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Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Marimba

                    Marimba

Modern marimba music calls for simultaneous use of between two and four mallets (sometimes up to six or eight), granting the performer the ability to play chords or music with large interval skips more easily.  Multiple mallets are held in the same hand using any of a number of techniques or "grips".  For four mallets (two mallets in each hand), the most common grips are the Burton grip (made popular by Gary Burton), the traditional grip (or "cross grip") and the Musser-Stevens grip (made popular by Leigh Howard Stevens).  Each


grip is perceived to have its own benefits and drawbacks.  For example, some marimbists feel the Musser-Stevens grip is more suitable for quick interval changes and mallet independence, while the Burton grip is more suitable for stronger playing or switching between chords and single-note melody lines.  The traditional grip gives a greater dynamic range and freedom of playing.  The Musser-Stevens grip and the Burton grip are more common in the United States, while the traditional grip is more common in Japan. The choice of grip also varies by instrument (the Burton grip is less common on a marimba than on a vibraphone) and performer preference. 28]

 Six-mallet grips consist of variations on these three grips.  Six-mallet marimba grips have been used for years by Mexican and Central American marimbists, but they are generally considered non-standard in the Western classical canon.  Keiko Abe has written a number of compositions for six mallets, including a section in her concerto Prism Rhapsody.  Other marimbists/composers using this technique include Rebecca Kite (who commissioned composer Evan Hause to write Circe, a major work for six mallets, in 2001), Dean Gronemeier, Robert Paterson, and Kai Stensgaard.  Paterson's grip is based on the Burton grip, and his grip and technique have been called the Paterson grip, and even the Wolverine grip.  Paterson states that his technique differs from others in that there is less emphasis places on block chords on the lower bank of notes (the naturals or white notes) and more emphasis on independence, one-handed rolls, and alternations between mallets 12-3 or 1–23 in the left hand (or 45-6 or 4–56 in the right hand, respectively), and so on.  Ludwig Albert published at first a work for eight mallets and demonstrated the Ludwig Albert eight-mallet grip based on the traditional grip from 1995.[citation needed]

Marimba

                    Marimba Modern marimba music calls for simultaneous use of between two and four mallets (sometimes up to six or eight), ...