The
vibraphone, sometimes called the
vibraharp or simply the
vibes, is
a
musical instrument in the
mallet subfamily of the
percussion family.
It is similar in appearance to the
xylophone and
marimba,
although the vibraphone uses
aluminum bars
instead of the
wooden bars of those
instruments. Each bar is paired with a resonator tube having a
motor-driven
butterfly valve at its
upper end, mounted on a common shaft, which produces a tremolo or
vibrato effect while spinning. The vibraphone also has a
sustain pedal similar to that used on a piano:
When the pedal is up, the bars are all damped and the sound of each
bar is quite short; with the pedal down, they will sound for
several seconds.
The most common uses of the vibraphone are within
jazz music, where it often plays a featured role, and
in the
wind ensemble, as a standard
component of the percussion section.
History
The first
musical instrument called "vibraphone" was marketed by the Leedy
Manufacturing Company in the United States
in 1921. However, this instrument differed
in significant details from the instrument now called the
vibraphone. The Leedy vibraphone achieved a degree of popularity
after it was used in the novelty recordings of "
Aloha 'Oe" and "Gypsy Love Song" by
vaudeville performer
Louis Frank Chiha ("Signor Frisco").

Former headquarters of J.
Deagan, Inc. in Chicago, where Henry Schluter invented the
vibraphone.
Now (2008) home to Century Mallet Instrument Service.
This popularity led J. C. Deagan, Inc. in 1927 to ask its Chief
Tuner, Henry Schluter, to develop a similar instrument. However,
Schluter didn't just copy the Leedy design, he introduced several
significant improvements such as making the bars from aluminum
instead of steel for a more "mellow" basic tone, adjustments to the
dimensions and tuning of the bars to eliminate the dissonant
harmonics in the Leedy design (further mellowing the tone), and the
introduction of a damper bar controlled by a foot pedal enabling it
to be played with more expression. Schluter's design was more
popular than the Leedy design, and has become the template for all
instruments called vibraphone today.
However, when Deagan began marketing Schluter's instrument in 1928,
they called it the vibraharp. As its popularity grew other
manufacturers began producing instruments based on Schluter's
design, marketed under a variety of names, including Leedy, who
marketed their new instrument as the vibraphone and abandoned their
old design.
The name confusion continues, even to the present, but over time
vibraphone became significantly more popular than vibraharp. By
1974, the Directory of the D.C. Federation of Musicians listed 39
vibraphone players and 3 vibraharp players. As of 2008, the term
vibraharp has disappeared except for anachronistic uses. Often,
vibraphone is shortened to "vibes", and the two terms are used
interchangeably.
The initial purpose of the vibraphone was to add to the large
arsenal of percussion sounds used by vaudeville orchestras for
novelty effects. This use was quickly overwhelmed in the 1930's by
its development as a
jazz instrument. As of
2008, it remains primarily, although not exclusively, a jazz
instrument.
The popularity of the vibraphone as a jazz instrument can primarily
be credited to one man,
Lionel
Hampton. The story, perhaps apocryphal, is that "Hamp", a
drummer at the time, was playing at the
NBC
radio studios, where he discovered a vibraphone that was kept on
hand to play the musical motif identifying the NBC network, the
"
NBC Chimes". After the gig, he spent a
considerable amount of time exploring the instrument, and fell in
love with it.
Later (October 16, 1930), Hampton was recording with
Louis Armstrong & His Sebastian New
Cotton Club Orchestra, and the studio they were working in happened
to have a vibraphone. Hampton showed Armstrong what he could do,
and they decided to add vibes to one of the tunes ("
Memories of You"), creating the first known
jazz recording using the vibraphone.
After this, Hampton decided to concentrate on the vibraphone,
eventually joining the
Benny Goodman
Quintet, and later leading his own big bands and achieving great
popularity.
Manufacturers
The first manufacturer of vibraphones in the modern configuration
was J.C.
