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MARIMBA BANDS INSTRUMENTS, Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban,
South Africa.

Marimba Bands
Instruments, information and definitions via
the web:
A marimba is an idiophone, a percussion instrument
that produces sound by means of vibrations that
travel through the entire body of the instrument.
The idiophone family also includes triangles and
cymbals, all instruments that form part of the
percussion section of an orchestra.
One subset of the idiophone family is the group of
instruments played with mallets, and the marimba
belongs to this group. In fact, the marimba is the
largest mallet instrument. Other mallet instruments
include the vibraphone, the xylophone, the chimes or
tubular bells, the glockenspiel, the steel drums,
and the crotales or antique cymbals. While
historically a variety of struck and plucked
instruments from Africa and Latin America have been
called marimba, today the terms is mainly used for
the modern orchestral marimba.

Like the xylophone, the orchestral marimba is a set
of wooden bars, often rosewood, mounted on a stand,
with each bar having its own resonator. This
distinguishes it from the other mallet instruments
which have bars made of metal. The marimba is also
distinguished by its resonant, mellow tone, which
contrasts with the xylophone’s sound, which has
little sustain and can be both brittle-sounding and
piercing. The first orchestral marimba’s were
manufactured in the United States in 1910.

A standard “concert marimba” has a 4 1/3 octave
range, while solo instruments are 5 octaves, and it
is a non-transposing instrument, usually scored on
the grand staff. The lowest pitches are customarily
placed to the players left. The marimba is
traditionally played with a variety of mallets, but
the hardest of hard mallets are avoided so as not to
risk cracking the bars.

An instrument called the xylorimba, or sometimes the
xylo-marimba or marimba-xylophone, covers the range
of both marimba and xylophone, but the sound is more
like that of the xylophone. Alban Berg, and Olivier
Messiaen wrote for xylorimba, but the parts are
played on a xylophone. Pierre Boulez, wrote for
xylorimba in several pieces: in once case, the part
is played on a xylophone, in the other, the parts
are played on a combination of xylophones and
marimbas. Composers for marimba have included Percy
Grainger, Darius Milhaud, Carl Orff, and Igor
Stravinsky, who reportedly called for a
marimba-xylophone, but meant a marimba. Famous
marimba players have included Clair Omar Mussser,
Leigh Howard Stevens, Gordon Stout, Keiko Abe, and
Evelyn Glennie.
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