If there was any song in the world that I wanted to see played on that, it was dire dire docks. I have an emotional attachment to it for many reasons and it's by far the song I've practiced the most. It actually brought me to tears when you started playing it. So yeah, thank you. I needed that today.
@@silverelk It's also called "Water" (what it's called on the official soundtrack released in Japan) since it also plays on a couple levels before Dire Dire Docks.
I clicked on what I thought was a Kalimba playing tutorial but quickly became fascinated watching the construction process. You have some serious woodworking skills!
The music sounds so familiar in a "I've heard music like it but I have no idea where it's from" but all that I could think of is how it sounds like it'd be great Mario music. Further comments confirmed that it actually is Mario music. Wow
Yes, I wondered why YT recommended this. Because I watch the matchbox car makeovers? And - I never heard of Dire Dire Docks, is it a song? I haven't made it through the vid yet. Is it like Duck Duck Go?
Man I'm really impressed ! It's normally very hard to give a good rhythm to a video, especially when you don't talk, but this one is very dynamic ! I didn't get bored any second ! Great job !
Wow, fantastic cinematography, your use of camera angles and lighting should be a lesson to all You Tubers, and your craftsmanship is great to watch. The instruments that you create are beautiful in looks and sound. Loved the playing, especially the duet; nicely done.
SanAndFe agreed re camera work and digital storytelling. I liked the occasional sound effects too. Great projects, both instrument build & documentation!
Can't believe it only took you 20 minutes to make?! But seriously, absolutely amazing craftsmanship! Especially to get everything in tune... Hats off to you, Sir :)
Absolutely beautiful instrument. Also what an amazing display of craftsmanship. You can tell how careful but deliberate he is while building. From the larger pieces to the most intricate and delicate ones, there's always patience of diligence. It's also sounds really good. I particularly love the beefy sound and resonance of the bass notes.
After watching the video advert i was still skeptical. But when i finally downloaded the plans ruclips.net/user/postUgkxZF0EMnrujZvqHhGkxiz559uIABJWR9TG i was very impressed. The whole plan was just as you said in the video. Thank you very much. I now have a large and valuable collection for my woodworks. This is great!
Completely brilliant! Love how the wire can be tuned to a specific pitch, especially being that thick. I have studied music for over twenty years and still always impressed by people who bring these instruments, that may seem other worldly to some, into the limelight show casing their unique flare to the music scene. If some of us took the time to broaden our horizons and open our minds a bit, they will find amazing music in other things. Not limiting themselves to just the piano, drums or guitar. Imagine what we could do with a combination of pitch sounds then. What kind of music would we be listening to? Love all the hard work that went into making this instrument. Absolutely beautiful.
this is definitely one of the coolest videos i've ever seen, i think videos like these should be more popular. it shows some serious talent. also, i never realized how relaxing this was to watch ya build something from scratch like that. hmm. for some reason i really wanna play mario 64 right now...
Great attention to detail all around. Recording, editing, and building. You captured the process in an artistic way that made your video very pleasant. I’m thankful to have found your channel.
I don't know why but the creation process was extremely pleasing to watch, it was enjoyable, somehow not boring and I watched every second of the video without skipping or thinking about it. Good job!
It has a very African sounding tone to my ears. When I lived in South Africa, I bought a large gourd that had been hollowed out and had keys/prongs just like this and sounded very similar.
J'ai adoré le précision des gestes, mais aussi, le son des différentes essence de bois. Les petites démo pour finir était extra. Merci! I loved the precision of the gestures, but also the sound of different woods. The little demos to finish was great. Thank you!
Such a perfect video!! Amazing build and a beautiful video documenting the process. Thanks a bunch for sharing and congratulations on your superb skills as a builder and film-maker!
The design, the details and woodworking skills to create beauty to eye and ear are impressive. Can no imagine the hours of patience and attention involved. Impressive! Well done. Great camera work and tight, well edited story.
Gorgeous! Absolutely gorgeous. I'm a little late to see this, but I'm glad I have! Not only does it sound so unique but it looks very nice. Grew up playing and practicing chromatic instruments, and this just brings such warmth to my heart, eyes and ears. Thank you for the video!
In 1970, John Ike Walton of the 13th Floor Elevators and I put together a very large chromatic thumb piano made from the body of a severely damaged guitar and the tongues from about 4 dozen accordion reeds. We called it "The Umgawa." A few decades later, I was performing at an outdoor theatre in Hunt, Texas and saw a modified version of it backstage. John Ike lived in Hunt or at least fairly close to there. So I said "Wow! An Umgawa! I haven't seen one of those in years. They told me the inventor was going to be there later. I informed them that I was one of the inventors of it, and John Ike was the other. This fellow who called himself "Johnny Umgawa" showed up later and started telling about how he invented it. When I called his hand on it, he admitted that he never thought he would actually meet the fellow who was responsible for figuring out how to do it and supplying the accordion reeds.
