"Caleidoscópio" by Gene Koshinski (two-mallet marimba solo)

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • Performed by Gene Koshinski
    www.genekoshinski.com
    Audio: Don Schraufnagel and Gene Koshinski
    Video: Marc Hill
    MALLETS: Innovative Percussion Artisan Series IP5003R (NJZ mallets in the video are discontinued)
    GEAR: 5 Octave Adams Alpha Marimba
    PROGRAM NOTES
    This piece is one of 10 works in the book "TWO" by Gene Koshinski, a collection of concert pieces for two-mallet marimba solo with a comprehensive guide to technique and performance practice.
    "Caleidoscópio" was inspired by my study of a coordinational independence method called "Ritmica," developed by Brazilian conductor Jose Gramani, and a series of courses on the subject taught by Gramani's protégé Rogerio Boccato. Portions of the "Ritmica" method focus on the simultaneous performance of unrelated meters and ostinati as well as contradictory melodic material, which is what the bulk of "Caleidoscópio" is founded upon. The "B" section of the piece pays homage to the Brazilian roots of the Ritmica method by hinting at a light samba feel and providing more of a melodic focus.

Komentáře • 145

  • @justinnash9460
    @justinnash9460 Před 4 lety +86

    doing this for my solo this year. if the poly rhythm is getting to you, just give it some time, practice making each hand independent and dont lose confidence. took me two days to figure out the basic rhythm.

  • @jonastechmanski1592
    @jonastechmanski1592 Před 4 lety +245

    For anyone wishing to develop their independence in the 15/16 polymelody, here's what I did:
    1: Graph out the sum of the two rhythms. Start with a common denominator of the 3/16 (dotted eighth notes) pattern and the 7/16 (123-12-12) pattern: one measure of 21/16. Graph the two rhythms as if it's a kick and snare: say, the 7/16 pattern on top, and the 3/16 on bottom. The 7/16 pattern will fit thrice within the measure of 21/16, and the 3/16 pattern will fit 7 times within the 21/16 measure. Once completed, practice the two rhythms together, with two hands. Here's my best textual representation of the two together, with #'s as the 3/16 and +'s as the 7/16 (#+ is a double stop between both), with -'s as 16th rests:
    (#+)-#(#+)-#+#-(#+)#-(#+)-#+##+#-
    Repeated over and over and over...
    Alright, totally disregard the jumbled syntax above if you didn't understand it- it's an attempt at best.
    Essentially, once you get the two rhythms together as one rhythm between two hands, master it. It's strange (21/16), but if you can get that engrained into your muscle memory, the next steps will be easy.
    2: Add pitches to the 7/16 ostinato. The pitches of the 7/16 are F#, E, and D. Once you know the rhythm mentioned earlier, put it on an idiophone. Implement those notes into whichever hand is playing the 7/16 pattern. Get this down to muscle memory.
    3: Add the 3/16 pitches. With every repetition of a dotted eighth note (3/16), you switch to a different pitch. This is the largest bump, as the 3/16 pattern is written in phrases of 5 (hence the 15/16 time signature). Keep the combined rhythm from the first step in the back of your mind while your left hand switches between notes over the 7/16 pattern.
    Practice the third step slowly at first. Once accurate, speed it up.
    Ultimately, boil it down, then add all the ingredients back in. Here are all 3 steps, simplified into a sentence:
    1: Learn what rhythm the two patterns make together
    2: Add pitches to the treble clef pattern
    3: Add pitches to the bass clef pattern.
    I hope that this helped anyone who had a hard time comprehending the material at play, and the execution of it. It is a challenging piece!
    Note: Forgive me if my detailed steps were a bit complex. It is not easy translating visual and physical information into text.

    • @genekoshinskimusic
      @genekoshinskimusic  Před 4 lety +144

      My brain hurts... :)

    • @justnoahherehello
      @justnoahherehello Před 4 lety +7

      Gene Koshinski same

    • @hollyzhang1418
      @hollyzhang1418 Před 4 lety +2

      @@genekoshinskimusic SAME

    • @ethanstrumwasser8798
      @ethanstrumwasser8798 Před 4 lety +8

      dude, thanks so much. i've been struggling with this for days, then i got it about 30 minutes after reading this :P

    • @KinkyPanda
      @KinkyPanda Před 3 lety +12

      It took longer to read this comment than the entire lengthy of the video. Seriously.