Deagan, Inc., of Chicago, Illinois
, United States, although they called the
instruments vibraharps. As the market for vibraphones was
proven, first as a vaudeville novelty instrument and then as a jazz
instrument, several other manufacturers stepped in to supply the
demand.
These included the Leedy Manufacturing
Company, of Indianapolis,
Indiana
, who retained the vibraphone name of their earlier
product but abandoned its design in favor of the Henry Schluter
innovations, and the Jenco Company, of Decatur, Illinois
, who initially marketed their instruments as
"vibrabells".
Outside of
the United States, the Premier Drum
Company, of London
, UK, after
experimenting with a variety of aluminum bar instruments more
closely related to the glockenspiel
that were called variations of “harpaphone”, moved to the
production of the Schluter vibraphone design. Bergerault, of
Ligueil, France
also began
manufacturing vibraphones in the 1930’s.
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 emerging class of specialist
jazz players. Deagan struck endorsement deals with many of the
leading players, including
Lionel
Hampton and
Milt Jackson.
In 1948, the Musser Company was founded by Claire Omar Musser.
Musser was an accomplished
marimba and
xylophone player famous for touring the
United States and Europe leading "marimba symphony orchestras". He
applied his experience and observations with the current designs of
mallet instruments to his eponymous company and the result was a
high-quality line of mallet instruments. His vibraphones emerged as
quite comparable in quality to Deagan vibraphones and Musser was
able to garner a share of the top-end market.
The 1960s and 1970s saw a shakeup in the vibraphone market. Leedy
and Jenco ceased operations. The Deagan operation was purchased by
the
Yamaha Corporation. Although
Yamaha used the Deagan knowledge to improve their own designs, for
vibraphones they discontinued the use of the Deagan name and Deagan
model legacy; as of 2008, no visible trace to Deagan remains,
although Yamaha continues to use the Deagan name for a line of
orchestra bells and chimes. The Musser Company was purchased first
by
Ludwig Drums, and then, through
Ludwig, was purchased by
Conn-Selmer,
Inc. Unlike the fate of Deagan, the Musser brand and model line
were retained by the purchasing companies, and Musser vibraphones
remain a major force in the vibraphone market.
This period also saw the emergence of new vibraphone manufacturers.
Notable
companies include Adams
Musical Instruments of Ittervoort, The Netherlands
and Ross Mallet Instruments, now owned by Jupiter Band Instruments of
Austin,
Texas
, United States.
As of 2008, the vibraphone marketplace is remarkably active,
considering the specialty nature of the instrument. The major
players include Musser, Yamaha, Adams and Ross.
Bergerault, Premier,
Studio 49 from Gräfelfing, Germany
and the
Saito Gakki Company of Japan
continue in
operation. In addition to the "mass" producers of
vibraphones, custom manufacturers, notably vanderPlas Percussion of
The Netherlands, are also active.
Range
The standard modern instrument has a range of three
octaves, from the F below
middle
C (F3 to F6 in
scientific
pitch notation). Larger three-and-a-half or four octave models
from the C below middle C are also becoming more common (C3 to F6
or C7). It is generally written at concert pitch, but sometimes
some composers (for example,
Olivier
Messiaen) write parts to sound an octave higher.
Construction
The major components of a vibraphone are the bars, resonators,
damper pad, motor and a frame to hold them all together.
Vibraphones are usually played with mallets.
Bars
Vibraphone bars are made from aluminum, which is the most obvious
way to distinguish a vibraphone from the other members of the
mallet percussion family. Aluminum for vibraphone bars is normally
obtained from standard commercial suppliers. For example, Musser
has used the #2024-T4 product from
Alcoa.
Different alloys of aluminum have slightly different tonal
characteristics. Manufacturers must choose their preferred alloy
carefully, balancing the tonal characteristics with the ability to
obtain supply over the long term.
Aluminum stock is purchased in long bars of the desired width and
thickness, and then cut into the appropriate lengths. Next, holes
are drilled through the width of bars at the two so-called "nodal"
points. The nodal points are the points near the ends of the bar
where the wave-like fundamental vibration of a sounding bar causes
little or no movement of the bar itself. For a uniform bar, the
nodal points are located 22.4% from each end of the bar.