I’m curious about what sort of tuning app you use. It would be really useful for tuning harmonics with. Also for the sound board, theres a few approaches. In many other tine instuments they’ll use a solid block of brass as a “tone block” to increase sustain. A solid mass will keep vibration in the tine, and works best for instruments amplified electronically. The other side, is using very thin tone wood that vibrates with the bridge readily, pushing against air and amplifying acoustically. I always thought cigar boxes made for nice instruments, since the wood is often spanish cedar, which makes for a warm sound. Its used on some classical guitars. Soft woods usually work best if you look into soundboard tone woods. Bodies and bracing tend to be hard woods. Dimensions might play a part also, you could get unwanted resonance or standing waves in box shapes, so looking into the design of speaker enclosures is helpful. Anways this is great, I really enjoyed watching and it sounds lovely.
I looked in the comments specifically to try and figure out why the instrument doesn't sound very good, thanks for this answer! Not to knock his build, it's beautiful and took great skill, it just doesn't sound great for a kalimba.
Sounds like there's a luthier, or some such, in the house. Or maybe an engineer, craftsman with interest, or "just" an aficionado. ;-) I've also seen that thickness shaping, in the case of box instruments, violins and such, is often done, sometimes using some vibrational amplitude indicators on the "activated" instrument. I don't know if any of that is applicable here, and I am "just" a guy with interest in musical instruments, but just a thought.
@@Svetty00 Interesting points and observations. Building many instruments they STRIVE for harmonics, LOTS of them (why they rib the sound boards on guitars, etc., and use 'dancing' particle indicators to 'work them up' sometimes), but I certainly agree there are 'good ones' and 'bad ones'. I know with design of amps/speakers/etc. even harmonics are MUCH less harmful than odd harmonics (I don't remember my infinite series addition stuff too well from college, but I think they add to a sign to create a square wave, and when that upper frequency, high bandwidth stuff starts becoming audible, it is HORRENDOUS. You can also damage tweeters easily with that sometimes inaudible energy, even if the amp is underrated for the driver, power wise. Different thing, I realize, THD, but just an aside, speaking to good and bad harmonics, in another realm. I'll have to listen to this vid again to see what you are saying about the harmonics maintaining pitch with pitch change on the tines...agreed...that would be BAD. In this kind of instrument, like any other actually, you get induced vibrations in (usually) higher pitches, that may be what you are hearing. If you damp the strings just above and for a ways up the piano, then strike a note hard, then do the same thing with that damper removed, you will hear a very different sound. If you are still hearing those bad harmonics when the sound board is removed, I think that might mean that might be the even MORE likely mode of inducement, as decreased mass and stiffness of the removed mount will cause that phenomena to occur to a greater extent. Again, I haven't built any instruments, so I'm guessing here. As for round vs. flat, or hollow vs. solid, I have no idea how those would change harmonics, though I have no doubt it could, probably even would, but how is beyond me, without thinking about it (probably even then, any more, the old brain's not what it used to be, stuff that used to come RELATIVELY easy, doesn't anymore). Sorry for the tome. Cheers.
You made like a beautiful master grand kalimba...hard work paid off...a job well done...Nice playing and.sound tone.God bless you for sharing your video and creative vision
I didn’t think I’d like ASMR, but this is the closest thing to that and I love it. Satisfying to see the work put into these, and the sounds accompanied with making it; feels as though I’m there watching this being made.
Beautiful! No skills or tools to make one, no money to afford one, but glad I at least got to see one and hear it being played. Thank you so kindly! I hope you enjoy it for many years to come. Blessings to you, thanks again for sharing it.
A long-time Keyboard Player, I was not aware of the existence of the Chromatic Kalimba until this excellent video. Your craftsmanship, perseverance and patience has left me feeling inadequate! Congratulations and Thank You. (also, am envious of your workshop...)
Awesome build and excellent playing! I have been working on building tongue drums (similar but the wood acts as the tine) and would love to see your take on making one of those! I will be watching for it.
Dude. You got a like and subscription from me for that last song. My absolute favorite game song from my childhood, and it sounds especially excellent on a Kalimba. Thank you for making this a reality.
