Build Your Own Glockenspiel

History
The instrument, now known as the glockenspiel, is a hybrid resulting from the fusion of two different types of instruments: the "genuine" glockenspiel with real bells, and the metallophone .
The "genuine" glockenspiel consists of a set of bells of various sizes. One or more musicians play several overlaid melodic phrases.In Germany the playing of fixed bells in church or town hall belfries is known as Beiern.

Metallophones have been played in eastern Asia for more than 1,000 years; the saron and the gendèr, for example, still perform a crucial role as melody instruments today. Metallophones were first mentioned in Europe in the middle of the 18th century. These instruments had a compass of more than three octaves, the bars were made either of the same metal as bells, or of silver, and were already arranged in the manner of a piano keyboard. The mallets had heads made of wood.

In the 14th century there were two types of glockenspiel: large instruments in church towers and smaller ones for playing at home. In the 17th century smaller glockenspiels began to be fitted with a keyboard which made it possible to perform more demanding roles.
The first step toward the glockenspiel used in the modern orchestra was taken by the Dutch in the 17th century. They replaced the unwieldy bells with a row of bars after the fashion of the metallophone from eastern Asia.
The first composer to write for the glockenspiel in the orchestra was George Friedrich Handel, who included it in his oratorio Saul (1739). The instrument he used was called a carillon and had a range of two and a half octaves. It had metal bells (bars) which were played via a chromatic keyboard. Handel wrote parts for the instrument in several of his operas.
For The Magic Flute (1791) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart had a glockenspiel which was largely the same as the one Handel had known.

Because it was more practical, the Dutch idea of replacing the sophisticated construction of bells with simple bars was widely adopted in the first half of the 19th century. The result was the keyboard glockenspiel; the bars were struck by small hammers operated by keys. This instrument made it possible to perform parts which had until then been written in keyboard style.
Shortly afterward the mallet-played instrument was developed to improve the tone, the bars of this instrument were being struck by hand-held mallets. The tone of the mallet-played glockenspiel is superior to that of the keyboard instrument.
From the mid 19th century both types were found in the orchestra, but 20th century composers increasingly preferred the mallet-played instrument because of its superior tone. Nowadays the keyboard glockenspiel, or the celesta, which was invented in Paris in 1886 by Auguste Mustel, is used to perform older parts containing chords and particularly demanding glockenspiel parts.
