledge p 266 ISBN 978 1 317 80625 7 OCLC 900827870 Meyer Ben July 2012 What You Need to Know About Mallets Modern Drummer Colwell Richard 2017 The Teaching of Instrumental Music Michael Hewitt Mark Fonder 5th ed New York NY Routledge p 365 ISBN 978 1 317 21273 7 OCLC 1007082083 Walker James 2001 Mallet Selection MalletJazz Retrieved 15 March 2022 Miller Dayton C 2006 Tone Bars Physics Case Western Reserve University Retrieved 15 March 2022 Worland Randy 2011 Experimental Study Of Vibraphone Pitch Bending Using Electronic Speckle pattern Interferometry Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics Vol 12 no 1 Seattle WA p 2 doi 10 1121 2 0000023 via ResearchGate Moore James L 1978 Acoustics of Bar Percussion Instruments Columbus OH Per Mus Publications OCLC 906308587 Beaton Douglas Scavone Gary June 2021 Three dimensional tuning of idiophone bar modes via finite element analysis The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 149 6 3758 3768 Bibcode 2021ASAJ 149 3758B doi 10 1121 10 0005062 ISSN 0001 4966 PMID 34241415 S2CID 235776759 Primatic Stephen 2015 Percussion Instruments Purchasing Maintenance Troubleshooting amp More Garwood Whaley 1st ed Delray Beach FL Meredith Music p 32 ISBN 978 1 57463 451 8 OCLC 1091896031 Hoffman Stewart 2017 The Band Teacher s Percussion Guide New York NY Oxford University Press p 126 ISBN 978 0 19 046168 3 OCLC 950004306 Wollwage Troy C 4 June 2019 Anatomy of a Vibraphone Yamaha Skidmore David 2012 Percussion 101 Keyboard Percussion Characteristics and Maintenance Vic Firth video 2 19 Stevens Leigh Howard 2019 The Acoustics of Resonators PDF Malletech p 12 Tuttle B C Burroughs C B 1998 The Effects of a Resonator Tube on the Timbre and Directivity of Sound Radiated from a Vibraphone Bar Pennsylvania State University p 6 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 482 5193 OCLC 198987505 Rossing 2000 p 66 Hosken Daniel W 2015 An Introduction to Music Technology 2nd ed New York NY Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 82572 6 OCLC 869365321 Yamaha The Structure of the Marimba Inside and outside the resonator pipes Retrieved 3 September 2020 Beck 2007 p 401 Walker James 2001 Vibraphone Pedaling MalletJazz Retrieved 27 August 2020 Ludwig Musser April 2001 M58 M58M Piper Vibe User s Manual PDF Ludwig Drums p 5 Moyer Iain 2020 Front Ensemble Friday Iain Moyer A Marimbists amp Arrangers Guide to Vibraphone Marching Arts Education video Solomon Samuel Z 2016 How to Write for Percussion A Comprehensive Guide to Percussion Composition 2nd ed New York NY Oxford University Press p 104 ISBN 978 0 19 992035 8 OCLC 936117814 Hartenberger Russell 2016 Performance Practice in the Music of Steve Reich New York NY Cambridge University Press p 188 ISBN 978 1 316 77874 6 OCLC 960643262 Ann Meyer Jacqueline 1973 The History and Development of the Vibes University of Indiana p 7 OCLC 23646943 Shaw Rutschman Michah 2018 Jazz Vibraphone as a Chordal Instrument A Comprehensive Guide to Comping and Block Chord Techniques PDF University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign p 1 OCLC 1084742692 Hans Ben 1981 Modern School for Mallet Keyboard Instruments Tom Schneller Jim Sewrey Hal Leonard p 2 ISBN 978 1 4768 5661 2 OCLC 1098658051 DRUM Magazine 2021 What is the French Grip Retrieved 18 March 2022 Becker Bob October 2009 Two Mallet Performance Gene Koshinski Interviewer Malletech Saindon Ed 2008 Ed Saindon Vibe Clinic Part 2 PASIC 2006 YouTube video 2 44 Retrieved 5 May 2022 David Friedman 1973 Vibraphone Technique Dampening and Pedaling Boston MA Berklee Press Publications p 21 OCLC 226205904 Mallows Frank A 2004 An Historical Survey of the Development of the Vibraphone as an Alternative Accompanying Instrument in Jazz PDF University of Cape Town p 22 Saindon Ed October 2006 Sound Development and Four Mallet Usage for Vibes PDF Percussive Notes Percussive Arts Society 44 5 48 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2007 via Vic Firth Santella Jim 1 July 1999 Gary Burton Alone At Last All About Jazz Retrieved 15 March 2022 Hartenberger Russell ed 2016 The Cambridge Companion to Percussion Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 46 ISBN 978 1 107 09345 4 OCLC 920816078 Berkowitz Adam Eric 2011 A Comparative Analysis of the Mechanics of Musser Grip Stevens Grip Cross Grip and Burton Grip PDF Florida Atlantic University p 46 