This is so beautiful, I'm just absolutely speechless! Your work is amazing in every way and watching it was so relaxing to me, I love it so much, oh my gosh! Keep up the amazing work, that instrument is amazing, I'm a musician and I wish I could get my hands on one of those so bad, they look so nice!
Beautiful!! I actually designed a chromatic kalimba a few years ago, a bit simpler than yours, but the same general principle. Nice to see how yours came together 😀
That was absolutely beautiful!!! I'm going to have to crib a few of your techniques there, those tiny bridges looked awesome! I'm disappointed those supports aren't visible though, that grain was beautiful!!!
Okay, that was a thing of beauty! I guess more experienced woodworkers than myself have seen it all before, but for me that was a masterclass in clever construction. No "measure twice, cut once" here, this was "measure once, then keep on cutting, dude, 'cause you've already measured it". Everything was just... so... smart!
Absolutely incredible. What a beautiful instrument! It was inspiring to watch you build it and play it as well. Was that the water stage from Mario 64 at the end? So tasteful!
I am so pleased for you both, at long last you are HOME, late but still a wonderful Christmas present. We wish you all the best & happiness in your new home.
BRAVO, excellent, tremendous. I could watch your first class edited video all night, about a skill filled labour of love. No short cuts, top notch materials. Well done, thank you.
First, this is wonderful! What a beautiful piece! Second, I have a couple of questions as an interested fellow builder: On the tines, would the resonance change, or even improve, if they were flattened rather than left cylindrical? Also, I love the use of the katalox (pretty sure it was katalox) for the mounting blocks. Is there a particular reason you made them so thick? (Please know that this is not a criticism at all!) Would the overall instrument benefit from having the tines closer to the resonator box? Katalox is extremely strong and rigid, so I'm sure it communicates the vibrations effectively, but intuitively, it seems to me that thinner might be better??? Again, this is spectacular. Thank you for sharing it! (And for putting up with a whole bunch of probably annoying questions.) Cheers!
Thank you so much for reaching out! I’m always interested in seeing what more capable hands can do with things I manage to bumble through! As far as the tines, the idea was to use the cylindrical steel to give some more heft & weight to those bass tines so they would be bassier. Definitely worked, but using wider steel would have also achieved the same result. I’d definitely say to flatten out the steel tines like you suggest if you make this. For playability alone, having really narrow targets to pluck takes some real getting used to, a wider tine tip would make playing it easier. Do some experimenting with the overtones AFTER you flatten it out though, I’m sure altering the shape of the tine will mess with the natural overtones of the raw steel. As far as the katalox bridge, YES! Make them thinner! I really don’t know what I was thinking making them THAT thick. It was too late by the time I shaped them to really shave off any additional thickness so I just had to live with it. Being katalox, it’s pretty hard so it doesn’t matter much in this case, but I’d do it thinner if I was making this again. They need to be thick enough so that the bottom of the eyebolts & nuts are off the sound board but other than that, they shouldn’t have to be very thick at all. Exactly right saying the thinner the better, it would absorb less of the vibration energy if it were thinner. Excellent questions and if I can help in any way when you attempt this, email me and I’ll be glad to help!
Man, you're awesome! Thanks for getting back to me. I made a small kalimba about a year ago for my daughter (and for me to try out making one), and it worked out okay, but you're construction ideas here are really great. Particularly, I like the eye-bolt tensioning for the tines. Thanks again for the response, and I look forward to seeing more on your channel! :)
Joseph Center -I enjoyed reading your comment, and the builder's reply. This comment thread should be pinned at the top by the channel owner, it is a must read.
Great idea to arrange like that with black keys hovering. A tiny idea would be a screw on each peg for fine tuning, but of course that would be exponentially more effort for very little benefit. Excellent build. Congrats and thanks for posting.
I am always amazed at what I can find by surfing RUclips. I watched the Ragtime Piano Pedal Mod. I never cease to be amazed at the technical and artistic abilities found. Here is a site that combines both artistry and technicallity. Thank you so much for sharing your gifts and abilities with us.
Really cool, i love it! I have 1 thing to ask though: Wouldn't it be "smarter" to *not* make a resonating Chamber? What if instead make some holes into the lid and put it underneath the kalimba when playing? Like so it can work either as a lid when not used, or as a resonating Chamber if the kalimba is played... you'd also save some wood with that, right?
Absolutely! That was actually my intention right off the bat. But making the resonating soundboard so thin, it made it impractical to flip that open or closed. I also ran out of time so just did the brute force method. But you are absolutely right! There is definitely some way to turn the lid into the resonating chamber, it just needs to thought put into it! I say do it, make a third version!
