Berimbau wrote:....another well known case is that of the nine stroke, sixteen pulse Angolan kachacha pattern:
X . X . X . X X . X . X . X X .
This pattern was reversed in Brasilian samba to accomodate the stophic forms absorbed from Portuguese and other European song forms:
X . X . X X . X . X . X . X X .
Berimbau wrote:Now a question for David, Ralph, or anyone still awake here. How was it that the Cubans developed such a sophisticated musical system around various African time line patterns without articulating the CONCEPT in the earlier literature? I believe that Don Fernando rattled on and on about the hardwood sticks, but not the African intellectual capital they rendered. Does all this really go back to old Mario Bauza band charts? No one else thoght to write about it before?
Berimbau wrote:.. it is the order of the TWO BARS (or sides, as salseros say) of the kachacha time line which is reversed in samba, NOT the entire pattern. The end result is the basic tamborim or agogo pattern.
Berimbau wrote:Mauleon's discussion on clave was lucid and informative. Doesn't her husband play guitar for some band out your way?
davidpenalosa wrote:||XoX||oXX|oXo|XoX|| standard pattern
||1+a|2+a|3+a|4+a|| four main beats w/ subdivisions
I think what you may be referring to is a common variation of the standard pattern which contains the identical sequence of strokes and rests, but is in a different order and therefore in a different relation to the main beats.
||XoX||oXo|XXo|XoX|| variation of standard pattern
||1+a|2+a|3+a|4+a|| four main beats w/ subdivisions
-David
windhorse wrote:We call the top version - "Short" bell, and the bottom one "long" bell.
Generally, short bell for Cuban 6/8 rhythms, and long bell for Haitian 6/8 patterns - like Djuba.
Question: On Francisco Aguebella's "Cantos A Los Orichas", are they mixing short bell and arara bell on several of the songs?
What I'm calling "Arara" bell:
[oXX-oXX-oXo-XoX]
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