The next step in the basic shaping of the bar is to cut a deep arch
in the base running between the nodal points. This deep arch is key
to the "mellow" sound of the vibraphone (and marimba, which uses
the same deep arch) compared to the xylophone, which uses a
shallower arch, and the glockenspiel, which has no arch at all.
Vibrating rectangular bars have three primary modes of vibration.
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
partial and A6 as the
second partial. As a side effect, the arch causes the nodal points
of the fundamental vibration to shift closer towards the ends of
the bar; this must be anticipated when drilling the holes.
Once the bar has obtained its basic shape, it must be fine tuned.
Normally, the dimensions and tolerances of the initial bar creation
process are set to create a slightly sharp bar. If the 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
individual tones can be tuned flatter by removing material from
specific locations of the bar.
The specific points from which to remove material are the
"anti-nodal" points of each vibration mode; i.e. the points where
the bar moves the most. To tune the fundamental mode, the tuning
point is in the center of the bar. Scraping material from there
will lower the fundamental pitch without lowering the other
partials, since these partials have nodal points there. The two
outside anti-nodal points for the first partial, which has a 4:1
relation to the fundamental, are just inside the main nodal points
and are used to tune that partial. For most vibraphones, only the
fundamental and first partial are tuned. The second partial can be
tuned using appropriate anti-nodal points from its vibration
mode.

Vibraphones with graduated
(foreground) and ungraduated (background) bars.
Higher quality vibraphones tend to have "graduated" bars. That is,
the lower bars are wider than the higher bars, graduating through a
number of steps of decreasing width. This helps to balance the
volume of the instrument across the entire range. Vibraphone bars
can come in a variety of colors, usually silver or gold, but other
colors are available, created by
anodizing
the bars after fine tuning. This has no effect on the tone of the
bars. Bars are also available in matte or glossy finish. Some argue
that there are tonal differences due to the finish.
Resonators
Resonators are thin-walled tubes, typically made of aluminum, but
any suitably strong material will do. 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. The resonator for A3 (the lowest
A on a vibraphone) is approximately 15 inches long. 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 off
the closure at the bottom, then returns back to the top and is
reflected back by the bar, over and over, creating a much stronger
standing wave and amplifying the fundamental frequency. The
resonators, beside raising the upper end of the vibraphone's
dynamic range, also affect the overall tone of the vibraphone,
since they amplify the fundamental, but not the upper
partials.
[[Image:Bobbyhutcherson-joelocke-072007.jpg|thumb|right|350px|Vibraphonists
Bobby Hutcherson and
Joe Locke performing at the 2007
[http://www.jazzbaltica.de JazzBaltica Festival] in Salzau (North
Germany, July 01, 2007).
Note the difference in the front resonator sets of the two
vibraphones. This difference is purely cosmetic. On Locke's
vibraphone (on the right) the resonators are only as long as they
need to be; the cap in each tube is near the bottom. On
Hutcherson's vibraphone the resonators on the high end are much
longer than they need to be to produce an arched front as seen in
many instruments (and the cap is near the top of those tubes). Both
instruments include non-functional resonator tubes with no
corresponding bar above to avoid a gap-toothed look.]]
There is a trade-off between the amplifying effect of the
resonators and the length of sustain of a ringing bar. Basically,
all of the energy in a ringing bar comes from the initial mallet
strike, and that energy can go to making the bar ring either louder
initially, or not as loud but longer. 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 to be slightly off-pitch to create a balance between loudness
and sustain.
Another difference in vibraphone resonators is the presence of a
rotating disk at the top of each resonator. The disks for a group
of resonators are ganged together with a shaft that can be driven
from an electric motor to cause the disks to rotate. When the disks
are open (standing vertically) the resonators have full function.
When the disks are closed (lying horizontally) the vibrating column
of air is blocked, reducing the amplification effect. As the disks
rotate, this varies the amplitude of the instrument, creating a
"vibrato" effect.
