Thursday, March 5, 2020

A Guide to Different Percussion Instruments.

A Guide to Different Percussion Instruments. Percussion is Not Just the Drumkit. Here’s a Beginner’s Guide to Some Other Percussion Instruments. ChaptersWhat You Need to Know Before You Play the Tambourine.A Guide to the Xylophone.All You Need to Know about the Marimba.Why You Should Learn the Triangle.Thinking about Learning the Steel Hang? Here are the Basics.Maybe by now you’ve cracked the drums. You can nail some pretty rhythms on the snare drum and love to make a racket with the cymbals.If that’s the extent of your ambitions, then read no further: keep doing what you are doing. However, if you want to be a proper percussionist, you have some different musical instruments to master too.Because percussion music isn’t all about the drum kit, no. There’s a lot more to it than that. From the castanets to the cajon, from the orchestral timpani to the djembe, there’s a much wider world out there that deserves the attention of your talents.That’s why we’re taking a look at some of the more important varieties of percussion instruments that exist in the world. We’ll take you through their histories, some different playing techniques, and some of the most impressive percussion performances ever recorded.So, put your drum sticks down for the moment â€" they’ll be right there when you get back. Let’s instead turn to some instruments that inspire percussionists around the world.Here are five different percussion instruments with which you can extend your personal percussion section. He's playing the tambourine with his foot! LowriMusic Teacher 5.00 (8) £85/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors Chi yuenMusic Teacher 5.00 (5) £30/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors DanielMusic Teacher 5.00 (5) £37/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors RussellMusic Teacher 5.00 (4) £30/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors LeighMusic Teacher 5.00 (3) £35/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors KonstancijaMusic Teacher 5.00 (4) £30/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors MilenaMusic Teacher 5.00 (5) £30/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors KurtMusic Teacher 5.00 (3) £20/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutorsWhat You Need to Know Before You Play the Tambourine.A frame in which ‘zills’ or jingles are suspended, the tambourine is one of the more well-known hand percussion instruments. It comes either with a drum head or without one â€" something that gives it a more, or less, percussive effect.Given the two basic variations of the tambourine, t hey can be played in two different ways â€" either by striking or by shaking. In either case, playing the instrument engages the resonance of the zills, making it either a good accompaniment to a pop song or else a specific percussion instrument in an orchestra.A Brief History of the Tambourine.Tambourines, like many percussion instruments, have a long history, spreading pretty much the length of the world.It is thought that this musical instrument developed in ancient Mesopotamia, from where it spread as far as Indonesia, in the form of the rebana, and eastern Europe, in what is known as the buben. It is thought to have entered western Europe through northern African and the Middle East to France, where it picked up the name tambourine. Since this point, the tambourine has been one of the favourite instruments of Christian iconography, often appearing as being played by angels.Some Important Tambourine Performances.For some inspiration, let’s see what the tambourine can do. Here are two examples of tracks in which the tambourine makes a huge difference.And if you want to know more about this instrument, check out our article on playing the tambourine.Prince â€" Tamborine.We all know that Prince is awesome. However, this song features a pretty spectacular tambourine performance that will be an inspiration to everyone.Tchaikovsky â€" The NutcrackerTchaikovsky made a lot of use of the tambourine â€" and in the ‘Russian Dance’ of the Nutcracker it stars almost centre stage.A Guide to the Xylophone.If the tambourine is an instrument generally seen wielded contemptuously by the likes of Noel Gallagher, the xylophone is put to a wide variety of uses.You’ll play it â€" or a glockenspiel maybe â€" at school to bash out tunes like ‘Twinkle Twinkle’, and you’ll see virtuosos playing xylophones in classical orchestras. As percussion instruments go, the xylophone seems to stand with both the most novice and the most accomplished musicians around.Yet, these p articular idiophones â€" a type of instrument whose whole parts resonate when struck â€" is neither the basic instrument nor the niche one you might think. Rather, it should be played by so many more people than those who enjoy it now.So, why not give it a go? Want to learn the tambourine?The Development of the Xylophone.Varieties of xylophone exist all over the world â€" and are often confused with other instruments including the marimba (below), the glock, the vibraphone and tuned percussion instruments in general.And whilst the xylophone has come to be the word that stands for all of these instruments that you strike with a mallet or beater, their histories are all pretty different too. From the gamelan in south-east Asia to the balafon in west Africa, xylophone-like instruments are ubiquitous.Sixteenth-century Germany was the first place a xylophone was heard of in Europe, but it didn’t even receive that name until much later. And the first