Flexatone
The flexatone or fleximetal is a modern percussion instrument consisting of a small flexible metal sheet suspended in a wire frame ending in a handle. Used in classic cartoons for its glissando effect, its sound is comparable to the musical saw.
History, construction and technique
An invention for a flexatone occurs in the British Patent Records of 1922 and 1923. In 1924 the 'Flex-a-tone' was patented in the USA by the Playatone Company of New York. "An instrument called the 'Flex-a-tone' was patented in the U.S.A. in 1924 by the Playertone Company of New York. It was introduced as a new instrument, making 'jazz jazzier' and announced as combining the tone effect of musical saw, orchestra bells, and song whistle." "Small sheet of spring steel in a frame with wooden strikers mounted on either side. The player shakes the beater while bending the steel in order to change the pitch."The instrument was first used in 1920s jazz bands as an effect but is now mainly and rarely used in orchestral music.
Wooden knobs mounted on strips of spring steel lie on each side of the metal sheet. The player holds the flexatone in one hand with the palm around the wire frame and the thumb on the free end of the spring steel. The player then shakes the instrument with a trembling movement which causes the beaters to strike the sides of the metal sheet. While shaking the handle, the musician makes a high- or low-pitched sound depending on the curve given to the blade by the pressure from his or her thumb: "As the thumb depresses the vibrating metal sheet, the relative pitch of the instrument ascends; as the thumb pressure is released, the relative pitch of the instrument descends." A vibrato is thus produced. While the instrument has a very limited dynamic range, volume can be controlled by how vigorously or delicately the player shakes the Flexatone.
"Vibes generally make a perfectly acceptable alternative, especially when the music is somewhat indeterminate anyway."
An alternate technique involves removing the two wooden knobs and their mounting springs, and then using a small metal rod held in the free hand striking the strip of spring steel. The pitch is altered in the same manner as the previous technique. "This method give the player greater control of the sound of the flexatone as it eliminates the need to shake the instrument." This method of playing results in a different, more constrained sound. The flexatone may also be bowed along its edge with an orchestral string instrument bow.
The flexatone is notated using tremolo lines to indicate shaking the instrument and lines to indicate the desired direction of the glissando or a wavy line to indicate alternating thumb pressure. If using the instrument with the balls removed, indicate strikes with single notes followed by arrows indicating the direction of the glissando. It is recommended that pitch designation should only be approximate, as, "specific pitches are difficult but possible; glissandi without specific pitch are easily executed."
Double meaning of the term "Flexatone"
In contemporary music of the 20th century between around 1920 and 1970 the term "Flexatone" has been used on one hand for the instrument flexatone, on the other hand for the musical saw. Composers who used it for the musical saw were: Arthur Honegger, Ernst Krenek, Dmitri Shostakovich, Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District, and film music for The New Babylon ), Aram Khachaturian, and Hans Werner Henze.Uses
The flexatone is sometimes heard in funk music, and occasionally in pop music for special effect. It is occasionally used in the soundtracks of films or cartoons to represent "ghosts" or other paranormal phenomena.The instrument is not often used in classical music, but it appears in the work of Arnold Schoenberg, Hans Werner Henze, Sofia Gubaidulina, György Ligeti and others. Schoenberg employed it, "unrealistically...accurate bursts of widely spaced sounds being hardly obtainable with such abruptness," in his Variations for Orchestra Op.31 and his unfinished opera Moses und Aron. The cellist in Sofia Gubaidulina's The Canticle of the Sun plays a bowed flexatone before the final section. Alfred Schnittke used it in his Faust Cantata, in the Tuba Mirum movement of his Requiem, in his Viola Concerto, and in his score for the ballet Peer Gynt, the flexatone represents the sound of the moaning wind. György Ligeti used it in many of his works, such as his 1988 concerto for piano second movement and his opera Le Grand Macabre. Peter Maxwell Davies uses it in the third movement of his Symphony No. 1, as well as three of them at the climax of his opera The Lighthouse. Vivian Fine owned a flexatone, and used flexatone music in compositions such as The Race of Life. Some other classical pieces featuring the flexatone include:
- Aram Khachaturian - Piano Concerto in the second movement, a rarely performed piece.
- Luciano Berio - Recital and Voci
- Christophe Bertrand - Mana
- John Corigliano - Symphony No. 1
- George Crumb - Songs, Drones, and Refrains of Death and Star-Child
- Michael Daugherty - Metropolis Symphony for Orchestra, mov. IV: "Oh, Lois!"