Some argue that calling this effect vibrato is incorrect, saying
that vibrato is a variation in pitch, not amplitude. The correct
term should be tremolo, a variation in amplitude, and therefore the
vibraphone is incorrectly named; it should be called a
tremolophone. Others argue that the common usage of vibrato and
tremolo is nowhere near that precise, even among experienced
musicians who should presumably know better. Arguably, as the
instrument is not called a vibratophone, the metaphor of vibration
is not being overly stretched anyway. Additionally, in this
context, there is the extra consideration that the rotating plates
interfere with wave-fronts in the resonator tubes to cause
doppler-effect pitch variations. This can be observed using an
oscilloscope.
Damper pad
The damper pad is a strip of piano felt, usually about one inch
wide and deep, that runs down the middle of the vibraphone. It is
attached to hinges on the ends, and a spring assembly and pedal in
the middle. When the pedal is up, the spring forces the damper pad
up into contact with the bars, muffling any ringing bars. When the
pedal is depressed, the damper bar is pulled down, allowing the
bars to ring freely.
The damper pad is the source of many maintenance headaches for
vibraphone players. The pad must be perfectly level, both
left-to-right and front-to-back, in order to contact all of the
bars simultaneously. When it is not level, some bars will stop
ringing before others, making it difficult to cleanly articulate.
After some years of use, the bars can make indentations in the pad
where they normally rest, compressing the felt and sometimes
causing buzzing as the bars contact the pad. Also, when the bars
are struck while the damper pad is up, the pad can transfer the
force of the impact into the frame, rattling anything that is
loose.
In the early 1990s, vibraphonist John Mark Piper designed a new
vibraphone for Musser that, among other innovations, included a
water-filled damper pad. Later that decade, custom vibraphone maker
Nico van der Plas improved on the idea by using
silicone gel as the filling. These pads eliminate
impact transference and provide more even dampening. Many
vibraphones have been retrofitted with gel pads, although the vast
majority of vibraphones still use felt dampers.
Motor
Vibraphones usually have an electric motor and pulley assembly
mounted on one side or the other to drive the disks in the
resonators. The early vibraphones used motors that were intended to
power record player turntables, and had limited or 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 via
a potentiometer mounted on a control panel near the motor. They
typically support rotation rates from about 1 Hz to about a dozen
Hz. These motors remained the preferred solution until the 1990s,
and even as of today are still the most widely used.
During the 1990s, some manufacturers began using
computer-controlled servo stepping motors. These motors allow
rotation rates so slow that they approach 0 Hz. The computer
control also allows operations that are not possible with an analog
motor, such as the ability to synchronize the rotation of the two
resonator sets and stop the rotation at a desired state (all open,
all closed, all half open, etc.).
Frame
The vibraphone frame offers a number of challenges to designers. It
must be sturdy enough to endure the torsional forces created by the
damper/spring/pedal assembly and the stresses of repeated transport
and playing, while still being light enough for easy transport.
Considering the weight of the bars alone, that doesn’t leave much
left for the frame. Also, the bars must be securely attached to the
frame, but not rigidly. Each bar must have some independent flex in
order to ring.
Vibraphone frames consist of two end blocks, made of metal, wood or
a combination, attached by various support members. Usually the end
blocks are approximately the same size as the two bars that are at
the same end; therefore one block is significantly larger than the
other.
The motor is attached to the frame at one end. The hinges for the
damper bar are attached at each end, and the spring assembly and
the pedal are usually attached in the middle. Two banks of
resonator tubes are laid into grooves in the frame so that they
straddle the damper bar. The resonators are not firmly fastened to
the frame. The ends of the shafts that gang the disks are attached
to the drive of the motor via a drive belt similar to an
O-ring.
