Dharma Bells

(Singing Bowls, Prayer Bells, Cuenco Tibetano, Rin Japonais, Keisu, Dobaci, Cloche de Temple Japonais, Campana Japonesa, Campana da Preghièra, Rin Chinois, Temple Bowls, Campana Vasiforme, Campana China, Chinese Temple Bells, Cloche de Temple, Gong Bowls, Dobachi, Tempelglocke)
These dharma bells were collected from antique shops by Emil Richards starting in the 1960s. They are loosely tuned/microtonal (but in general, chromatic) and have a range of 2 ½ octaves.
According to Emil, they came in sets of 3, 5, and occasionally 7 or 9. He took the dharma bells and laid them out in rows so they could be played more easily; then once he had enough, he mounted them vertically. He often played them with soft mallets or the back ends of drumsticks. Emil used them in scores often by sliding the sticks across them to give a glissando effect, or hitting them individually to create ringing tones.
- Price/Day
- $130
- Range
- F3-C6
Quick demo of dharma bells. Note that mallet choice has a large impact on timbre, and this is only one example.
In this excerpt from Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events (2004), by Thomas Newman, listen for the dark, metallic sound of one of the dharma bells completing the phrases of this piece in 3/4.