I've considered it! Looking into what kind of piezo pickups I'd need to get good bass frequency response as well as the high end frequencies. There's definitely room to add the pickups in there pretty easily without having to disassemble the instrument.
A PZM mic would mount inside it and give an excellent response :) Or rig up a Panasonic WM-61A condenser raised off but facing the soundboard in a similar way to a PZM and use a Linkwitz mic pre-amp in the box. I've made many like that in the past and they sound fantastic :) ॐ
That is a nice bit of work mate, you did an outstanding job. I made a couple of kalimbas myself and I added a couple of small holes on the sides which gave you kind of a tremolo effect if you covered and uncovered them with your index fingers. I also added an internal pizeo electric pick up which I output to an old Behringer effects unit for a bit of chorus and reverb. Check out earth, wind and fires "The Kalimbas Song" Dig it.
awesome touch with the black and white keys positioned like that
Wow! small world, I wasn't expecting to see you here.
@@ciandally4558 Yeah, same! The MMX video this week was awesome!
Pleasantly surprised to see you here haha
let's be real: of course Martin's gonna be watching videos of well-constructed homemade instruments
well, this explains why this video is in my recommendation :)
If there was any song in the world that I wanted to see played on that, it was dire dire docks. I have an emotional attachment to it for many reasons and it's by far the song I've practiced the most. It actually brought me to tears when you started playing it.
So yeah, thank you. I needed that today.
OMG thank you for naming the song. It was killing me. So much nostalgia so quickly.
@@silverelk
It's also called "Water" (what it's called on the official soundtrack released in Japan) since it also plays on a couple levels before Dire Dire Docks.
Даййре дайре докс
Dudeee me too it gave me my 7 year old memories i got so sad when i lost the game and dire dire docks bgm was my favorite one
I heard the first 8 notes and was like "is that ?..."
For just passing on the knowledge of the template for those corner joints you deserve a medal! Beautiful work!
-builds sophisticated instrument
-plays seven nation army
I thought that was pretty funny. I was expecting some Bach.
I knowww
That song is so overused
= dislike
20:08
He was playing Super Mario 64 - Dire, Dire Docks, thats the REAL treat here
I clicked on what I thought was a Kalimba playing tutorial but quickly became fascinated watching the construction process. You have some serious woodworking skills!
I had no idea I could recognize Dire Dire Docks just three notes in. Damn
That's exactly how I was
PaintingJo n
i wanna to sream bro wowowowwoooow
i played so much of mario 64 that my ds cartridge shorted
The music sounds so familiar in a "I've heard music like it but I have no idea where it's from" but all that I could think of is how it sounds like it'd be great Mario music. Further comments confirmed that it actually is Mario music. Wow
The editing and camerawork of creating this piece is stunning and trance like. Beautifully done.
I love you for playing Dire Dire Docks at the end.
Ah so THATS why youtube brought me here. Aside from an interest in instrument builds
Yes, I wondered why YT recommended this. Because I watch the matchbox car makeovers? And - I never heard of Dire Dire Docks, is it a song? I haven't made it through the vid yet. Is it like Duck Duck Go?
@@geezermann7865 Its the water level theme from the Mario game for the N64.
Man I'm really impressed ! It's normally very hard to give a good rhythm to a video, especially when you don't talk, but this one is very dynamic ! I didn't get bored any second ! Great job !
Wow, fantastic cinematography, your use of camera angles and lighting should be a lesson to all You Tubers, and your craftsmanship is great to watch. The instruments that you create are beautiful in looks and sound. Loved the playing, especially the duet; nicely done.
Well said!
I’m your 100th like
Yeah. It's cool!
SanAndFe agreed re camera work and digital storytelling. I liked the occasional sound effects too. Great projects, both instrument build & documentation!
Can't believe it only took you 20 minutes to make?!
But seriously, absolutely amazing craftsmanship! Especially to get everything in tune... Hats off to you, Sir :)
Absolutely beautiful instrument. Also what an amazing display of craftsmanship. You can tell how careful but deliberate he is while building. From the larger pieces to the most intricate and delicate ones, there's always patience of diligence.
It's also sounds really good. I particularly love the beefy sound and resonance of the bass notes.
After watching the video advert i was still skeptical. But when i finally downloaded the plans ruclips.net/user/postUgkxZF0EMnrujZvqHhGkxiz559uIABJWR9TG i was very impressed. The whole plan was just as you said in the video. Thank you very much. I now have a large and valuable collection for my woodworks. This is great!