A bed for the bars is made by laying four wooden rails onto pins on
the end blocks. Like the resonators, these rails are not firmly
attached to the frame. Each rail has a series of pins with rubber
spacers that will support the bars. The bars are arranged into two
groups, and a soft cord is passed through the nodal holes in the
bars of each group. The bars are laid between the support pins,
with the cord hooking the pins. The pins on the outside rails have
U-shaped hooks and the cord just rests in the bend. The inside pins
have a hook that grasps the cord and holds the bars in place
against the force of the damper pad. The two ends of the cord are
attached with a spring at one end to provide tension and
flex.
The two rows of bars follow the piano convention of white and black
keys, with the row nearer to the player corresponding to the white
keys. As with the piano, the lower notes are on the player’s left.
Unlike the marimba and the xylophone, the two rows of bars are in
the same horizontal plane so that the damper bar will come in
contact with both rows at the same time.
Frames come in a variety of styles, from functional to ornate, but,
except for negatively via squeaks and rattles, they don't really
contribute to the tonal qualities of the vibraphone. Some frames
allow the distance between the bars and the resonators to be
adjusted, to compensate for variations in air temperature, pressure
and moisture that change the speed of sound and therefore the
tuning of the bar/resonator system, but this is more common in
marimbas than vibraphones. Other frames allow the adjustment of the
height of the bar bed. It’s common to see players who don’t have
this capability hunched over their instruments while they play as
the standard height of non-adjustable frames is often too low for
men of average height.
Mallets

Typical vibes mallets.
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 (other materials, such as nylon, are sometimes
used). Mallets suitable for the vibraphone are also generally
suitable for the marimba.
The specific mallets used can have a great effect on the tonal
characteristics of the sound produced, ranging from a clang of
harsh clashes to a mellow ring with no obvious initial attack.
Consequently, a vast array of mallets is available, offering
variations in hardness, head size, weight, shaft length and
flexibility.
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, since "we don’t
know what we’re going to want to play until the second or two that
we're there", tend to stick to a single general-purpose mallet type
that works well in all dynamic ranges. Often this choice becomes
one of the defining items of the player's personal style. Many jazz
players alter commercially available mallets to get just the tone
they want.
Technique
The world of vibraphone players can be roughly divided into those
who play with two mallets, and those who play with four. In reality
the division is not quite so neat. Many players switch between two,
three and four mallets depending on the demands of their current
musical situations.
Furthermore, concentrating on the number of mallets a player holds
means missing the far more significant differences between the
two-mallet and four-mallet playing styles. As of 2008, these
differences are not quite as extensive as they were when
Gary Burton first introduced the world to the
four-mallet style in the 1960s, but they still exist to a large
degree.
Two-mallet style
The two-mallet approach to vibes is traditionally linear, playing
like a horn. 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 usual 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.
Two-mallet players use several different grips, with the most
common being a palms-down grip that is basically the same as the
matched grip used by drummers. The mallets are held between the
thumb and index finger of each hand, with the remaining three
fingers of each hand pressing the shafts into the down-facing
palms. Strokes use a combination of wrist movement and fingertip
control of the shaft.
Another popular grip is similar to the
timpani grip. The mallets are again held between the
thumb and index fingers and controlled with the remaining three
fingers, but the palms are held vertically, facing inward towards
each other. Most of the stroke action comes from the finger-tip
control of the shafts.
Passages are usually played hand-to-hand with double-sticking
(playing two notes in a row with the same hand) used when
convenient in minimizing crossing the hands.
The player must pay close attention to the use of the damper pedal
in order to cleanly articulate and avoid multiple notes ringing
unintentionally at the same time. Since the notes ring for some
significant fraction of a second when struck with the damper pad
up, and ringing bars do not stop ringing immediately when contacted
by the pad, a technique called "after pedaling" is necessary. In
this technique, the damper pedal is depressed marginally after the
note is struck, shortly enough after so that the recently struck
note continues to ring, but long enough after so that the previous
note has stopped ringing.
Another damper technique is "half pedaling", where the pedal is
depressed just enough to remove the spring pressure from the bars,
but not enough so the pad has lost contact with the bars. This
allows the bars to ring slightly longer than with the pad fully up
and can be used to make a medium-fast passage sound more
legato without pedaling every note.