  • @mb2268
    @mb2268 Před 2 lety +73

    The independence between the right and left hand that he gives is amazing

  • @epicdrumz
    @epicdrumz Před 2 lety +42

    The only thing I dislike about this piece is that its too short. Love this composition.

  • @exquisiteoath
    @exquisiteoath Před 6 lety +186

    The interplay of ideas in this is so wonderful.

  • @Michael-Oh
    @Michael-Oh Před 5 lety +107

    love this is as a percussionist but also as a genius composition.

  • @wholegrain1092
    @wholegrain1092 Před 4 lety +58

    About a year ago, I started playing percussion. Now I am a million times better than when I knew absolutely nothing. I got more into music for marimba, and this really stuck with me. I already got the book, and started practicing for Solo & Ensemble. Thank you for this composition, and hopefully I get a 1 this spring.

    • @liammcelroy2265
      @liammcelroy2265 Před 4 lety +2

      Why do I feel like I have the exact same life as you. It's weird

  • @FriedmanVibe
    @FriedmanVibe Před 4 lety +98

    Absolutely gorgeous, elegant playing!

    • @genekoshinskimusic
      @genekoshinskimusic  Před 4 lety +15

      Thank you so much Mr. Friedman, it means so much coming from you!

  • @conormulford
    @conormulford Před 6 lety +54

    RIP to the video I posted a few years back. Beautifully played, beautifully written, great to listen to. Nice work Gene!

  • @oli77sch
    @oli77sch Před 3 lety +22

    Great piece! Not sure if I would recognize it as a two mallet piece in blind test...

  • @vermine18
    @vermine18 Před 8 měsíci +5

    My god man this makes me want to play the marimba again. One of the most beautiful peaces I've ever heard👌

  • @charakter-etudenjohannesst8121

    Gene Koshinski - Genius of percussion literature! 👏

  • @samvollmost
    @samvollmost Před rokem +10

    This is a lovely marimba solo 😊

  • @torram28
    @torram28 Před 5 lety +32

    1:58 mmmm what a smooth transition

  • @abcrtzyn
    @abcrtzyn Před 4 lety +5

    I did this piece for my high school senior recital. Such a fun little piece.

  • @eddyed5670
    @eddyed5670 Před 11 měsíci +3

    This is such a beautiful piece of music. Definitely gonna try to learn it once I get the chance to play a marimba again.

  • @Willhelm55
    @Willhelm55 Před 2 lety +2

    found someone on tiktok referencing this and had to come see it! This is marvelous! Thank you for your contributions to culture!

  • @sentientape8694
    @sentientape8694 Před 2 lety +12

    My teacher plays this after rehearsal I cant believe I found it

  • @madalynpropst2738
    @madalynpropst2738 Před 4 lety +8

    I'm going to try this for solo and ensemble next year :) I'm super excited, and hope that piano helps with hand independence.

    • @ShockzG5
      @ShockzG5 Před 2 lety

      Playing this for solo and ensemble as well

  • @Dragonsshadow264
    @Dragonsshadow264 Před rokem +2

    Great piece playing it for my solo! It's so fun to have the independent patterns

  • @Jburjan1
    @Jburjan1 Před 5 lety +5

    Beatiful music and respect for tehnique this ussualy play with least 3 4 sticks

  • @e018
    @e018 Před 6 lety +10

    Perfect work-out music!!!

  • @donovanh778
    @donovanh778 Před 5 lety +125

    Any tips on visualizing this? I'm having trouble keep both of my hands independent with each other without straying from the static rhythms. Thanks

    • @henryhorne6114
      @henryhorne6114 Před 5 lety +34

      Honestly I just practiced it until one day it clicked

    • @josebolanos5773
      @josebolanos5773 Před 4 lety +21

      Take it real slow at first to accurately have the rhythms in time and then slowly increase speed

    • @ashtonallen5608
      @ashtonallen5608 Před 4 lety +16

      One way that has helped is to set your met to straight 16ths slowly and realize how each pattern fits to those. For me it clicked realizing that the dotted 8th created a 16th grouping of three and then fit the right hand pattern into that. And then sit on that slow and realize patterns and how they are very independent yet give to each other. Brilliant piece. Even funner to play.

