PASIC 2003
Select your interest:
Page One: Health and Wellness; playing posture.
Page Two: Best of Show.
Page Three: New developments in mallet instruments.
Page Four: Miscellaneous instrument photos.
Page Two: Best of Show.
MalletJack


With all our attention to great instruments, great repertoire, and great
players, more mundane accessories can get lost in the bunch. But this
device is really important.
If you're a teacher with students of various heights, or if you work at an
institution with students of various heights, you're cheating them--and most
likely injuring them, too--if you don't provide them with an effective way to
adjust the instruments to their own bodies. As the previous page
demonstrated, there is no such thing as successful compensation for improper
instrument height. The instrument must be raised or lowered to
match the player. Wood blocks are too primitive and don't provide fine
enough control. And adjustable height instruments often don't go high
enough and/or are such a pain to adjust that their heights are generally set and
forgotten.
The MalletJack addresses all these issues. Its range is from zero to
ten inches. Its hand cranks with handy measuring indications are easy and
quick to use. Handles are intelligently placed. The plastic parts
are black all the way through, to hide scuffs. The fact that the
MalletJack also protects instruments to some extent from damage in transit is a
small plus as well.
The cost is a little under one-thousand dollars. That's reasonable
given the materials and the construction costs.
I met the guys who build this thing. They're friendly, accessible, and
from what I can tell highly conscientious. (Please
email me your experiences on
this.) Please note that I'm not an endorser in any way. I've been
paid nothing to say this, and I've had no conversations with anyone about
putting up this page. I'm just expressing my own thoughts here.
You can contact the MalletJack people via their website,
www.malletjack.com.
Now it's on to: