Building and Playing a Marching Machine
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Building A Marching Machine
Getting Started:
There is no standard size for a Marching Machine so the
size of yours can be adjusted to your individual needs. A reasonable size
frame is10 inches by 14 inches and can easily be handled by any age player.
The frame can be made from inexpensive 1x2 stock lumber or any reasonably
wood stock close in size. All of the materials can be found in any hardware
store at inexpensive prices, and many may have these items laying around
the garage or basement.
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Photos courtesy of Leroy Osmon |
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| Materials Needed: |
(This builds a 10 by 14 inch Marching Machine) |
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48 inch long pieces of 1x2 stock lumber (cut to the
following lengths) |
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2 - 10 inch long pieces of 1x2 stock lumber |
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2 - 14 inch long pieces of 1x2 stock lumber |
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8 (or more) wood screws or nails to secure frame |
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Wood glue (if desired) |
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12 feet (Approximately) of heavy string or twine |
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6 foot dowel rod, 1.5 inches in diameter (cut into 20,
approximately 3 inch pegs) |
| Tools Needed: |
Saw (to cut 1x2 lumber and dowel rod) |
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Screwdriver (or hammer) |
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Drill |
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Assembling the Marching
Machine:
- From the 48 inch long 1x2, cut two boards approximately 10 inches
long and two boards approximately 14 inches long.
- Attach the boards together in a rectangle with at least two wood screws
(or nails) per joint, and/or wood glue.
- Drill holes evenly spaced in all four boards with five holes in the
14 inch lengths and four holes in the 10 inch lengths (this is to thread
string through). Make sure that the drill bit is large enough for the
string or twine to fit through.
- Cut wooden dowel rod into 20 pieces approximately 3 inches long. Do
not worry about making them exactly the same because you will want these
“pegs” to hit the surface at different times to create the
desired marching sound. (If you are creating a larger marching machine,
you will want more pegs. They need to be evenly spaced within the frame
(example, 4 rows by 5 rows, or 5 rows by 6 rows, etc., depending upon
the size of your frame).
- Drill holes in the pegs so they can be threaded from both directions.
The holes can cross each other or they can be slightly separated. Again,
if the pegs are slightly uneven, it produces a more pronounced marching
effect.
- After the frame and pegs have all been drilled, simply start to thread
the string from one end of the frame, through the appropriate number
of pegs and out the opposite end of the frame (example, if you have
5 pegs per row, thread the string through those 5 pegs only, then come
back through the opposite end of the frame; continue until all rows
are threaded). NOTE: you may instead thread one row
at a time and tie it off; however, one continuous string provides a
more desirable combination of flexibility and tension.
- After you have threaded from end to end, thread the pegs from side
to side. Be sure to pull the string tight so that the pegs are suspended.
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Playing the Marching
Machine
When playing the Marching Machine, you should experiment with the various
ways it can be allowed to “hit” the surface. A rocking or
swaying motion produces the best marching sound. It is best to use the
Marching Machine on a wood surface (wooden stage floor, wooden table,
a piece of solid wood (like plywood) placed over an open container (such
as a metal trash can).
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Photos courtesy of Leroy Osmon |
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Who Composes for the Marching
Machine?
Various composers have written for the Marching Machine. There are advanced
works by composers Morton
Gould and Fisher
Tull, as well as works for young bands by Leroy
Osmon. |
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