time the instrument went ‘mainstream’ was in the late nineteenth century.Some Famous Xylophone Players.So, which xylophone players might you actually have heard of? And in what pieces of music would it have appeared?Here are two places you might have heard the xylophone. And you can find out m ore about the instrument in our article on playing the xylophone.Evelyn Glennie.These days more accurately known as Dame Evelyn Glennie, this percussionist became known to the general public at the 2012 Olympics. Her xylophone performances are astounding.Pink Floyd.Fans of Pink Floyd will know that they are fans of less conventional instruments. This includes the xylophone, which can be heard on tracks like ‘See-Saw’ and ‘Time’. LowriMusic Teacher 5.00 (8) £85/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors Chi yuenMusic Teacher 5.00 (5) £30/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors DanielMusic Teacher 5.00 (5) £37/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors RussellMusic Teacher 5.00 (4) £30/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors LeighMusic Teacher 5.00 (3) £35/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors KonstancijaMusic Teacher 5.00 (4) £30/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors MilenaMusic Teacher 5.00 (5) £30/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutors KurtMusic Teacher 5.00 (3) £20/h1st lesson free!Discover all our tutorsAll You Need to Know about the Marimba.The marimba is one of the instruments most commonly confused with the xylophone. However, there are important differences.The marimba has resonators, or pipes that descend vertically from the bars â€" to increase volume and change the tone. Meanwhile, the bars themselves are larger and deeper in pitch than a xylophone. In the language of a proper percussion ensemble, this difference is quite crucial.However, if you manage as a xylophone soloist, the chances are that you’ll be able to play a pretty tune on the marimba too.A History of the Marimba.We said that marimbas and xylophones have fairly similar â€" or at least indistinguishable â€" histories. The difference is that where xylophones entered reasonably early into classical instrumentation, marimbas took quite a different route.Instead, marimbas headed to Latin America with the transportation of west African people in the slave trade. When there, they became quite popular instruments and, ultimately, became â€" for example â€" the national instrument of Guatemala.It was there â€" and across the length of Central America â€" that they gained their popularity and developed into their modern form.Where You Can Hear the Marimba.Like the xylophone, the marimba became popular in pop music and classical as an unconventional instrument to add different effects to pieces. There are a lot of examples of the marimba being used â€" but here are two.You can find out more about this instrument in our article on playing the marimba.The Rolling Stones â€" Under My Thumb.Throughout the Stones’s famous track, a marimba plays probably the most interesting rhythmic line. Listen carefully and you can’t miss it.Steve Reich â€" Six Marimbas.In the later twentieth century, the marimba entered classical music hard. One of the most famous pieces featuring the marimba is Steve Reich’s minimalist piece, where there is only the rhythm section. The triangle is actually a really important instrument!Why You Should Learn the Triangle.The triangle is seen by many as something of a joke instrument, one that requires no skill and that contributes fairly little to the world of music.This isn’t exactly fair and people who hold this view have a big wall of history to contend with â€" as the instrument has been played for nearly a thousand years.It’s the instrument that consists of a metal rod that is bent into a triangle with one open corner. Yet, despite its modest appearance, it is actually quite important.You can see this percussion instrument in all manner of places throughout history: in religious iconography, on medieval manuscripts, in Turkish travelling bands. And its importance comes from its strange ethereal sound: designed so as not to produce a defined pitch, its ring is completely distinctive.Crucial Triangle Performances.The triangle has been used in classical music since the eighteenth century. You can hear it in action in such famous pieces as Brahms’s Fourth Symphony, where it features heavily in the third movement.You can learn more about this instrument in our article on playing the triangle!Thinking about Learning the Steel Hang? Here are the Basics.Where all the other instruments mentioned here have long, illustrious histories behind them, the steel hang is something of a more recent invention. We’re talking less than twenty years old.Invented by a pair of Swiss musicians, the ‘hang’ is an idiophone that sits on your lap. Made from two bowl-shaped pieces of metal, it is struck by hand in different places to produce different tones. The effect is wonderful, with a sort of resonant hypnotic tone produced.‘Hang’ in Swiss German means both ‘hand’ and ‘hill’ â€" senses that encapsulate this completely different instrument. You can learn more about the instrument in our article on playing the steel hang.The Steel Hang Artists You Should Know.There aren’t many artists w ho are famous for their hang playing. There are probably only a couple who are worth mentioning.One of these is Manu Delago, an Austrian experimental musician who puts the instrument to really extraordinary ends.

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