EKE BBB Posted December 19, 2003 Report Posted December 19, 2003 Maybe this is common knowledge, but... Listening to Cecil Taylor´s "Lookin´ ahead", where Earl Griffith is credited playing "vibraharp", I wondered if vibraharp and vibraphone were exactly the same instrument. Searching through the web, I came to different conclussions. Generally it´s defined as the same instrument: "An electronic instrument developed in the 1920's, used much in jazz music. It consists of metal bars arranged in the manner of a piano keyboard, and it is sounded by means of soft mallets. Usually the vibraphone has a three octave range of f to f'''. Some vibraphones have an extended range from c to f'''. It is also known as the vibraharp." But in susanpascal.com web-site I discovered that "vibraharp" is the instrument and "vibraphone" is a trade name for an equivalent instrument produced by Musser company. "Marimba, an instrument of wooden bars with tubular "resonators" underneath that hold air spaces to amplify the sound. It has a large playing range; a marimba can be five octaves long. You'll see these in Latin America, where the instruments are so big that three people play at the same time: a player creating bass lines, a chording player in the middle, and a melodic soloist at the high end. The marimba is related to the... Xylophone, which also has wooden bars, but features a high-pitched range and is typically used for fast, sprightly musical passages. During the 1920's vaudeville era, the xylophone was a fixture in the show percussionist's instrument arsenal. Vaudeville shows called for plenty of sound effects, and the J.C. Deagan company capitalized on this by inventing new musical novelties. Among other creations, they developed the... Steel Marimba, which was, as you might guess, a marimba with steel bars instead of wood bars. (This instrument had a short life.) They then went a few steps further, developing the... Vibraharp, which has metal bars, a damper pedal (functioning like a piano damper pedal), and a system of butterfly valves (one at the top of each resonator tube) that creats a vibrato effect. The vibraharp was used by NBC, for chime notes to mark radio intermission signals. Lionel Hampton played the xylophone, and in 1930 he was recording with Louis Armstrong in an NBC studio where there was a vibraharp. They tried Lionel on the new vibraharp for their recording of the song, Memories of You, the first time jazz was recorded on the instrument. Vibraphone is the trade name for an equivalent instrument produced by the Musser company, a J.C. Deagan competitor. Vibes, an abbreviation for vibraphone or vibraharp, is now in common use." Quote
vibes Posted December 19, 2003 Report Posted December 19, 2003 Thanks for posting that, EKE BBB. Very interesting information. Quote
Jazzmoose Posted December 19, 2003 Report Posted December 19, 2003 The main thing to remember is that both instruments are illegal in Texas... Quote
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