by FrankieM » Wed Feb 14, 2007 4:30 pm
Hello everyone. I’m a new member. It’s an honor and true pleasure to join all you other conga aficionados.
My brief background: I’m a non-Hispanic who long has had a passion for Afro-Cuban percussion. I’m an amateur musician with piano being my main instrument. I also play timbales (LP TP model) and bongos. (I play mainly so-called classical piano – classical music being my other musical passion along with Latin.)
I grew up in NYC in the late 50’s -- an era when Latin, or “Salsa,” music was widely popular. I used to frequent the old Palladium, witnessing and dancing to many “battles” between the two Titos (Puente and Rodriguez) as well Machito, La Playa Sextet, the two Palmieries, etc. I have the clave feeling deeply ingrained in me.
One of the biggest thrills of my life is when my sister had a surprise birthday party for me back in the 80’s. I walked into her family room and there was Charlie Palmieri on keyboard and Orlando Marin (who my brother-in-law knows well) on Timbales, along with someone I didn’t recognize on guitar and my brother-in-law (a hobbyist like myself) on conga. I sat in on bongos.
I recently treated myself and purchased the Giovanni Hidalgo bongos. I now want to purchase a good set of congas and have decided that the LP Classics are my best trade-off between performance and cost.
Many years ago, my wife bought me a conga as a birthday present. It has a “Sekooa” emblem. She purchased it from a local "Mom and Pop" music store. I recently did an internet search and could find only Sekooa guitars.
A question: has anyone here heard of Sekooa congas? A brief description: it is true Conga size (11.75”), white painted wood, tunable and has a narrower than usual bottom opening, at least compared to modern LP Congas. Its skin is mounted in a way that hides the rim under the skin. I’m not knowledgeable enough to know what kind of skin it is but I’d guess cowhide. In any case, it really has a more than decent sound for a “no-name” drum.
Since I am strictly a hobbyist, and the fun for me is in soloing, I plan to start by adding an LP Classic Quinto. I appreciate that the more standard approach would be to add a Tumba but then my “inferior” drum would be the Conga. At the same time, the Sekooa has a good bass sound, probably because of the narrow bottom opening. So I likely can get away with tuning it lower than the usual Conga note. I recall reading somewhere that a larger tuning gap between drums was more common in the past. Any guidance/comments about any of this?
Edited By FrankieM on 1171470871