    • @brianpeede7877
      @brianpeede7877 Před 2 lety +3

      Practice the rhythm first dont add movement of the melody, syncopated rhythms is the melody by itself, then you add the actual melody of the peice it can get very confusing so break up the sections, its not a easy thing to do but it can lock perfectly when you start to put it together

    • @ShockzG5
      @ShockzG5 Před 2 lety +1

      ^^^^^this this this I’m having so much trouble with this

  • @nobody8thechicken186
    @nobody8thechicken186 Před 3 měsíci

    Made something of my own with this as inspiration!

  • @aaronmilam2290
    @aaronmilam2290 Před 11 měsíci

    Wow. Known about this piece and heard it a handful of times, but this performance is just immaculate.

  • @guscavin3011
    @guscavin3011 Před 2 lety +3

    A few months ago I would've never considered playing this but now my high school is about to bring Compound Autonomy to state solo and ensemble. If anyone knows what that is, I think it's good prep for rhythms like this.

  • @User-fv1jx
    @User-fv1jx Před 6 lety +5

    This is wonderful! Love the key changes haha

  • @neacailmcmillan3427
    @neacailmcmillan3427 Před 5 lety +5

    Love it! Great performance too!

  • @kalebcrouch424
    @kalebcrouch424 Před 2 lety +1

    beautiful marimba, gorgeous playing

  • @gettingcrispy9593
    @gettingcrispy9593 Před 4 lety +4

    Make sure you don’t give up practice and nail this peace. Take time with the measures and I’m sure you can get this tricky beat down

  • @FriedmanVibe
    @FriedmanVibe Před rokem +5

    Lovely piece, beautiful playing!

  • @michaelhayes690
    @michaelhayes690 Před rokem

    Nice. Beautiful touch. I like that your work is very concise. Thanks.

  • @tonyswrldxoxo
    @tonyswrldxoxo Před 5 lety +3

    Its just amazing

  • @Jane-vy6mf
    @Jane-vy6mf Před 6 lety +3

    I love this so much!!!

  • @Leokipo
    @Leokipo Před 2 lety +1

    This is such a charming composition :)

  • @tulleyj3
    @tulleyj3 Před 6 lety +2

    Lovely!!!

  • @amauriangel
    @amauriangel Před rokem

    What a nice solo. Beautiful!

  • @austinblifting
    @austinblifting Před 4 lety +4

    2:02 favorite solo

  • @connersigrist
    @connersigrist Před 2 lety +4

    Currently trying to learn this for my junior year in high school solo and ensemble. It is kicking my butt but I am getting some really good progress on it. I have 2 weeks to play it cleanly. I have learned it all but I just need reps on it.

    • @coolguycorbproductions
      @coolguycorbproductions Před 2 lety +2

      Best of luck dude. Just played this at regional and got a 1. It's a weird peice but a solid one to learn 👍

    • @ItzRogue
      @ItzRogue Před 2 lety

      How did it go?

    • @connersigrist
      @connersigrist Před 2 lety +1

      @@ItzRogue I did 3 solos and an ensemble and they all got ones. I had a really good run on this piece.

    • @acoasting8200
      @acoasting8200 Před rokem

      @@connersigrist solid, good to hear

  • @arnoldrivera7183
    @arnoldrivera7183 Před 6 lety +7

    Please do more of your TWO book! Maybe walking on the white? Or running with scissors!? Prelude Nuevo?! Homage??!!

    • @genekoshinskimusic
      @genekoshinskimusic  Před 6 lety +5

      Thanks Arnold - I am doing exactly that! This is the first one done and I have a few more recorded already. I just need to find the time to edit those and record more. Little by little...

  • @EthanStricklandPerc
    @EthanStricklandPerc Před 6 lety +2

    LOVE THIS

  • @ginomarzocchi8144
    @ginomarzocchi8144 Před rokem

    Bello e bravo!!!

  • @GraysonPeterman
    @GraysonPeterman Před 3 lety +1

    I wish they had this for UIL marimba solos

  • @leonieclapham5141
    @leonieclapham5141 Před rokem

    Very beautiful

  • @Jacob24668
    @Jacob24668 Před 7 měsíci

    0:50 is so happy and stuff idk this piece is really good

  • @crabb5413
    @crabb5413 Před 4 lety +12

    Is there any way I could buy this piece on its own? I would love to play this but don’t have the money to buy the whole book

    • @eugenekoshinski6131
      @eugenekoshinski6131 Před 4 lety +3

      Banana Watermelon Fish yes, it’s available at Bachovich Music and distributed at other places like Steve Weiss Music.

