Chapman Stick a Powerful Instrument That’s Easy to Learn

Stephen Wise has owned a Chapman Stick for 30 years. If he could have only one instrument, it would be the Stick.

Moving a new, alternative instrument into the mainstream is a truly arduous task. Most attempts, in fact, will fail. It is not surprising that in over 35 years on the market that the Chapman Stick® is not yet a household name. It took the saxophone over 100 years to achieve that mark. Yet, The Stick® has made steady gains. No one who has seen it, it seems, ever forgets it!  [Watch Rob Martino and then Kevin Keith play the Stick®]. Those who have played it become disciples.

Another trait that The Stick® shares with the saxophone is that it is a modern instrument, developed from the ground up to be easily played using a logical technique. I know all of these things because I have been a Stick® owner for over 30 years. Although I have learned to play more than a dozen instruments over the years, if you came to me today and told me that I could only have one instrument for the rest of my life, I would keep my Stick®!

The Stick® was first marketed by Emmett Chapman in 1974, the culmination of his experiments in “touch playing” of fretted instruments in the guitar family. As a jazz guitarist, limited to six strings and five fingers, Emmett began to envy the freedom and space that keyboard musicians enjoyed, but still wanted to have the degree of nuance that only fingers on strings can deliver. In a flash of inspiration, he up-ended his guitar, reached around the neck with both hands, and  began tapping out riffs.

Several years and several prototypes later, The Stick® emerged, named for its truly minimalist design. It was an instrument of ten strings spanning over five octaves. Today, the original Stick® is a member of a growing family stick-like instruments, all with the same logical, easy-to-master design.

Although The Stick® can sound like anything from a clavichord (when amplified cleanly) to the nastiest metal (in extreme overdrive), and although The Stick® has all of the nuance of the guitar and then some, the real power of The Stick® is that it is an easy instrument to learn while offering no limits to the virtuoso.

Emmett’s roots as a jazz musician led him to create an instrument that is a dream to both the experienced improvisational performer and the beginner. The touch is light – no heavy callouses needed – and the action is quick. Shifting the hand position one string to the left takes you through the “circle of fourths.” Shifting the hand position one string to the right takes you through the “circle of fifths.” Moving up or down the fretboard transposes you in “half steps.”

The implication here is that no matter what key you are playing in, you can move to any other key and your fingering does not change at all! Try doing that on a piano! You can learn a song in one key, then easily “find” a new key to accommodate another musician. There is no need to learn scales and arpeggios in every key. They are all the same! I have often worried whether or not maladies such as arthritis might curtail my musical fun, but The Stick® has such a light touch that I’m confident that I can still enjoy it well into wherever the future leads.

In this allotted space, I can only touch on the high points. The Stick® web site is rich in detail and has possibly hundreds of links to materials and artists. Many artists go solo. After all, you can play bass, rhythm, and lead all by yourself! Others pair with a percussionist or assorted other artists. You will be astounded by the variety! Every musical style is represented from Renaissance to the hit songs of today, to all manner of free-form improvisation. In addition, a perusal of You Tube® will lead you to performances by everyone from beginners to seasoned professionals.

If you can only have one instrument, why not The Stick®? It’s portable and doesn’t take up much space. You need guitar/bass amplifiers for public performance, but I usually practice using only a headphone amplifier. In a pinch, you can plug a set of high sensitivity mp3 player ‘buds or ‘phones’ directly into the instrument (with an adapter plug) and can actually hear it!

Stephen Wise has been designing electronic musical instruments since 1975. Steve specializes in realistic recreations of traditional instruments. He became interested in the field after hearing Walter/Wendy Carlos’ “Switched On Bach” and upon being introduced to the Allen Digital Computer Organ, the world’s first all digital musical instrument. Steve is currently designing instruments for Schulmerich Bells, maker of handbells, electronic carillons, and the breakout MelodyWave® instrument.

9 comments

1 Jeff Kline
Posted 03/12/10 at 5:51 am

I would certainly be interested in trying one of these things. I have yet to hear what one sounds like though. At least at a quarter to 5am I’m trying to think back if I’ve heard one in anything commercial. If the sound is right, I have some things I am working on that it might lend well to. But; the trick is to find one first and for someone who’s on a budget. :-)

2 Stephen Wise
Posted 03/12/10 at 6:30 pm

Jeff; That’s always the rub with alternative instruments. You can’t just go down to your local music store and try one. They also lack the level of mass production that can give you a $50 guitar. There are reconditioned units around…. I bought mine way before the web, based on a radio interview with Emmett, a pamphlet, and testimonial from a trusted friend (who wanted one but was afraid), by mail order. I’m an instrument designer more than a musician, so perhaps I’m more open to new instruments. Use stick.com to get in touch with others whose style you like. Someone might be playing in a town near you.

3 Barry Volain
Posted 03/14/10 at 9:31 pm

So, the only way to try one of these is to order one or know someone who has one? Jeez, that’s inconvenient. I would think that there must be some esoteric music store SOMEWHERE (NYC, LA) that might carry them, no?

4 Bryan Greifinger
Posted 08/11/10 at 9:23 am

Can someone please upload a sound bite so we can hear what it sounds like? Thanks

5 Stephen Wise
Posted 08/11/10 at 9:36 am

Bryan, there are examples of many styles of Stick® playing on You Tube®. It has a sort of clavichord sound, but can be modified with effects boxes to sound very electric. What do you like? Perhaps I could find something for you.

6 Leah
Posted 08/11/10 at 11:02 am

Click on the links in the first paragraph. They take you to two YouTube videos. Where it says this, in the post:
[Watch Rob Martino and then Kevin Keith play the Stick®].

7 EffectsBay
Posted 08/11/10 at 11:34 am

When I think of the ‘stick’ I always go back to King Crimson’s ‘Discipline’ album. Toni Levin played it on there, and is a signature sound of that album.

Here is Toni explaining the stick:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOUkl46wzHo&feature=related

Here is Toni performing ‘Elephant Talk’ a King Crimson song with his band:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcbSjC9tAY8&feature=related

hank

8 Brett Cammack
Posted 08/11/10 at 8:23 pm

I don’t mean to sound flip, but Ferrari’s are terrific cars, too. I just priced the Chapman Stick and, at $2000+, it’s about as attainable at a Ferrari to me. I know that there are guitars that cost that much (and far more as well), but they can also be had for less than $200 in good quality. My Yamaha F325 was $169 + tax and, what with economic circumstances as they are, I might well play it the rest of my life.

It’s unfortunate that this interesting instrument is not available in a broader range for price and quality.

9 Stephen Wise
Posted 08/13/10 at 8:30 am

Brett, It’s the age old problem: If the price were lower, more would be sold. If more were sold, the price would be lower. Stick Enterprises® is pretty much a garage operation. That low cost guitar was probably turned out by numerically controlled machines on an assembly line. Emmett would love to be able to do that, but the projected sales just are not there. It would be hard for me to buy a Stick® today. I bought mine when I was young and single, Sticks® cost a lot less, and I could sit at home eating beans and rice for a while (I walked to work).

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