Glockenspiel (bells), xylophone, marimba, and vibrophone all have distinctively different sounds. Xylophone actually has a harsh edge to its sound, and produces dry, staccato tones that have very little or no sustain or resonance. It’s often used in cartoons to depict skeletons dancing, and composers use it for raunchy, macabre, or aggressive musical settings. If you want high-pitched tinkling suggestive of magic or fairies you use glockenspiel, and if you want warm, mellow tones you use marimba. Vibrophone produces a more modern, electronic sound with pure tones, and is not used in older compositions, i.e. rarely or never heard in classical orchestras.
M2MM about 1 year ago
His expression in panel 3 is priceless. :D
TampaFanatic1 about 1 year ago
Viola should hang out with Andre as they both like to make loud noises while around Petey.
Izzy Moreno about 1 year ago
Ah, she’s unhinged.
einarbt about 1 year ago
Brutal.
ellisaana Premium Member about 1 year ago
Marimba! A new dance for you to learn, Alice.
SteveHL about 1 year ago
Did Viola scare off Ernesto?
win.45mag about 1 year ago
Looks like a xylophone to me.
markkahler52 about 1 year ago
And of course, another rousing rendition of “Moonlight Feels Right!”
Zebrastripes about 1 year ago
Violas a wackjob ….she sure rang his bell….lol
WaitingMan about 1 year ago
Is this how Ruth Underwood (longtime percussionist with Frank Zappa) got started?
P51Strega about 1 year ago
Good thing it was a marimba, the sound is much softer than xylophones.
Twelve Badgers in a Suit Premium Member about 1 year ago
I suppoze things would get confuzing if she played a small cello.
Kaputnik about 1 year ago
Viola believes in being fully armed.
Calvin about 1 year ago
Beware, be very aware
A.Ficionada about 1 year ago
Petey’s brain in panel 1 “Girl, girl, girl” like at the end of Inside Out. He’s forgetting he lives with two, which could provide context ; )
wongo about 1 year ago
What’s the diff?
belgarathmth about 1 year ago
Glockenspiel (bells), xylophone, marimba, and vibrophone all have distinctively different sounds. Xylophone actually has a harsh edge to its sound, and produces dry, staccato tones that have very little or no sustain or resonance. It’s often used in cartoons to depict skeletons dancing, and composers use it for raunchy, macabre, or aggressive musical settings. If you want high-pitched tinkling suggestive of magic or fairies you use glockenspiel, and if you want warm, mellow tones you use marimba. Vibrophone produces a more modern, electronic sound with pure tones, and is not used in older compositions, i.e. rarely or never heard in classical orchestras.
Liverlips McCracken Premium Member about 1 year ago
And THAT is a lesson Petey will always marimba.
fritzoid Premium Member about 1 year ago
Viola branggs the heat!
Amra Leo about 1 year ago
Sonic barrage!
ChessPirate about 1 year ago
I’m not surprised, look at the size of those ears!
(I think it’s cool how Richard drew about double the number of “standing-up” hairs on Petey’s head in the last panel…☺)
ars731 about 1 year ago
I guess its an sore subject for Viola
maverick.kaminski about 1 year ago
Ah ha, so Thompson did make it a marimba on purpose!
brooklyn51 about 1 year ago
Marimbaists are so easily triggered, living on the razor’s edge as they do.
ekke about 1 year ago
Somehow I doubt that “heenk”-ing back at her will have the same magnitude of effect.
Not the Smartest Man On the Planet -- Maybe Close Premium Member about 1 year ago
“I can’t hear them.” Riot.
Sisyphos about 1 year ago
Petey will now always remimba that it’s a marimba and not a xylophone!
Ring, ring! Maybe it’s a happy sound. https://tinyurl.Com/ndaxh4p
JH&Cats about 1 year ago
Last panel is adorable.
Durandal_1707 about 1 year ago
You’d have to hit a marimba really hard to make someone’s ears ring.
I used to have a downstairs neighbor who played the marimba. He would practice at 1 AM sometimes. Nobody cared. It’s a quiet instrument.