  • @ZickyNee
    @ZickyNee Před rokem

    amazing

  • @henryhorne6114
    @henryhorne6114 Před 6 lety +1

    BRUH! That’s dope!

  • @memassironi
    @memassironi Před 4 lety +2

    te amo Gene

  • @musicaldye
    @musicaldye Před 3 lety +3

    Quick Question: Measure 29 & 37 sounds like you play G-Bb-C for the first three notes instead of the printed G-Ab-C. Is there an errata I'm missing, or was this a version edit? Just curious what the 'official' verdict is (and I personally like the jazziness of the Ab).

    • @genekoshinskimusic
      @genekoshinskimusic  Před 3 lety +7

      Could just be a wrong note, these are live takes and not edited. The score is right.

  • @bjmichaud14
    @bjmichaud14 Před 3 lety +2

    This sounds really peaceful at 0.75x speed

  • @JGpercussion
    @JGpercussion Před 11 měsíci

    GENE

  • @ChristopherSchiffermiller

    Awesome island sound. Question, never heard of a marimba, I called them xylophone since I was a kid, whats the difference? Thank you for your videos, great stuff. Love, peace and harmony to everyone, love Chris

    • @kellybrewster3782
      @kellybrewster3782 Před 2 lety +4

      there’s different types of mallet instruments based on look and sound! they’re all played with different kind of mallets as well! there’s marimba, which you see in this video. xylophone, which looks like a smaller marimba but is louder and played with harder mallets. vibraphone, which has a pedal like a piano so it can ring while you play (used a lot during jazz band). and glockenspiel, which are small and made of metal so they’re loud and have a good ring. there’s also different kinds of these instruments too, like bass marimba, etc. hope this helped!!

    • @ChristopherSchiffermiller
      @ChristopherSchiffermiller Před 2 lety +1

      @@kellybrewster3782 Thank you Kelly for the info and details. Greatly appreciated.

    • @grovetender4713
      @grovetender4713 Před rokem +2

      On the sound
      Xylophones are sharp and stacatto
      Glockenspiels are resounding and can be piercing or elegant depending on dynamic and mallet
      Vibraphones have a moderate to hard sound depending on mallet and are faintly metallic - in a jazz band you’re more likely to hear hard mallets as opposed to soft
      Marimbas are quite a soft sound (in texture not volume), more organic or natural sounding, and very expressive - this is what makes them such common instruments for solos

  • @geonhuisblairsfun3339
    @geonhuisblairsfun3339 Před 5 měsíci

    This solo reminds me of african music

  • @xanderrouk6895
    @xanderrouk6895 Před 4 lety +9

    thank you for making such a quality piece of music.
    Edit: I'd really absolutely love to buy the book and learn this piece, but my school does not have a 5 octave, do you have any tips that will allow me to play this, but not remove any of its quality?

    • @genekoshinskimusic
      @genekoshinskimusic  Před 4 lety +6

      sorry Xander, they all really require a 5 octave. There is a lot of other great repertoire out there as well. Thanks again for your comments!

  • @DeeboComing
    @DeeboComing Před 3 lety +5

    This may sound crazy, but once I learned the 4 mallet technique, I never once considered going back to play 2 mallet solo repertoire and now I feel like I missed out on some good music. 🤦🏾‍♂️🤦🏾‍♂️🤦🏾‍♂️

  • @DrivenZacy
    @DrivenZacy Před rokem

    0:48 is the best and hardest part of the song

  • @deadbydebt6859
    @deadbydebt6859 Před 25 dny

    makes me wish i had a five octave

  • @socrates6923
    @socrates6923 Před 5 lety +1

    Slick

  • @coolguycorbproductions

    I'm gonna take a chance and learn this bruh

  • @ninadkamath1760
    @ninadkamath1760 Před 5 lety +2

    My marimba does not have the lowest d flat, what should I replace it with

  • @JustBecauseStudiosMusic

    I love this solo, but only have access to a 4.3 octave marimba, does anyone have any other songs that are similar

  • @FollowJesus777-KING
    @FollowJesus777-KING Před 5 lety +1

  • @omarsandoval6616
    @omarsandoval6616 Před rokem

    great piece may I ask what mallets you are using.

  • @leilam8193
    @leilam8193 Před 4 lety +2

    Is there a way for me to buy this solo alone instead of the whole book?