Completely brilliant! Love how the wire can be tuned to a specific pitch, especially being that thick. I have studied music for over twenty years and still always impressed by people who bring these instruments, that may seem other worldly to some, into the limelight show casing their unique flare to the music scene. If some of us took the time to broaden our horizons and open our minds a bit, they will find amazing music in other things. Not limiting themselves to just the piano, drums or guitar. Imagine what we could do with a combination of pitch sounds then. What kind of music would we be listening to?
Love all the hard work that went into making this instrument. Absolutely beautiful.
I really like the little key you build into your cross-cut sled that allows you to make a box joint. That was swell.
I was surprised no one else caught that!! I thought I was the only one, so neat!
ruclips.net/video/pgzvXGic-LA/видео.html
What a pleasure it is to watch superb craftsmanship in action. Such a gift you have.
this is definitely one of the coolest videos i've ever seen, i think videos like these should be more popular. it shows some serious talent. also, i never realized how relaxing this was to watch ya build something from scratch like that. hmm. for some reason i really wanna play mario 64 right now...
Great attention to detail all around. Recording, editing, and building. You captured the process in an artistic way that made your video very pleasant. I’m thankful to have found your channel.
Why does everything this man creates end up being beautiful?
I don't know why but the creation process was extremely pleasing to watch, it was enjoyable, somehow not boring and I watched every second of the video without skipping or thinking about it. Good job!
No wonder these instruments are so expensive 😳
JustAMessenger it was a 20 min build though
@@stonemuzza8311 yes he did that all in 20 minutes and he didnt cut out anything at all
@@gl1zzy999 whoosh
@@gl1zzy999 did you edit your comment to not look stupid because you got wooshed?
@@ferretforrent1144 What'd his comment say before?
It has a very African sounding tone to my ears. When I lived in South Africa, I bought a large gourd that had been hollowed out and had keys/prongs just like this and sounded very similar.
Coz it's originated from Africa like Zimbabwe and other African countries
That's called an mbira
That's called a mbira.
American Patriot, This instrument originated in Africa and has been called by many names such Thembe, Kalimba and more.
Stunning. You are a true artist with wood, it was a pleasure to see your work
J'ai adoré le précision des gestes, mais aussi, le son des différentes essence de bois. Les petites démo pour finir était extra. Merci!
I loved the precision of the gestures, but also the sound of different woods. The little demos to finish was great. Thank you!
Such a perfect video!! Amazing build and a beautiful video documenting the process. Thanks a bunch for sharing and congratulations on your superb skills as a builder and film-maker!
The design, the details and woodworking skills to create beauty to eye and ear are impressive. Can no imagine the hours of patience and attention involved. Impressive! Well done. Great camera work and tight, well edited story.
I always forget to turn on the subtitles
wait what oh fuck
I never expected that.
Nooooo now I have to watch it again
THANK YOU❤ JT
LOL
Gorgeous! Absolutely gorgeous. I'm a little late to see this, but I'm glad I have! Not only does it sound so unique but it looks very nice. Grew up playing and practicing chromatic instruments, and this just brings such warmth to my heart, eyes and ears. Thank you for the video!
Caught me off guard with the Dire Dire Docks. Terrific craftsmanship, and sounds great.
The talent, craftsmanship, and detail is off the charts. You're an artist in every sense of the word.
Beautiful craftsmanship, and perfectly shot and edited. That was truly impressive. Well done sir!
In 1970, John Ike Walton of the 13th Floor Elevators and I put together a very large chromatic thumb piano made from the body of a severely damaged guitar and the tongues from about 4 dozen accordion reeds. We called it "The Umgawa." A few decades later, I was performing at an outdoor theatre in Hunt, Texas and saw a modified version of it backstage. John Ike lived in Hunt or at least fairly close to there. So I said "Wow! An Umgawa! I haven't seen one of those in years. They told me the inventor was going to be there later. I informed them that I was one of the inventors of it, and John Ike was the other. This fellow who called himself "Johnny Umgawa" showed up later and started telling about how he invented it. When I called his hand on it, he admitted that he never thought he would actually meet the fellow who was responsible for figuring out how to do it and supplying the accordion reeds.
I’m curious about what sort of tuning app you use. It would be really useful for tuning harmonics with. Also for the sound board, theres a few approaches. In many other tine instuments they’ll use a solid block of brass as a “tone block” to increase sustain. A solid mass will keep vibration in the tine, and works best for instruments amplified electronically. The other side, is using very thin tone wood that vibrates with the bridge readily, pushing against air and amplifying acoustically. I always thought cigar boxes made for nice instruments, since the wood is often spanish cedar, which makes for a warm sound. Its used on some classical guitars. Soft woods usually work best if you look into soundboard tone woods. Bodies and bracing tend to be hard woods. Dimensions might play a part also, you could get unwanted resonance or standing waves in box shapes, so looking into the design of speaker enclosures is helpful. Anways this is great, I really enjoyed watching and it sounds lovely.
