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  2. Marimba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marimba

    The term marimba refers to both the traditional version of this instrument and its modern form. Its first documented use in the English language dates back to 1704. [1] The term is of Bantu origin, deriving from the prefix ma-meaning 'many' and -rimba meaning 'xylophone'. The term is akin to Kikongo and Swahili marimba or malimba. [2]

  3. Marímbula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marímbula

    The Cubans call it marímbula, and most of the other Caribbean countries have adopted this name or some variant of it: marimba, malimba, manimba, marimbol. The instrument has a number of other names, such as marímbola (Puerto Rico), bass box, calimba (calymba), rhumba box, Church & Clap, Jazz Jim or Lazy Bass , and box lamellophone.

  4. List of national instruments (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_national...

    marimba [38] Xylophone-like instrument with gourd resonators, two sets of overlapping keys, struck with mallets 111.222-4 Corsica: cetera ceterina, cetara A musical instrument of the cittern family, common in Corsica. 111.224-4 Crete: lyra [39] Three-stringed fretted, pear-shaped instrument with a hollow body and a vaulted back, propped up on ...

  5. Vibraphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vibraphone

    The Leedy vibraphone did not have a pedal mechanism, and it had bars made of steel rather than aluminum. The growing popularity of Leedy's instrument led competitor J. C. Deagan, Inc., the inventor of the original steel marimba on which Leedy's design was based, to ask its chief tuner, Henry Schluter, to develop a similar instrument in 1927 ...

  6. 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]

  7. 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.

  8. Merengue music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merengue_music

    In the 1930s–1950s, a bass instrument was also often used. Called marimba, it resembles the Cuban marímbula, and is a large box-shaped thumb piano with 3-6 metal keys. The main percussion instruments, güira and tambora, have been a part of the ensemble since the music's inception, and are so important that they are often considered symbolic ...

  9. Leigh Howard Stevens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leigh_Howard_Stevens

    During the 1970s, Stevens began writing down his thoughts and exercises he invented in order to facilitate the mastery of this new technique. The result was his pedagogical treatise Method of Movement for Marimba, first published in 1979 by his own company, Marimba Productions.