Lithophone
This postcard from 1906 illustrates the method of early lithophone performances in Luray Caverns, Virginia, United States
A lithophone is a musical instrument consisting of a rock or pieces of rock which are struck to produce musical notes. Notes may be sounded in combination (producing harmony) or in succession (melody). The lithophone is an idiophone similar to instruments such as the glockenspiel, metallophone, xylophone and marimba.
Notable examples
The Musical Stones of Skiddaw
Lithophone made of
Phonolite in the botanic garden in Schellerhaus (Germany)
A more sophisticated lithophone trims and mounts individual stones to achieve a full-scale idiophone:
The German composer Carl Orff calls for a lithophone called Steinspiel in his later works. Some lithophones include electric pickups to amplify the sounds.
External links
- The British composer Will Menter[1] invented the llechiphone, a marimba with keys made of slate, while working in North Wales.[2]
- Other slate lithophones, called stonaphones, are made in the U.S. state of Maine by Jim Doble out of recycled slate roofing.[3]
- An installation in Quark Park by Perry Cook and Jonathan Shor, consisting of 17 bars stretched over a 35-foot (11 m) long path.
Video
See also
References
- ^ P. Yule/M. Bemmann, Klangsteine aus Orissa Die frühesten Musikinstrumente Indiens?, Archaeologia Musicalis 2.1, 1988, 41–50 (also in English and French).
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