James it literally says it on the bottom of the app itself precision strobe tuner app, you are welcome.
I looked in the comments specifically to try and figure out why the instrument doesn't sound very good, thanks for this answer! Not to knock his build, it's beautiful and took great skill, it just doesn't sound great for a kalimba.
Sounds like there's a luthier, or some such, in the house. Or maybe an engineer, craftsman with interest, or "just" an aficionado. ;-) I've also seen that thickness shaping, in the case of box instruments, violins and such, is often done, sometimes using some vibrational amplitude indicators on the "activated" instrument. I don't know if any of that is applicable here, and I am "just" a guy with interest in musical instruments, but just a thought.
@@Svetty00 Interesting points and observations. Building many instruments they STRIVE for harmonics, LOTS of them (why they rib the sound boards on guitars, etc., and use 'dancing' particle indicators to 'work them up' sometimes), but I certainly agree there are 'good ones' and 'bad ones'.
I know with design of amps/speakers/etc. even harmonics are MUCH less harmful than odd harmonics (I don't remember my infinite series addition stuff too well from college, but I think they add to a sign to create a square wave, and when that upper frequency, high bandwidth stuff starts becoming audible, it is HORRENDOUS. You can also damage tweeters easily with that sometimes inaudible energy, even if the amp is underrated for the driver, power wise.
Different thing, I realize, THD, but just an aside, speaking to good and bad harmonics, in another realm.
I'll have to listen to this vid again to see what you are saying about the harmonics maintaining pitch with pitch change on the tines...agreed...that would be BAD. In this kind of instrument, like any other actually, you get induced vibrations in (usually) higher pitches, that may be what you are hearing. If you damp the strings just above and for a ways up the piano, then strike a note hard, then do the same thing with that damper removed, you will hear a very different sound. If you are still hearing those bad harmonics when the sound board is removed, I think that might mean that might be the even MORE likely mode of inducement, as decreased mass and stiffness of the removed mount will cause that phenomena to occur to a greater extent.
Again, I haven't built any instruments, so I'm guessing here. As for round vs. flat, or hollow vs. solid, I have no idea how those would change harmonics, though I have no doubt it could, probably even would, but how is beyond me, without thinking about it (probably even then, any more, the old brain's not what it used to be, stuff that used to come RELATIVELY easy, doesn't anymore). Sorry for the tome. Cheers.
You made like a beautiful master grand kalimba...hard work paid off...a job well done...Nice playing and.sound tone.God bless you for sharing your video and creative vision
My ears thank you for returning to the tonic in all of your scales.
I didn’t think I’d like ASMR, but this is the closest thing to that and I love it. Satisfying to see the work put into these, and the sounds accompanied with making it; feels as though I’m there watching this being made.
Dear god when you started playing the Mario song I actually had a feels trip holy carp
@cgwworldministries he did at the end, he played Dire Dire Docks from Super Mario 64
@cgwworldministries he did
cgwworldministries
It’s a song from the first 3-D Mario Game, Super Mario 64. The Song’s name is Dire Dire Docks.
He did.
Beautiful! No skills or tools to make one, no money to afford one, but glad I at least got to see one and hear it being played. Thank you so kindly! I hope you enjoy it for many years to come. Blessings to you, thanks again for sharing it.
That Super Mario Underwater theme made me so verry happy. GREAT build.
Dire Dire Docks.
@@1r587
"Water" on the official soundtrack released in Japan. You also hear it in Jolly Roger Bay after all.
@@Schwarzorn I know, I just didn't think anyone cares about the official name considering it's a common word.
A long-time Keyboard Player, I was not aware of the existence of the Chromatic Kalimba until this excellent video. Your craftsmanship, perseverance and patience has left me feeling inadequate! Congratulations and Thank You. (also, am envious of your workshop...)
Awesome build and excellent playing! I have been working on building tongue drums (similar but the wood acts as the tine) and would love to see your take on making one of those! I will be watching for it.
Dude. You got a like and subscription from me for that last song. My absolute favorite game song from my childhood, and it sounds especially excellent on a Kalimba. Thank you for making this a reality.
Welcome Back! That was well worth the wait. Awesome! So satisfying seeing your final product.
Wow dude, it's incredibly impressive how you did this!
