Berimbau wrote:In my humble opinion, the attempted projection of the Cuban conception of clave onto Brasilian music has never been a helpful analytical tool as it inaccurately assumed that these two DISTINCT cultures share the same musical values. In many cases they demonstratively do, as in the adaptation of African musical values, but an important difference is in the greater assimilation and distillation of West African time line patterns into Cuban popular music.
Berimbau wrote:Now many good Cuban percussionists seem to be able to find the "clave" in nearly every kind of music, perhaps even in Mozart!!! I think that this reflects their OWN musical orientation, and not necessarily that of OTHER musicians.
Human beings tend to reinterpretate a variety of local cultures through their own lense, and I suspect that that is the case with the projection of clave onto Brasilian music. If you want to look hard enough for it, it will be right where you expect to find it.
Berimbau wrote:During his lectures throughout Africa, Gerhard Kubik would make a point by playing some music he recorded from an African culture FAR from the location he was speaking in. Many of his students would then proclaim that the music being played was just LIKE the music of their home villages, and proceed to clap and dance on the WRONG beats!!
Berimbau wrote:Again, as Dr. K wrote, the mathematical content of the African time line patterns exists independently of their cognitional dimension." I'm agreeing with you on the math, which is an invariable reality, but not necessarily on the cognitive aspects! Feeling the "clave" and the intellectual concepts of "clave" involve very different brain functions.
...it is my contention that a variety of cultures that employ time line patterns in their music simply did NOT have the same cultural interpretation as Cuban musicians do. Until the Cubans so expressed it, clave was not an EXPLICIT element in popular music.
...I think that clave reflects how the Cubans unconsciously distilled and processed various African time line patterns as African musical sources were mixed ever increasingly with European musical sources. Doubtless after much experimentation mixing these disparate musical values, the mathematical reality of clave proved the most adaptive to the emerging new Cuban forms.
Now I try to use neutral terms such as time line patterns to describe the larger phenomena and clave only for specifically Cuban or Cuban-influenced musics.
Berimbau wrote:Now on to your inquiry. I think that if we do a little comparitive study, we will discover that the 3/2 - 2/3 clave conception in Cuba may indeed have originated there.
If you study Kubik's time line pyramid note that it is divided, like clave, into two seperate parts. One part of the pyramid always has an even number of beats in it while the other part always has an uneven number of beats in it. Cuban clave, with the ultimate reduction of beats into two in one part and three in the other part, represents the essential asymetrical geometry of these dichotomous patterns. Like yin and yang, patrix and matrix, each part, or "side' to use a Cuban term, both defines and compliments the other.
With this in mind, Mario Bauza it is suggested, first wrote 2/3 or 3/2 on his band charts to impart that vital information to his US born horn soloists. Now certainly someone had to have done something like this previously, yet I know of NO earlier source for its notation in Cuban musical history.
Berimbau wrote:You ask an interesting question about the direction of time line patterns... Despite the linear orientation of musical transcription, I have always concieved them as circular in nature. Looped, in fact, if I can appropriate Gary Harding's similar terminology.
Harding also employs a cultural-specific term, bembe wheels, to describe this phenomenology. Realizing that he had come to a similar conclusion regarding the nature of time line patterns, I e-mailed him an inquiry.
windhorse wrote:Do you think of Iyesa as 2/3?
windhorse wrote:Do you think of Iyesa as 2/3?
davidpenalosa wrote:windhorse wrote:Do you think of Iyesa as 2/3?
Iyesa is neither in 3-2 nor 2-3. The rhythm iyesa does not have a particular clave sequence, neither does guaguanco, bembe, or any other African, or African-based rhythm I've encountered. Now, there are 3-2 and 2-3 songs in iyesa, guaguanco and bembe, but the percussion does not have a designated clave sequence, other than the "one" is the first stroke of the three-side. You are not the only one who has applied the 3-2, 2-3 concept inacurrately to rhythms.
windhorse wrote:Since we can have a different "one" and still get the same job done?
Why did you say that I "applied the 3-2, 2-3 concept inacurrately to rhythms" though I didn't apply it in a question - except in formulating the question?
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