User Manual

DAN MOORE 1
Educator Series
PERCUSSION
Marimba Grooves
By Dan Moore
Dan Moore is percussion area head at the University of
Iowa. A "total percussionist," his experience in the
many aspects of percussion keyboard, drumset,
ethnic, multi and electronic ranges from concert to
marching and from jazz to classical. Moore has per-
formed throughout the United States, and in Japan
and China. His interest in electronic percussion led
to his development of the MIDI-marimba, which
augments the acoustic marimba with electronically-
triggered sounds. In 1985 he formed the Britain/Moore
Duo with Nashville-based steel drummer and per-
cussionist Mat Britain. The BMD performs their
eclectic mix of acoustic and electronic percussion
throughout the country. Moore is a national per-
forming artist for Yamaha Corporation of America,
Innovative Percussion and Sabian Ltd. He serves on
the Latin Percussion Music Group (LP) Educational
Advisory Board. His music is published by Cricket City
Music, Innovative Percussion and Creative Music.
As I was heading off to college in the summer of 1976, the pop duo Starbuck had a hit tune which fea-
tured a very cool marimba solo. I must have listened to the marimba on "Moonlight Feels Right" a hun-
dred times. As a drum set player and rudimental snare drummer in high school, I didn't have much use
for keyboard percussion, but that solo sparked my interest in the marimba.
In 1979, another "Top 40" tune featured a marimba solo that fanned the flame of my interest in the
instrument. This time it was a bar band from Buffalo, Spyro Gyra, and a tune called "Morning Dance,"
with marimbist Dave Samuels. By the time I entered graduate school, the marimba had become my
instrument of choice. I wanted to carve out my own niche with it. That opportunity arose in 1985 when
I formed the Britain/Moore Duo with steel drummer/percussionist Mat Britain.
From the start, Mat and I shared the concept of the duo's ideal sound: a thick contrapuntal texture that
sounded like more than two performers. But the nature of our two instruments — the pan with its lim-
ited range and the marimba with its quick decay time — made realization of that sound much more
difficult than we anticipated. It took a change in my approach to the marimba to make this pairing work.
The change did not necessarily involve new techniques as much as different ways of employing
existing techniques.
My paradigm shift started by throwing out everything I had learned about playing jazz chord changes
on a keyboard percussion instrument. On the vibes I had learned to look at a C7 chord and think of
every note to play except the root and fifth — notes normally left to the bass player. In a duo with no
bass player, I needed to play these very notes so the harmonies would make sense. To thicken the tex-
ture, I began constructing my parts with bass lines that also contained comping patterns and occa-
sional melodies or obligato lines thrown in for good measure. I listened to recordings and live per-
formances from a new perspective to develop lines on the marimba that would likely be played by a
bass player, and comping patterns that would be played by a guitarist or pianist. The result when I put
it all together was a self-contained marimba groove.
This approach works very well for the marimba in a duo or a solo setting. I use it with duo part-
ners ranging from vocalists to violinists, as well as with percussionists, drum set players, and
of course, pan players.
The following exercises are designed to give you some ideas about the process of developing grooves
for the marimba. Work through them with the goal of establishing a solid groove. Learning notes is
usually much less of a problem than perfecting the feel-finding that deep groove and locking into it.
These exercises are all based on a single rhythmic motive expressed with two contrasting bass lines.
There are many other grooves from which to choose, but the next few exercises are enough to give you
an understanding of the concept.
Dan Moore

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