by jmdriscoll » Tue Jun 26, 2007 1:43 pm
Ketipung, not sure what to say about your conga's as I have never played the Pearl folkloric congas. I do however have a similar situation as you in regards to practice time and being an aspiring conga player. I work 40hrs a week also and practice 1-2hrs a day. I am lucky enough to work in a near abandoned 10 story building that has a lot of empty space. I have a matador quinto, conga, tumba, and a little crappy pearl travel conga that is very similar in size to the LP compact congas. That thing has a ring like you wouldn't believe, but it is ok because i only use it for my conga and do most of my work on the quinto.. I keep my conga and tumba at home during the week, and my quinto and pearl travel conga at work. Go up to the the 10th floor every day to practice for an hour, and practice more when I get home. I have been messing around with what my teacher calls "toy congas" for a few years, until I finally found a good deal on the three matadors. I played with tumbaos mostly before meeting my teacher, and probably did not focus on my technique as much as the pattern that I was playing. One of the first things that my teacher gave me for homework was some practice exercises to get my technique straight before moving on to other rhythms. I created a practice routine in which I would practice each technique for 5 minutes at a time and go to the next one. These practice rudimants have helped me achieve tone definition and has allowed me to play isolating opens, from slaps, from bass, from Muff, etc...
Bass toe, Bass toe - "L L R R" - 5 minutes
Bass bass toe toe - "R L R L" - 5 minutes
Bass toe toe, Bass toe toe - "L L L R R R" - 5 minutes
Bass toe toe toe, Bass toe toe toe - "L L L L, R R R R" - 5 minutes
Bass toe open slap - "L L R R" - 5 minutes
Bass toe open slap - "R R L L" - 5 minutes
Bass toe slap open - "L L R R" - 5 minutes
Bass toe slap open - "R R L L" - 5 minutes
Free play for 20 minutes... tumbaos... etc..
I did this routine for a month straight and as boring and mundane as it might be, it has paid off. I can be very impatient at times, and it took a seasoned congeuro to instruct me to do this, before I actually sat down and did it with 100% effort. It has paid off greatly in my playing. I was playing around with these congas for a while before sitting down and doing what I should have done when I first started playing. I am still very much in the same boat as you and consider myself a beginner this very complex and sometimes frustrating instrument. But every day through constant practice, I see very small incremental improvements in my playing. My teacher currently has me doing practicing varations of the tumbao, and guaguanco. I have the basic rhytms and varations down pat now and am now trying to play against the clave as much as I can, and work on my arrangements so that they have style and flavor. It's hard to break out of the robot like mold of playing basic patterns and varations back to back, but through perciverence and practice it will come with time. I have learned that no matter how frustrating things can be when trying create a sound that inspires people to move their feet, practice is the mother of all skill. no matter how much rhythm you think that you do or don't have, practice is the mother of all skill. Even on days when my head is down, and I think to myself.. "why am I even doing this? I have so far to go playing at the level that I would like to be" That motto and the inspiration of my teacher keeps me going and I practice anyway. Good luck to you from one practicing conga player to another!
Mike
"Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted"
"Music and rhythm find their way into secret places of the soul"