"The Bo Diddly rhythm is the pulse beat of the universe....so primal and basic is that 5/4 "hambone" syncopation, introduced on his first self named hit ("Bo Diddly") derived from ancient African rhythms and overlaid with tremolo guitar"....
....." His professional name probably derives from the one stringed southern instrument called the diddly bow on which his famed rhythm was often played"
I also think the music journalist writing about rhythm was slightly unprecise, because he surely did not mean odd metres like 5/4.5/4 "hambone" syncopation
davidpenalosa wrote:There's sufficient evidence that tresillo-based single-celled structures were retained in African-American folk music independent of any Cuban influence. I don't imagine that the African-American ring shout churches or the Mississippi drum and fife groups of the Nineteenth Century were influenced by Cuban popular music.
Perhaps clave itself was retained in some African-American folk music I haven't heard and the Cuban influence merely brought out a latent sensibility that was already there. I just haven't heard or seen the evidence. In his great book "Africa and the Blues", Gerhard Kubik devotes an entire chapter to what he calls "A Strange Absence"; "... the very specific absence of asymmetrical time-line [clave-like] patterns in virtually all early 20th Century U.S. African American music." He says they were probably absent in the U.S from the start.
In 1972 Kubik recorded the last surviving exponent of the Mississippi drum and fife music, 89 year old Othar Turner. While mentioning the clearly African-based syncopation of that drumming, Kubik says flat out that it has no time-line pattern - "in spite of its various verbalized rhythms such as 'Granny, will your dog bite? No child, no!'" Interestingly, if you tap you hand to the rhythm of "Granny, will your dog bite? No child, no!", you will see that it is an embellishment of son clave. So, as fuzzy as the "latent clave" idea may be, it could be the correct answer to the question.
Bo Diddley was well known for the "Bo Diddley beat," a rumba-like beat (see clave), similar to "hambone", a style used by street performers who play out the beat by slapping and patting their arms, legs, chest, and cheeks while chanting rhymes. Referred to as a "shave and a haircut" beat, Diddley came across it while trying to play Gene Autry's "(I've Got Spurs That) Jingle, Jangle, Jingle".[5] Three years before Bo's "Bo Diddley", a song that closely resembles it, "Hambone," was cut by Red Saunders' Orchestra with The Hambone Kids.
In its simplest form, the Bo Diddley beat can be counted out as a two-bar phrase:
"One and two and three and four and one and two and three and four and..." The bolded counts are the clave rhythm.
His songs (for example, "Hey Bo Diddley" and "Who Do You Love?") often have no chord changes; that is, the musicians play the same chord throughout the piece, so that the rhythms create the excitement, rather than having the excitement generated by harmonic tension and release. In his own recordings, Bo Diddley used a variety of rhythms, from straight back beat to pop ballad style, frequently with maracas by Jerome Green.
David Wrote
By the late 40’s and early 50’s New Orleans musicians like Dave Bartholemew and Professor Longhair were borrowing Cuban elements from the son, mambo and conga and effortlessly mixing it with R&B and rock & roll. Bartholemew openly identified his Cuban influences and the New Orleans "mambos" were undoubtedly inspired by popular Cuban music of that era. However, while Bo Diddly came up during this same time, the origins of his overt clave motif remain a mystery to me. What effect if any, did Cuban music have on Bo Diddly?
....Cuban influence merely brought out a latent sensibility that was already there. I just haven't heard or seen the evidence.
His songs often have no chord changes; that is, the musicians play the same chord throughout the piece, so that the rhythms create the excitement, rather than having the excitement generated by harmonic tension and release
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