  • @M333_Uhhhhh22
    @M333_Uhhhhh22 Před 4 lety +1

    I have tears! 😭😭 so beautiful 💜 played this for my senior HS solo. Buuuuut you kept it the same tempo at the 2/4 (@52 sec). Was that a personal choice or did you intend for it to be played that way/write it that way? (Maybe I misread it lol)

  • @owenchristiansen4461
    @owenchristiansen4461 Před rokem

    If you don't mind me asking, but I'd love to know which mallets you are using. I'd LOVE to get some of my own!
    Thank you!

  • @atlassolid5946
    @atlassolid5946 Před rokem

    hey, so in my hubris, i chose this for my junior recital, and. i might die.

  • @dameez6599
    @dameez6599 Před 6 měsíci

    Does anyone know if any of the pieces in this book are playable on a 4.3?

    • @Oscar.DeMille
      @Oscar.DeMille Před 5 měsíci

      Not well but you can play it an octave up and it still works.

  • @Anthonydmusic.21
    @Anthonydmusic.21 Před 4 lety +1

    Has anybody had any success playing this on a 4.3?

  • @ems7623
    @ems7623 Před 2 lety +1

    A nice little study. Complicated rhythms. I'm never quite sure how mallet instruments sound as solo instruments. To my ear, they are always crying out for an ensemble.

  • @retro_tcb
    @retro_tcb Před 4 lety +1

    I’m a freshman in highschool who isn’t great on marimba and needs a solo how hard is this to learn?

    • @genekoshinskimusic
      @genekoshinskimusic  Před 4 lety +2

      Yeah, you might want to start with something else, but come back to this after a few other solos under your belt.

    • @mellowtron214
      @mellowtron214 Před 4 lety +1

      I don’t play marimba, but I drum, and this seems pretty high level to me. The poly rhythms, odd meters, and then the part where he is cycling through putting emphasis on different individual strokes in the melody, alternating between hands and again all within the poly rhythm.
      Pretty wild to me.

  • @sarabarros8643
    @sarabarros8643 Před rokem

    Awesome man! Can you share the music sheet?

  • @mariag9811
    @mariag9811 Před 3 lety +1

    Can it be played on a 4.3 octave??

  • @tannerprewitt4489
    @tannerprewitt4489 Před 5 lety +2

    What are those mallets?😍

    • @genekoshinskimusic
      @genekoshinskimusic  Před 5 lety +4

      These are the Innovative Percussion NJZ mallets. They are discontinued, but there is a new version (the same materials and makeup) called the Artisan line. They are great!

  • @peterlyday8845
    @peterlyday8845 Před 4 lety +3

    What mallets are you using? They sound great! They are shorter than most that I have seen, could someone help me out?

    • @gavinkitchen581
      @gavinkitchen581 Před 4 lety +1

      Peter Lyday they seem to be Innovative Percussion’s NJZ 4

  • @drummer0541
    @drummer0541 Před rokem

    When the homies say "percusion is easy"🗿

  • @josephko2142
    @josephko2142 Před 5 lety

    Does this solo work on 4.5? Or can i only play on the marimba one 😓

    • @genekoshinskimusic
      @genekoshinskimusic  Před 5 lety

      Sorry it's a 5.0 octave piece.... :(

    • @josephko2142
      @josephko2142 Před 5 lety

      @@genekoshinskimusic ouch well at least i got a 5.0 at school so ill keep practicing

    • @liammcelroy2265
      @liammcelroy2265 Před 4 lety

      Just use my secret tecnique and move everything up an octave

  • @mflance7197
    @mflance7197 Před 3 lety

    This would be even better with a drummer playing the same thing just on share , hi hat and bass drum .

  • @Sebas_percussion
    @Sebas_percussion Před 5 lety +2

    I need this work in my music stand, give me the parties for free? Please

  • @BboyS25
    @BboyS25 Před 3 lety

    1:59

  • @cg7240
    @cg7240 Před rokem +2

    I am almost completely clean with this whole solo, the only part that's kicking my butt still is 0:49

  • @nikadorii_percussion
    @nikadorii_percussion Před 5 lety +2

    4.3???

  • @maleevongxiong4080
    @maleevongxiong4080 Před rokem

    Sounds like music I'd hear in minecraft

  • @epictubs8908
    @epictubs8908 Před rokem

    0:11

  • @BenjaminKohleffel
    @BenjaminKohleffel Před 6 měsíci +1

    It’s okay I guess

  • @RuEvEloll
    @RuEvEloll Před rokem

    fresh meat