Love the Jolly Roger Bay rendition at the end. Your work is absolutely lovely!
Beautiful work. Loved watching the whole process, and it was nice to watch someone work without annoying background music. Well done.
What a great video to start my morning to. Excellent job!
I agree...lovely editing and camerawork. But the sound(s)! That was the treat for me, as well as watching the masterful build. Thank you.
i love that there's no music at all, and the subtitles tip is excellent! great video
Watching you make this was AMAZING ! Very beautiful . I WISH I had the skills and the tools to do that . 🎉👍
This is so beautiful, I'm just absolutely speechless! Your work is amazing in every way and watching it was so relaxing to me, I love it so much, oh my gosh! Keep up the amazing work, that instrument is amazing, I'm a musician and I wish I could get my hands on one of those so bad, they look so nice!
Nice job, nice shooting, and I appreciate the fact that you use the sounds of you craft as music.
That version of chopsticks is the EXACT one my keyboard taught me when I was a beginning musician! Why am I so emotional at this video!
Beautiful!! I actually designed a chromatic kalimba a few years ago, a bit simpler than yours, but the same general principle. Nice to see how yours came together 😀
That was absolutely beautiful!!! I'm going to have to crib a few of your techniques there, those tiny bridges looked awesome! I'm disappointed those supports aren't visible though, that grain was beautiful!!!
Them supports were gorgeous.
Okay, that was a thing of beauty!
I guess more experienced woodworkers than myself have seen it all before, but for me that was a masterclass in clever construction. No "measure twice, cut once" here, this was "measure once, then keep on cutting, dude, 'cause you've already measured it". Everything was just... so... smart!
This is straight up bad ass! What a cool project.
Beautiful, excellent craftsmanship and musicianship. Hats off to you. Well done. (Applause)
Absolutely incredible. What a beautiful instrument! It was inspiring to watch you build it and play it as well. Was that the water stage from Mario 64 at the end? So tasteful!
I am so pleased for you both, at long last you are HOME, late but still a wonderful Christmas present. We wish you all the best & happiness in your new home.
I feel like youre the kind of guy that could make their own grand piano.
BRAVO, excellent, tremendous. I could watch your first class edited video all night, about a skill filled labour of love. No short cuts, top notch materials. Well done, thank you.
20:09 omg i'm feeling nostalgic
What a detailed precise crafted musical creation. beautiful...
First, this is wonderful! What a beautiful piece!
Second, I have a couple of questions as an interested fellow builder:
On the tines, would the resonance change, or even improve, if they were flattened rather than left cylindrical?
Also, I love the use of the katalox (pretty sure it was katalox) for the mounting blocks. Is there a particular reason you made them so thick? (Please know that this is not a criticism at all!) Would the overall instrument benefit from having the tines closer to the resonator box? Katalox is extremely strong and rigid, so I'm sure it communicates the vibrations effectively, but intuitively, it seems to me that thinner might be better???
Again, this is spectacular. Thank you for sharing it! (And for putting up with a whole bunch of probably annoying questions.)
Cheers!
Thank you so much for reaching out! I’m always interested in seeing what more capable hands can do with things I manage to bumble through!
As far as the tines, the idea was to use the cylindrical steel to give some more heft & weight to those bass tines so they would be bassier. Definitely worked, but using wider steel would have also achieved the same result. I’d definitely say to flatten out the steel tines like you suggest if you make this. For playability alone, having really narrow targets to pluck takes some real getting used to, a wider tine tip would make playing it easier. Do some experimenting with the overtones AFTER you flatten it out though, I’m sure altering the shape of the tine will mess with the natural overtones of the raw steel.
As far as the katalox bridge, YES! Make them thinner! I really don’t know what I was thinking making them THAT thick. It was too late by the time I shaped them to really shave off any additional thickness so I just had to live with it. Being katalox, it’s pretty hard so it doesn’t matter much in this case, but I’d do it thinner if I was making this again. They need to be thick enough so that the bottom of the eyebolts & nuts are off the sound board but other than that, they shouldn’t have to be very thick at all. Exactly right saying the thinner the better, it would absorb less of the vibration energy if it were thinner.
Excellent questions and if I can help in any way when you attempt this, email me and I’ll be glad to help!
Man, you're awesome! Thanks for getting back to me. I made a small kalimba about a year ago for my daughter (and for me to try out making one), and it worked out okay, but you're construction ideas here are really great. Particularly, I like the eye-bolt tensioning for the tines.
