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On Feb 14, 2020, at 16:30, 'THOMAS SIMPSON' via Handbell-l <handb...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Uh. Ring a lot of LV only music?
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Hi Rod!I admit I'm jealous because I'd much rather have a choir that damps less than a choir that damps too much!Are you a pianist? I invite you to consider teaching them to damp as you would as a pianist. (How often do you play piano without using the pedal? Even if it's not marked...)Remember also that handbells can damp more flexibly than a piano because we can control every note individually and a piano can't. Make use of that ability too.If you'll be at National Seminar this year, please consider taking my "50 Shades of Damping" class in which we explore the vast area between LV and strict note-value damping.-Michèle Sharik
I recently joined a new handbell choir in our new town and they will likely recruit me to become conductor sooner or later.--None of the ringers damp hardly ever presumable because they have not been trained how and when to damp. The sound is similar to a bell tree [no disrespect].The question is, how does one transition into damping without freaking everyone out. Some ringers have been playing many years, so a hard habit to change.Rod
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To me it seems that handbell damping should be heard the same way as with piano or Indonesian gamelan; that is, the beauty of the decay in each case should be valued where and as long as it can be appreciated, but in both of those cases the usual density of piano and gamelan music would become seriously muddied and unpleasant if undamped.
On the other hand, as in piano and gamelan performance, handbell ensembles that damp prematurely are indeed disturbing the beauty of the bell “decay” that draws so many people to the instrument.
I really can’t remember having difficulty teaching even the youngest and most elementary ringers to damp precisely as a general principle. It’s such a basic technique and expressive device. All pianists learn very early and rather quickly to release notes just in time for the next one to be struck, or to hold notes down when they should be sustained. At a more advanced level they learn to use sostenuto pedals when “damping” is to be avoided. A first principle for gamelan players is the somewhat more challenging maneuver of damping each bar or pot immediately after it is played while simultaneously striking the next pitch.
So I say it’s worth the relatively minor effort to learn precise damping as one of the fundamental tools of handbell musicianship. This is the “legato damping” principle that Dawn Beckwell referred to: it’s a gorgeous sound when handbell ensembles master this, just like fine piano and gamelan playing–for any style of music except change ringing, tower bell, some unison parts or special expressive effects.
When tower bells and carillons ring one tone at a time, fine—by all means don’t hurt your shoulders to damp them :( but let everyone enjoy the breadth of “ring" that tower bells convey so well. Even great carillons playing organ arrangements (loved the weekly carillon recitals at The University of Michigan!) have a special spatiality that is tantalizing in their settings. But the densely-textured and often virtuosic handbell ensemble pieces we all play on stages and in churches sound sloppy at the least and cacophonous at the worst if completely or inconsistently undamped!
Herb
Herbert G. Geisler, Ph.D.
Emeritus Professor of Music and Director of Music Education and Handbells
Concordia University Irvine, California
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I have the same problem with my crew.
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You really need to try to convince your ringers that damping is not a sin and it will only improve the overall presentation of your music ministry. Try to get them to learn and use "dirty" damping on both the bells and chimes. This is damping as the next note is rung so that there is not a noticeable space between notes and the previous note does not cover up or create a dissonance with the note being played.
Have you tried to record a rehearsal or presentation of your music and then had them listen to what they are doing?
David in Stafford, VA
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