Four-mallet style
The four-mallet vibraphone style is multi-linear, like a piano.
"Thinking like a pianist, arranger, and orchestrator, the vibist
approaches the instrument like a piano and focuses on a
multi-linear way of playing." 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.
Furthermore, the four-mallet style has led to a significant body of
unaccompanied solo vibes playing. One notable example is Gary
Burton’s performance of "Chega de Saudade (No More Blues)" from his
Grammy-winning 1971 album "Alone at
Last".
Although some early vibes players made use of four mallets, notably
Red Norvo and sometimes
Lionel Hampton, the fully-pianistic
four-mallet approach is almost entirely the creation of
Gary Burton. Many of the key techniques of the
four-mallet style, such as multi-linear playing and the advanced
dampening techniques describe below, are easily applied to playing
with two mallets and some modern two-mallet players have adapted
these devices to their playing, somewhat blurring the distinctions
between modern two- and four-mallet players.
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.
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. One common
variation of the Burton grip places the outside mallet between the
middle and ring fingers, instead of between the index and middle.
Four-mallet vibists usually play scalar linear passages much the
same as two-mallet players, using one mallet from each hand
(outside right and inside left for Burton grip), except four-mallet
players tend to make more use of double strokes, not only to avoid
crossing hands but also to minimize motion between the two bar
rows. For example, an ascending E flat major scale could be played
L-R-R-L-L-R-R-L, keeping the left hand on the "black" bars and the
right hand on the "white". For linear passages with leaps, all four
mallets are often used sequentially.
Pedaling techniques are at least as important for the four-mallet
vibist as for two-mallet players, but the all-or-nothing dampening
system of the pedal/pad presents many obstacles to multi-linear
playing since each line normally has its own dampening requirements
independent of the other lines. To overcome this, four-mallet
players use a set of dampening techniques referred to as "mallet
dampening", in addition to the pedaling techniques used by
two-mallet players. The mallet dampening techniques "are to the
vibist as garlic and fresh basil are to the Northern Italian chef"
and contribute significantly to expressive four-mallet
playing.
Mallet dampening 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
immediately stop. This produces a fairly distinctive "choked" sound
and dead strokes are often used just for that particular sound in
addition to the dampening aspects.
In hand-to-hand dampening, the vibist plays a note with one mallet,
while simultaneously pressing another mallet onto a previously
ringing bar. Usually the dampening mallet and the striking mallet
are held in different hands, but advanced players can, in some
circumstances, use two mallets from the same hand. This is the most
powerful of the mallet dampening techniques as it can be used to
dampen any note on the instrument while simultaneously striking any
other note.
Slide dampening can be used to dampen a note that is physically
adjacent to the new note being struck. The player strikes the new
note and then controls the rebound of the mallet so that it slides
over and onto the note to be dampened. Sometimes slide dampening
can make the new note sound "bent" or as if there is a
glissando from the dampened note to the ringing
one, as the two notes normally ring together for some short period
of time.
Hand dampening (also known as finger dampening) can be used to
dampen a white note while striking a nearby black note. As the
player strikes a black note with a mallet, they simultaneously
press the heel of their hand or the side of their pinky finger onto
the ringing white bar, using the same hand to strike the black note
and dampen the white note. Using both hands, it's possible to
dampen and strike two notes at once.
Specialty techniques
Pitch bending: This technique allows the pitch of
a ringing bar to be smoothly lowered, or "bent", downward, by a
half-step or so. To do this, the player replaces one of the normal
mallets with a hard-headed mallet such as a hard plastic xylophone
mallet or a brass glockenspiel mallet. The player presses the
special mallet onto a ringing bar at the nodal point, and then
slides the mallet out towards the middle or edge of the bar. This
causes the mallet to start vibrating with the bar, adding its
weight to the system and slowing the vibration. The player must be
very careful in placing the hard mallet onto the bar in order to
avoid a rattling as the mallet and bar come into contact.