Thanks again for the response, and I look forward to seeing more on your channel! :)
Joseph Center -I enjoyed reading your comment, and the builder's reply. This comment thread should be pinned at the top by the channel owner, it is a must read.
excellent video and process. You have shown me what i need to do with all this time I have. Thank you for sharing.
Awesome
knew you'd be here somewhere
Great idea to arrange like that with black keys hovering. A tiny idea would be a screw on each peg for fine tuning, but of course that would be exponentially more effort for very little benefit. Excellent build. Congrats and thanks for posting.
A family that plays on their home made chromatic kalimba together stays together.
extremely therapeutic to watch. Very talented!!! beautiful ending with the music!
19:26 My man pulled out the second pair of hands
Most enjoyable, superb craftsmanship and professionalism.
Belo trabalho !! Mais bonito vê-lo do que ouvi-lo. Parabéns
I literally clapped after your first performance. Bravo talented sir and I HAD A HAPPY ATTACK WHEN I HEARD DIRE DIRE DOCKS!!!
estupendo, eres genial, felicitaciones maestro carpintero y músico.
not to hate on instrument makers who arent musicians but its such a more satisfying video when you get to see it played at the end! great job!
Ha I was wondering what the eye bolt on top of your sled was for, very ingenious! Great build great video
I am always amazed at what I can find by surfing RUclips. I watched the Ragtime Piano Pedal Mod. I never cease to be amazed at the technical and artistic abilities found. Here is a site that combines both artistry and technicallity. Thank you so much for sharing your gifts and abilities with us.
Me: Don’t. No. Stop right there. Don’t do it. Don’t say it.
The slab of wet meat that infests my skull:
*play megalovania*
"slab of wet meat that infests my skull"
I'll write it down
this kind of videos is so satisfying to watch
I want to know what the tuning app he used was. That looked cool
I cannot imagine what it would be like to have the amazing talent and skill that you have. Loved the video and love the beautiful kalimba. Awesome.
Really cool, i love it!
I have 1 thing to ask though: Wouldn't it be "smarter" to *not* make a resonating Chamber? What if instead make some holes into the lid and put it underneath the kalimba when playing? Like so it can work either as a lid when not used, or as a resonating Chamber if the kalimba is played... you'd also save some wood with that, right?
Absolutely! That was actually my intention right off the bat. But making the resonating soundboard so thin, it made it impractical to flip that open or closed. I also ran out of time so just did the brute force method. But you are absolutely right! There is definitely some way to turn the lid into the resonating chamber, it just needs to thought put into it! I say do it, make a third version!
Mario underwater theme? Nice, you have a wonderful skill and this instrument is beautiful keep it up! You are a wonderful maker
that was... therapeutic
That was an amazing video on your craftsmanship. Beautiful how it turned out. Loved the music it made.
You could buy some contact mics and record it DI...
I've considered it! Looking into what kind of piezo pickups I'd need to get good bass frequency response as well as the high end frequencies. There's definitely room to add the pickups in there pretty easily without having to disassemble the instrument.
A PZM mic would mount inside it and give an excellent response :) Or rig up a Panasonic WM-61A condenser raised off but facing the soundboard in a similar way to a PZM and use a Linkwitz mic pre-amp in the box. I've made many like that in the past and they sound fantastic :) ॐ
You might want to play with using a phono cartridge as a pickup.
Secret boss
I had a feeling it was gonna be dire dire docks, it's just too perfect to pass up! Thank you for showing off this beautiful instrument!
*Kalimbalovania* fades in...
Well done on this piece, you can see a lot of hard work went into this. And it sounds great too .
20:09 Made me want to boot up Mario 64 on my DS and play that level.
I just played the level and got the star.
@@3kgtjax awesome
That is one of the most fascinating videos iv seen and heard in a long time. What a cool instrument, percussion with fingers, versus a mallet
20:08 👌
wk the fish MAAA PUUH SUUH TO REEEE
The amount of finesse, musicianship and time this requires astounds me.
Song of storms would be good on this.
CecilDaBomb1117 I think Gerudo valley would too
That is a nice bit of work mate, you did an outstanding job. I made a couple of kalimbas myself and I added a couple of small holes on the sides which gave you kind of a tremolo effect if you covered and uncovered them with your index fingers. I also added an internal pizeo electric pick up which I output to an old Behringer effects unit for a bit of chorus and reverb. Check out earth, wind and fires "The Kalimbas Song"
Dig it.
When ya finish that, make an artificial heart.
And this is WHY they're so expensive!! Beautiful.
¡Wow! You are really amazing
I realy love de song of Mario 💙💙
That's just plain old good work Brother. The video presentation as well as crafting the instrument. Well done. Bob from Philly