"American Craig Ramsell reportedly came up for the idea for his
boomwhackers in 1994 while at home recovering from radiation therapy.
While cutting cardboard tubes into shorter lengths for recycling he
happened to notice the different pitches resulting from the different
lengths and decided to investigate their creative potential. He
experimented with various plastics before settling on plastic mailing
tubes.
Boomwhackers produce musical tones when struck together, on the floor,
or against nearly any surface. They can also be grouped together and
struck with mallets in different configurations, in specialized holders
(homemade or available from the manufacturer), similar to a
horizontally-aligned xylophone. When one end of a Boomwhackers tube is covered with what the manufacturer calls an Octavator Cap, the pitch it produces is lowered by an octave.
Boomwhackers are most commonly used in elementary music classrooms as an
inexpensive alternative or supplement to traditional pitched
instruments such as xylophones and metallophones. Boomwhackers are often used by performance artists and other musical
performance groups to add an element of spectacle. They can also be used
by people with intellectual and developmental impairment to develop
sensorimotor skills, social skills, and creativity."
With 50,000,000 views this mightn’t count as “TYWK” for your readers, and it isn’t precisely the same product, instead a DIY version based on the same principle, but I found it entertaining
Sweet! :)
ReplyDeleteWith 50,000,000 views this mightn’t count as “TYWK” for your readers, and it isn’t precisely the same product, instead a DIY version based on the same principle, but I found it entertaining
ReplyDeletehttp://youtube.com/watch?v=-0gED3rn2Tc