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  2. Stevens grip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stevens_grip

    Stevens grip is a technique for playing keyboard percussion instruments with four mallets developed by Leigh Howard Stevens.While marimba performance with two, four, and even six mallets had been done for more than a century, Stevens developed this grip based on the Musser grip, looking to expanded musical possibilities.

  3. Leigh Howard Stevens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leigh_Howard_Stevens

    Leigh Howard Stevens (born March 9, 1953, in Orange, New Jersey [1]) is a marimba artist best known for developing, codifying, and promoting the Stevens technique or Musser-Stevens grip, a method of independent four-mallet marimba performance based on the Musser grip.

  4. Keyboard percussion instrument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keyboard_percussion_instrument

    Glockenspiel and Crotales. A keyboard percussion instrument, also known as a bar or mallet percussion instrument, is a pitched percussion instrument arranged in the same pattern as a piano keyboard and most often played using mallets. [1]

  5. Fulcrum grip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulcrum_grip

    The Fulcrum grip is a four-mallet grip for vibraphone and marimba developed by vibraphonist and educator Ed Saindon. The aim of the grip is to use varying fulcrum positions and finger technique to achieve the control, speed, and power of a two-mallet grip while being able to use all four mallets.

  6. Lists of tuned and untuned percussion instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_tuned_and_untuned...

    This group of instruments includes all keyboard percussion and mallet percussion instruments and nearly all melodic percussion instruments. Those three groups are themselves overlapping, having many instruments in common. Angklung [1] Celesta [2] Chime bar; Cup chime [3] Glockenspiel; Hand chime; Marimba; Metallophone; Piano; Steel pan; Tubular ...

  7. Grip (percussion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grip_(percussion)

    Five mallets in use on a vibraphone In percussion , grip refers to the manner in which the player holds the sticks or mallets , whether drum sticks or other mallets. For some instruments, such as triangles and large gongs , only one mallet or beater is normally used, held either in one hand or in both hands for larger beaters.

  8. Percussion mallet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percussion_mallet

    Mallet bag showing variety of mallets. A percussion mallet or beater is an object used to strike or beat a percussion instrument to produce its sound. The term beater is slightly more general. A mallet is normally held in the hand while a beater may be a foot or mechanically operated, for example in a bass drum pedal. The term drum stick is ...

  9. Marimba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marimba

    An example of the mallets used when playing a marimba. The mallet shaft is commonly made of wood, usually birch, but may also be rattan or fiberglass. The most common diameter of the shaft is around 8 mm (5 ⁄ 16 in). Shafts made of rattan have a certain elasticity to them, while birch has almost no give.