2009 Carolina Gold Front Ensemble Packet
2009 Carolina Gold Front Ensemble Packet
2009 Carolina Gold Front Ensemble Packet
2009
Carolina
Gold
Percussion
2009 Carolina Gold Percussion – FRONT ENSEMBLE
Welcome
Thank you for your interest in the percussion program here in Carolina
Gold. This will be the primary material used to determine your position in
the ensemble as well as being used in all rehearsals. For rehearsal dates
and times, please visit www.Carolina Goldbands.com.
We hope that you get the most from your experience and we look forward
to working with you!
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Front Ensemble
A few tips...
Spend some time playing on other instruments. Less than half of the
keyboard players will be on a marimba, yet most players tend to spend
most of their time practicing on them. Take some time and play on a
vibraphone or xylophone. Be able to play comfortably on all keyboard
instruments.
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Keyboard Technique
Guidelines
Posture
The way we stand behind our instruments not only allows us to be
successful musicians, but also creates an atmosphere of professionalism
to the audience. Remember: before you play your first note, you are
judged on how you look behind your instrument.
Stand with your feet shoulder width apart. Torso should be upright with
the shoulders and arms relaxed. How far away from the instrument you
stand will be determined by which exercise you are playing. Generally
speaking, you should be standing where both manuals are easily
reachable. Many players make the mistake of standing too far back, and
then have to lunge or overextend to reach the accidental manual. There is
no one perfect place; in fact you should be compromising by shifting
your weight forward or back depending on which manual you are playing
at the time. Note: While standing with your feet shoulder width apart,
place one foot slightly in front of the other. This will give you better
balance while shifting between manuals.
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Mallet Placement
Whenever possible, we strive to play every note in the center of the bar
directly over the resonators. While there are many schools of thought on
this subject, for our purposes this allows us more consistency is sound
quality and projection. This will often mean you will have to play with
mallets next to each other.
Rebound
Never do anything to inhibit the free rebounding of the mallet. The
grips we use will facilitate this, but remember to allow the mallet to
rebound after each stroke. Under no circumstance should you finish an
exercise with the mallets down near the bars.
Two-Mallet Technique
Grip
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With about 2 inches of the mallet extending from the back of the hand,
wrap the back two fingers around the mallet. Then lightly wrap the
remaining fingers around the mallet, with the index finger slightly
extended. The rear two fingers hold the mallet and the remaining fingers
“guide” the mallet. Avoid pinching the index finger and thumb. This
provides a sharp, brittle sound and restricts the rebound. The palms
should not be flat, but rather turned slightly inward at a natural and
comfortable angle. The wrist and arm should form a natural angle that
puts no stress on the wrist joint.
Stroke
From a resting position about ½” inch above the bar, the motion is
initiated by the mallet head, followed by the wrist and arm in a fluid,
seamless motion. The mallet head should move directly up, not at an
angle. Nor should it move in or away from the body. Upon reaching the
top of the stroke, the mallet is brought down by the weight in the back of
the hand (where the rear two fingers are holding the mallet). As the
mallet comes down, the wrist turns to accelerate the mallet into the bar.
The mallet should be completely level as it strikes the exact center of the
bar. After contact is made, the looseness in the front of the grip allows
the mallet to naturally rebound, thus initiating the next stroke.
At a moderate tempo, the stroke is 90% wrist motion, 10% arm motion.
As the tempo increases, the stroke will become more wrist-oriented and
the mallets will stay lower to the bars. As the tempo decreases, the stroke
will become more arm-oriented, and the mallets will come higher off of
the bars.
Rebound
When playing with two mallets, never let the mallets stop moving. The
mallets will never stop or slow down near the bars, nor will they stop at
the top of the stroke.
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Four-Mallet Technique
Grip
Here, we use the standard Stevens grip when playing with four mallets.
With the hand turned sideways in a “handshaking” position, the outside
mallet is gripped with the bottom two fingers with no more than a half-
inch extending beyond the back of the hand. The inside mallet is
balanced between the center of the palm and the curled-in index finger.