- Jacob Druckman - Aureole for orchestra
- Brian Ferneyhough - Plötzlichkeit, for orchestra
- Vivian Fine - Meeting for Equal Rights 1866, Ma's in Orbit
- Lukas Foss - Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird
- Sofia Gubaidulina - And: The Feast is in Full Progress, Jetzt immer Schnee, Figures of Time
- Stephen Hartke - Meanwhile - Incidental Music to Imaginary Puppet Plays, mov. VI: "Celebrations"
- Hans Werner Henze - Violin Concerto no. 2, Tristan, and Venus und Adonis
- Steven Mackey - Eating Greens and It Is Time
- Benedict Mason - Lighthouses of England and Wales and Double Concerto
- Peter Maxwell Davies - Caroline Mathilde: Suites from Act I & II, J. 297-8 ; Cross Lane Fair, J. 332 ; Stone Litany, Runes from a House of the Dead, J. 168 ; Symphony No. 5, J. 331 ; and Time and the Raven
- Per Nørgård - Symphony No. 4
- Nigel Osborne - The Electrification of the Soviet Union
- Krzysztof Penderecki - De Natura Sonoris No. 1
- Einojuhani Rautavaara - Piano Concerto no. 2
- Robert Xavier Rodríguez - The Dot and the Line: A Romance in Lower Mathematics
- Alfred Schnittke - Concerto No. 1 for Cello and Orchestra, Cello Concerto No. 2, Life with an Idiot
- Arnold Schoenberg - Variations for Orchestra, op. 31 ; Von heute auf morgen, and Kol Nidre, Op. 39
- Vladislav Shoot - Ex Animo
- Dmitri Shostakovich - The New Babylon, The Bedbug, and The Golden Age
- Erwin Schulhoff - Symphony No. 1
- Edgard Varèse - Nocturnal
- Judith Weir - The Consolations of Scholarship
- Malcolm Williamson - The Display, ballet
Recordings
- John Barry's "Wednesday's Child" instrumental version.
- Jimi Hendrix used a flexatone on "1983... "
- Rahsaan Roland Kirk - The Inflated Tear
- Appears in a lot of Funkadelic's recordings, beginning with "Back in Our Minds" from the album Maggot Brain, and like a lead eventual effect on the 1978 hit "One Nation Under a Groove".
- The flexatone is used almost as a lead instrument in "Sing Swan Song" on the album Ege Bamyasi by the band Can.
- The instrument is also prominent in the intro to "Faith Healer" by Sensational Alex Harvey Band.
- Percussionist Dom Um Romão plays the Flexatone frequently on Weather Report's Weather Report, Sweetnighter, Mysterious Traveller, and Tale Spinnin'.
- It makes an appearance on the Magma album Ẁurdah Ïtah .
- Ronnie Laws' funk/jazz hit "Always There".
- There's a flexatone in the intro of Stylus's version of "Summer Breeze"
- A flexatone is used on album Jaco Pastorius on the track "Opus Pocus".
- Lonnie Liston Smith's "Get Down Everybody "
- Rick Wakeman uses it on his album Criminal Record.
- A flexatone can be heard on a number of tracks on the London Calling album by The Clash, most noticeably on the track "Jimmy Jazz".
- It is featured in Rick James' "Super Freak".
- Its infrequent appearances, countering an insistent, funky bassline, form most of the hook in One Way's "Cutie Pie".
- "Weird Al" Yankovic used the flexatone during his performance of "Another One Rides the Bus" live on The Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder.
- "The Simpsons Theme" by Danny Elfman.
- DJ Quik uses the flexatone in many of his songs, such as "Pitch in on a Party" and Tony! Toni! Toné!'s "Let's Get Down".
- A flexatone is featured on Dr. Dre's "Been There, Done That".
- Flexatone heard throughout Ozomatli's early release "Cut Chemist Suite" from self-titled album
- Scaramanga Six - Cursed
- "Meu CEP é o Seu", Entidade Urbana, by Fernanda Abreu
- Michael Hunter - " Theme Song"
- The Phantom Band - "Throwing Bones"
- The BP Renegades Steel Orchestra uses it during a quiet passage in their rendition of the calypso "Sound of the Ghost", A Panorama Saga II.
- Joker - "Digidesign"
Samples