The present invention belongs to the technical field of equipment of musical instruments and their accessories. Specifically, it is a special bag for covering, protecting, packing, and safely transporting the keyboard of a keyboard-percussion instrument, such as the vibraphone or the marimba.
Means of storage and transportation of musical instruments is an important technical area. Many musical instruments are large, heavy, and sensitive to physical and environmental conditions and impacts. In addition, instruments of high quality, made by well-known craftsmen and used for professional performance are expensive. On the other hand, the concert activities of professional music performers are inseparable from transportation, use, and storage of musical instruments during travel and sometimes in unforeseen conditions, which occasionally can be harmful or even disastrous for the instrument.
Each class of musical instruments has specialized technical solutions and tools that provide the best protection for that particular class or even a specific type of instrument. The present invention relates to protection means for keyboard-percussion instruments. Several instruments are included in the class of keyboard-percussion instruments: vibraphone, marimba, xylophone, metallophone (glockenspiel), bells, and the like.
A keyboard-percussion instrument usually comprises an instrument stand (frame), a set of percussion bars (plates) (“keyboard”), and percussion tools, usually mallets with soft tips. Different instruments of this class may also have additional sound-forming elements, such as the vibraphone and the marimba having resonators that amplify the sound emitted by the percussion bar as well as form the sound timbre and other characteristics. The aforementioned percussion bars are the essential elements of these instruments, where the sound of the instrument is created when the soft tips of the mallets are used to hit the bars of the keyboard. Depending on the type of the instrument, the percussion bars can be made of metal, wood, ceramic, plastic, or other materials suitable to generate the sound.
The vibraphone or marimba bar, which looks like a simple plate, actually has a special design and is made with great precision. For example, vibraphone bars are made of an aluminum or metal alloy (or a silver alloy) cut into plates of a predetermined length. In the plates, across their width, two holes are drilled through which the bars are strung into the keyboard by strings, and then the keyboard is hung with these strings on the holders in the frame of the instrument, thus allowing the bars to hang and sound free. The hanging bars are separated from each other, usually at regular intervals. To obtain a longer sound of the bars (self-resonance), said holes are drilled through the nodal points of minimum amplitude around which the plate vibrates. These points are approximately at ¼ of the length of the plate from each end of the plate. Besides, the vibraphone or marimba bar has an arch shape on its underside to lower the ringing frequency: it allows to shorten the largest bass bars. Moreover, this arch gives the bar a complex harmonic vibration mode and a specific soft sound, for example, the F3 bar sounds in the main F3 tone, along with the F5 and A6 consonants. In addition, due to the curvature of the arch, the said nodal points are displaced closer to the ends of the bar (22.4% of the length from each end of the plate). After the bar plate is made, its sound is tuned with precision. If the shape of the bar is flat, the ringing is adjusted by scraping/sanding the metal from the ends of the bar. Additionally, secondary and tertiary bar tones can be tuned by scraping/sanding the material in various other locations (arches) of the bar-plate.
Similar principles apply to the production of the Marimba bars. The essential difference is that the marimba bars are made of wood, usually expensive rosewood.
All this determines, that the bars and keyboards of the mentioned instruments are rather complex; they create the sound of the instrument and constitute a significant part of the price of the instrument. Meanwhile, transporting the instrument, careless use or even a slight physical shock (for example, mutual collisions of bars in the keyboard during transportation) can significantly degrade the sound of the instrument and the instrument may even be no longer suitable for professional performance.
There are several cases for storing and transporting percussion-keyboard instruments, which accommodate the whole instrument or only its keyboard, on the market. The closest source to the present invention is the Yamaha Soft Cases for YM-5100A Marimba [1]. It provides a set of cases, in which the wooden plates of the marimba bars are laid down side by side to each other, on a flexible fabric-made pallet which then is rolled into a roll together with the plates and fastened. Depending on the instrument type, if the bar weights are small, then harmful physical effects during transporting the keyboard are unlikely. However, when transporting a much heavier metal vibraphone keyboard, the case of this design may be not protecting from stronger collisions bars with other parts of the instrument or with other bars.