The middle finger secures the mallet in the palm, while the thumb rests
on top of the index finger. For more information on the Musser-Stevens
grip, see Leigh Howard Stevens’ “Method of Movement” or Gifford
Howarth’s “Simply Four.”
Keep your hands turned on their sides. The angle of the hand is very
different from the 2-Mallet technique, but it is very common to confuse
the two.
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Keep the thumb and index finger across from each other. Don’t over-
curl the index finger or pull back with the thumb. This “locks” the mallets
in place and prevents quick interval changes and good tone production.
(It also leads to tension in the hands. See “No pinching, please” above.)
Stroke
Prior to the stroke, all four mallets are lifted simultaneously by turning
the wrist upward while leaving the arms in their original position. It is to
this position that the mallets should return after each and every stroke.
Also, only move the mallet or mallets that are being used. The others
should remain up. Don’t allow stationary mallets to “sag” or “wiggle”
along with the others.
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Fundamental Exercises
Octaves
Green
G.H. Green
half on and half off the bar. Try to match the sound of the edge to that of
the center.
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With “Green,” though, the hands do not start together. We must perform
a “two-handed lift.” One mallet (the first hand) is going to move before
the other. When playing this exercise, most players immediately lift both
hands together, causing the mallet to move at two different speeds on
the first two notes, thus ensuring that the beginning of the exercise does
not sound even. By moving one hand and then the other in rapid
succession, both hand speeds are the same, and the beginning of the
“phrase” is linear and even.
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Seiko
Also keep in mind how your wrists are positioned while playing the
inversions, especially in other keys. They should be in a natural position
and free of any tension.
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Independence
Arpeggios
This is our basic 4-mallet arpeggio and inversion exercise. Begin this
exercise very slowly, around 40 bpm, to ensure proper technique. Make
sure when you move to then next inversion, the mallets are in proper
position to efficiently play the next set of inversions, meaning:
As you play the first 2 notes, the left hand will move directly over its next
set of notes (opposite for descending), thereby allowing for efficient use
of motion around the instrument.
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STOP!
DO NOT CONTINUE IN THIS PACKET
UNTIL ALL OF THE PREVIOUS EXERCISES
ARE COMFORTABLE!
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Ensemble Exercises
The next few pages contain exercises that we use as an ensemble to both
warm-up and work on various timing and listening issues we may face
throughout the music. All of the previous material should be learned and
continue to be mastered. Doing so will make you stronger as an
individual player, thereby making the ensemble stronger as a whole.
Scharton
Garrett Scharton
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67
Alan Miller
“67” is named for its ideal starting tempo: 67bpm, though you should be able to
perform it at a variety of tempi. This exercise stresses double stops and note-
value changes and is the first exercise involving independence of the hands.
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Version B
Alan Miller
“Version B” uses two of the three main strokes: double vertical strokes
and single independent strokes.
Measures 1-6 use double vertical strokes. Remember to keep the wrists
turned properly.
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Laterals
Sean Combes
“Laterals” employs the third and final stroke type we will discuss: double
lateral strokes. Double laterals are basically two single independent
strokes sped up and combined into one fluid stroke. However, while this
is considered one “stroke,” there are three discrete motions: 1) The first
mallet moving downward and striking the bar. 2) The wrist turning,
elevating the first mallet and bringing the second down to strike the next
bar; and 3) The second mallet rebounding to its original position.
When playing this exercise, avoid letting the second mallet “flop” onto the
bar. Turn the wrist strongly and produce a tone equal to that of the first.
Due to the amount of wrist strength needed to play double laterals, one
should postpone this exercise until the previous two stroke types are
mastered. Attempting to play double laterals before attaining the
requisite wrist strength will result in an uneven and unsatisfactory sound.
Also, at almost all tempi, even though this is a lateral exercise, the eighth
notes will be moving at a speed that requires the player to execute single
independent strokes. Don’t get sloppy by trying to play lateral strokes on
the eighth notes.
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4-2-1 Grid
Alan Miller
Before learning the next exercise, familiarize yourself with the following
progression of 5ths. The exercise will be much simpler to read after
doing so.
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