via Percussive Arts Society Morales Andrew 2020 Sticking Categories A Practical Application in Contemporary Literature for Four Mallet Marimba The University of Arizona p 21 OCLC 1194935009 ProQuest 2435175212 via ProQuest Glassock Lynn 1971 A Study of Four Mallet Grips Used in Playing Keyboard Percussion Instruments PDF University of North Texas p 72 OCLC 849690331 United States Army 2018 Percussion Techniques PDF p 40 Kuzmich John Bash Lee 1984 Complete Guide to Instrumental Jazz Instruction Techniques for Developing a Successful School Jazz Program West Nyack NY Parker Pub Co p 195 ISBN 978 0 13 160565 7 OCLC 10023386 Cheesman Brian Scott 2012 An Introductory Guide to Vibraphone Four Idiomatic Practices and a Survey of Pedagogical Material and Solo Literature The University of Southern Mississippi p 26 OCLC 815679716 Sevsay Ertugrul 2013 Vibraphone The Cambridge Guide to Orchestration para 10 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107067486 Lipner Arthur 1996 The Vibes Real Book MalletWorks Music OCLC 837860299 Porter Joe 2011 A New Six Mallet Marimba Technique and its Pedagogical Approach PDF University of Lethbridge p 3 OCLC 1033167255 via Percussive Arts Society Smith Joshua D 2008 Extended Performance Techniques and Compositional Style in the Solo Concert Vibraphone Music of Christopher Deane PDF University of North Texas p 14 OCLC 1269351540 Rossing 2000 p 186 Holland James 2005 Practical Percussion a Guide to the Instruments and their Sources Revised ed Lanham MD Scarecrow Press p 56 ISBN 978 1 4616 7063 6 OCLC 681550519 Dimpker Christian 2013 Extended Notation The Depiction of the Unconventional Berlin LIT Verlag p 132 ISBN 978 3 643 90302 0 OCLC 830355087 Dierstein Christian 2018 The Techniques of Percussion Playing Mallets Implements and Applications Michel Roth Jens Ruland Christiana Nobach Ellen Fallowfield Kassel Barenreiter Verlag p 152 ISBN 978 3 7618 2406 1 OCLC 1051235045 Parker Wesley Grant 2010 The History and Development of the Percussion Orchestra PDF Florida State University p 21 OCLC 756921613 Roeder Michael Thomas 1994 A History of the Concerto Portland OR Amadeus Press p 365 ISBN 0 931340 61 6 OCLC 27070961 Barnes Austin Lee 2012 Analysis Of Selected Percussion Literature Concerto For Vibraphone and Orchestra By Ney Rosauro Surface Tension By Dave Hollinden Urban Sketches For Percussion Trio By Lon W Chaffin Take Five By Paul Desmond And DT Supreme PDF Kent State University p 2 OCLC 806852905 Chaib Fernando 2012 Vibrafone Uma Fonte de Coloridos Sonoros Per Musi in Portuguese 25 58 doi 10 1590 S1517 75992012000100006 ISSN 1517 7599 Siwe Thomas 1995 Percussion Solo Literature Media Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 9635891 1 8 Hewitt Jeferry Allen 2014 The Objective Grading of Original Unaccompanied Four Mallet Solo Vibraphone Literature PDF University of Arizona p 114 OCLC 903490514 Smith Joshua D November 2011 The Quest for Solo Vibraphone Repertoire PDF Percussive Notes Percussive Arts Society 49 6 31 Strain James Allen John Calhoun Deagan Hall of Fame Indianapolis IN Percussive Arts Society Archived from the original on 30 January 2016 Retrieved 23 January 2016 Schmidt Paul William 1991 History of the Ludwig Drum Company Fullerton CA Centerstream p 28 ISBN 0 931759 49 8 OCLC 24811851 Beck 2007 p 402 Bibliography EditBlades James 1992 Percussion Instruments and Their History Rev ed Westport CT Bold Strummer ISBN 978 0 933224 71 1 OCLC 28230162 Rossing Thomas D 2000 Science of Percussion Instruments Singapore World Scientific ISBN 978 981 02 4158 2 OCLC 45679450 Beck John H 2007 Encyclopedia of Percussion 2nd ed New York NY Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 97123 2 OCLC 0415971233 Further reading EditBurton Gary 1965 Introduction to Jazz Vibes Creative Music ASIN B002V5MLY0 Udow Michael 2019 Percussion Pedagogy Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 090296 4 Cook Gary D 2018 Teaching Percussion Cengage Learning ISBN 978 1 337 67222 1 External links Edit Media related to Vibraphones at Wikimedia Commons A Demonstration of Mallet Dampening by Gary Burton Vibraharps from The Deagan Resource Mourning Dove Sonnet performed by Doug Perry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vibraphone amp oldid 1136185280, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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