The company “Pearl” [2] accommodates the marimba keyboard into a case together with the instrument frame. However, even after the instrument has been packaged into the case, it still must be handled with care as the risk of damage remains significant.
Among patent sources, one can find patents on keyboard-percussion instruments, as well as on various bags and holders for musical instruments, for example, in documents U.S. Pat. Nos. 1,575,960, 3,138,986A, 4,411,187A, 164,702S, “Portable component marimba” in U.S. Pat. No. 9,406,287B2, “Support post for a suspended tone bar” in GB2564440A, “Musical instrument stand” in JP6579130B2, “Folding marimba” in U.S. Pat. No. 10,325,577B1, and others. However, an essentially close patent document on such percussion bars bags was not found.
The reviewed technical documentation shows that bags for transporting, operating, and storing a percussion keyboard may not be safe enough, especially, if the percussion keyboard is larger, heavier, and more expensive. The present invention discloses a bag of improved construction that allows the bars of a keyboard-percussion instrument to be stored, transported, and operated much more safely.
The purpose of the invention is to effectively protect the keyboard and bars of a keyboard-percussion instrument (vibraphone, marimba, xylophone, and the like) during operation, transportation, or long-term storage of the instrument.
The technical solution is a percussion keyboard bag of special construction, which, unlike other known made-of-fabric and padded keyboard bags for this purpose, additionally comprises special (fabric and padded) bar-separating tabs attached inside the bag, which, when the bag is used to cover the keyboard, are inserted into the gaps between the bars, thus separating the bars and preventing them from coming into direct contact under various operating and transporting conditions.
Effect: in this bag, each percussion bar is separated from each other by the aforementioned tabs, therefore, the bars do not rub or hit each other, neither on their edges nor on their flat surfaces. Another important effect is that the required silence can be ensured during assembly and disassembly of the instrument, for example, when the said assembly-disassembly activity of the instrument is carried out behind the scenes while other performers are on the stage. Removing, installing, and colliding the metal vibraphone keyboard causes an audible sound behind the scenes and on the stage that is undesirable during a performance. Another effect is that when assembling and disassembling a vibraphone, the said bar-separating tabs maintain a fixed distance between the bars, which remains the same or similar to that when the bars are placed on the vibraphone frame. Therefore, when installing the percussion keyboard, it is no longer necessary to adjust the layout of the bars—to pull and slide them when putting them on the metal holders of the keyboard, with a high risk of damaging their lower surface.
The invention is explained in the drawings. The drawings are an integral part of the description of the invention and are provided as a reference to a possible embodiment of the invention, but are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
The bag (8) for the keyboard (2) of the percussion-keyboard instrument (1) is made of fabric, preferably with a soft padded base (9). The shape and size of the base (9) can vary, but in the best embodiment, the bag base (9) corresponds to the shape and size of the instrument's unfolded keyboard (2) with the outspread bars (3) and their connecting cords (5). The base (9) of the bag may be slightly larger than the unfolded keyboard (2).
The bag has special bar-separating tabs (10) attached (sewn) to its base (9). The bag with the tabs is shown in
The bag (8) may have clasp means (11) (
The base (9) of the bag (8) and the bar-separating tabs (10) are made of a strong and rigid material suitable for cases and bags for musical instruments. Also, the padding and tabs may use internal paddings, such as nonwoven technical fabric (sintepon), cotton wool, or other similar materials.
The thickness of the bar-separating tabs (10), including the layer of material and the inner padding, can be selected so that each bar-separating tab (10) fits tightly into the space between the two bar (3), the width of which is usual to such keyboards (2) mounted onto the frame of the instrument (1).
The keyboard bag (8) can be used to cover and protect percussion keyboards and bars of the following instruments: vibraphone, marimba, xylophone, metallophone, bells, or the like. The bag (8) is suitable for the following major applications:
The invention is not limited to the instruments, materials, and keyboard bag functionality indicated in this specification. The keyboard bag with bar tabs, for this purpose, can also be used in other suitable cases to protect musical instruments.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| LT2020 564 | Dec 2020 | LT | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/IB2021/061395 | 12/7/2021 | WO |