Bowing: In addition to striking the bars with
mallets, the bars can be made to sound by drawing the bow of a
string instrument along the edges. Since bars are fairly massive
compared to strings, better results are obtained by using bows from
the larger string instruments, at least a
cello bow and often a
double
bass bow. Often a player will use two bows, one for the white
bars and the other for the black. With bowing, the player is able
to excite the bars directly to the pure ringing tone and eliminate
many of the transient dissonant sounds that are present immediately
after a mallet strikes.
Five or six mallets: In order to achieve greater
density of 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. Results can be interesting, especially five-mallet playing
where the left hand
"comps" in three note
voicings while the right hand plays melodic lines, similar to the
popular
piano technique. However, the grips
tend to lead to limited musical possibilities, with little ability
to adjust the interval between the outside and middle mallets and
difficulties in playing hand-to-hand lines, and therefore use of
five or six mallets is rare.
Other techniques: The vibraphone solo, "Mourning
Dove Sonnet," composed by
Christopher
Deane, utilizes a four mallet grip with two cello (or bass)
bows held where the outer mallets would be, with a yarn mallet for
the main melodic playing and a plastic mallet for pitch bending in
the inner positions.
Solo vibes videos
The large size of the vibraphone and the fast-moving mallets can
create a great deal of visual interest during a vibraphone
performance. Probably the best way to fully appreciate the
capabilities of the vibraphone is to watch and listen to solo
(unaccompanied) vibes performances. A number of high-quality solo
vibes performances have been made available on the web. Here are
some examples:
- Gary Burton (at http://www.vicfirth.com/artists/burton.html):
On Gary's Vic Firth Artist page, there is
a video where Gary talks about his signature mallets and plays a
blues. Watch closely and you can see Gary
using all of the mallet dampening techniques mentioned above.
- Jerry Tachoir (http://www.tachoir.com) Video
(http://www.masterstudyseries.com) Vibist Jerry Tachoir was the
first to release an educational vibraphone. Vol I - The Vibraphone
- Jerry Tachoir Vol II - The Vibraphone - Jerry Tachoir These are
available at www.masterstudyseries.com
- Ed Saindon (at http://www.vicfirth.com/artists/saindon.html):
On Ed's Vic Firth Artist page, there are several videos recorded at
the 2006 version of the Percussive Arts Society
International Convention (PASIC). Performances include "Black
Orpheus", "Body and Soul"
and "Do
You Know What it Means ".
- Tony Miceli (at http://larrysimprovpage.com/?q=node/48/play and
http://larrysimprovpage.com/?q=node/50/play): Tony's "Quick and
Dirty" videos cover topics of four-mallet technique and include
performances of standard tunes such as "Come Rain or Come Shine", "Just
Friends" and "Cherokee".
- Joe Locke (at
http://www.joelocke.com/projects/sas.htm): The Joe Locke Quartet
live at the A-Trane Jazz Club in Berlin, November 05, 2007, playing
"The Rosario Material", also featuring Jonathan Kreisberg, Jay
Anderson, Joe La Barbera. Joe Locke:
4-mallet style improvisation / Post-Bop style Jazz.
- Richard Szaniszlo (at
http://thejazznetwork.ning.com/video/video/show?id=1974321%3AVideo%3A173578)
Hungarian jazz vibist. You can hear a beautiful unaccompanied vibes
intro of his song called Storm and Rainbow.
Vibraphone recordings
Vibist Jerry Tachoir was the first to release an educational
vibraphone.Vol I - The Vibraphone - Jerry TachoirVol II - The
Vibraphone - Jerry TachoirThese are available at
www.masterstudyseries.com
See also
References
- Introduction to Jazz Vibes; by Gary
Burton; Creative Music; 1965.
- Vibraphone Technique: Dampening and Pedaling; by David
Friedman; Berklee Press
Publications; 1973.
- Contemporary Mallet Method - An Approach to the Vibraphone and
Marimba; by Jerry Tachoir: Riohcat
Music; 1980