windhorse wrote:What about Mozambique? Comparsa?
Again, we think of them as having a two-three clave bell. Are we thinking of the "one" as your "three"? Did I learn everything wrong?
davidpenalosa wrote:windhorse wrote:What about Mozambique? Comparsa?
Again, we think of them as having a two-three clave bell. Are we thinking of the "one" as your "three"? Did I learn everything wrong?
The Cubans begin clave on the three-side in mozambique and comparsa too. But like you say, those bell parts do enter on the two-side. I wouldn’t say you learned everything wrong, not by any means. Don’t worry. I know where you are coming from. You have learned from a variety of sources. I’m suggesting that you sort out the sources and contexts and refine your understanding of clave. Try hearing all clave-based folkloric music from the three-side for thirty days, no obligation and your money back if not fully satisfied.![]()
-David
windhorse wrote:I get what you mean now,, and thanks so much for being a teacher!!
Question remains about the "Cantos A Los Orichas" and are they playing a bunch of Arara bell over the regular 6/8 bell??
davidpenalosa wrote:PC:
"I will attempt to write the arara bell pattern, there are three different modulations that I learned from Spiro, I'll just write the most complex one:"
|xx*|xx*|x*x|x*x|x*x|*xx|*xx|*x*|- Arrara bell
|x*x|**x|*x*|x**|-Clave (6/8)
davidpenalosa wrote:windhorse wrote:What about Mozambique? Comparsa?
Again, we think of them as having a two-three clave bell. Are we thinking of the "one" as your "three"? Did I learn everything wrong?
The Cubans begin clave on the three-side in mozambique and comparsa too. But like you say, those bell parts do enter on the two-side. I wouldn’t say you learned everything wrong, not by any means. Don’t worry. I know where you are coming from. You have learned from a variety of sources. I’m suggesting that you sort out the sources and contexts and refine your understanding of clave. Try hearing all clave-based folkloric music from the three-side for thirty days, no obligation and your money back if not fully satisfied.![]()
-David
windhorse wrote: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
Hi David,
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]
windhorse wrote:Do you think of Iyesa as 2/3?
Berimbau wrote: I think that Afro-Cuban music went through another metamorphisis when Machito's band began to interact with U.S, Jazz musicians, who came from a cultural region DEVOID of time line patterns. Again, Kubik addressed some of this in Africa and the Blues in his chapter. "A Strange Absence." This alone dilineates one of the MAJOR differences between African- American music and that of the Caribbean and Brasil. Other than the later assimilation of Cuban clave and Brasilian samba time lines, the music of the US doesn't display this uniquely African musical trait.
davidpenalosa wrote:windhorse wrote:Do you think of Iyesa as 2/3?
Hi Windhorse,
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.
There is a rhythmic phenomena that's worth mentioning though, because it leads many people to percieve iyesa as a "2-3 rhythm". In African rhythm there is a phenomena I call "beat motifs". These are rhythmic motifs based on main beats. For example, there's the "one-beat motif": if you hear one main beat emphasized in 6/8 music, most likely it's beat one:
||Xoo|ooo|ooo|ooo|| one-beat motif in 6/8
||XoX|oXo|oXo|Xoo|| clave
||1+a|2+a|3+a|4+a|| beats w/ pulses
You hear this in palo, bembe, chachalokuafun, etc.
There is an interesting rhythmic motif found in makuta, yuka and iyesa where there's a one-beat motif on the opposite side of the clave. This "4/4 one-beat motif" has been adapted into guaguanco, conga de comparsa and salsa. In fact, it's one of the main determinites of where clave is in salsa. If you hear one main beat emphasized in 4/4 Cuban music, most likely it's main beat three:
||oooo|oooo|Xooo|oooo|| 4/4 one-beat motif
||XooX|ooXo|ooXo|Xooo|| clave
||1e+a|2e+a|3e+a|4e+a|| main beats w/ pulses
When we hear the low drum play on a main beat, we automatically interpret that beat as "one". In iyesa however, it's really beat three. I've see dancers do a little involuntary shuffle when the bata drums shift from chachalokuafun (low drum on 1) to iyesa (low drum on 3), because they want to put their right foot on the "boom" of the low drum. It's where they want to feel "one". I almost always have to work with dancers so they will maintain their feet consistantly with clave ("it's OK to put your left foot with the low drum").
This 4/4 one-beat motif is one of the reasons so many people mistakenly perceive guaguanco as a "2-3 rhythm". The segundo is on beat three, not beat one.
In 6/8 you commonly find a two-beat motif and a three-beat motif:
||Xoo|ooo|ooo|Xoo|| two-beat motif
||Xoo|ooo|Xoo|Xoo|| three-beat motif
||XoX|oXo|oXo|Xoo|| clave
||1+a|2+a|3+a|4+a|| beats w/ pulses
The two-beat and three-beat motifs are common rhythmic motifs found in the vocabulary of lead drum parts for bembe, chachalokuafun and palo. They are also common motifs found in the itotele and iya bata enu melodies, as well as Northwest African djun djun parts.
Please don't hesitate to ask if you need some clarification. I realize that my posts may induce a coma.![]()
-David
pcastag wrote:Not necessarily, many comparsas begin on the 2 side. Just think of how we're used to hearing the bell, or the step! Listen to top percussion, there's a comparsa on there that Clearly begins on the two side.
XOXO|XXOX|OXXO|XOXO- Bell
OOXO|XOOO|XOOX|OOXO- Clave
pcastag wrote:Berimbau wrote: I think that Afro-Cuban music went through another metamorphisis when Machito's band began to interact with U.S, Jazz musicians, who came from a cultural region DEVOID of time line patterns. Again, Kubik addressed some of this in Africa and the Blues in his chapter. "A Strange Absence." This alone dilineates one of the MAJOR differences between African- American music and that of the Caribbean and Brasil. Other than the later assimilation of Cuban clave and Brasilian samba time lines, the music of the US doesn't display this uniquely African musical trait.
I disagree, New Orleans music has a distinct clave ( second line) although not as formal as the Cuban Clave, Plus if you listen to funk music and follow the guitar parts on ANY james brown tune you will FIND THE CLAVE. Not straight clave, but a rhythmic patttern that fits the concept of clave.I guarantee it. It's almost a universal thems
pcastag wrote:davidpenalosa wrote:PC:
"I will attempt to write the arara bell pattern, there are three different modulations that I learned from Spiro, I'll just write the most complex one:"
|xx*|xx*|x*x|x*x|x*x|*xx|*xx|*x*|- Arrara bell
|x*x|**x|*x*|x**|-Clave (6/8)
Sorry David, I guess I wasn't clear. The bottom line is the 6/8 bell lined up with the Arara bell. It seems that the Ewe bell is EXACTLY the same.Pretty cool. I still have a hard time relating the clave to the bell pattern in the arara/ewe music.
PC
Berimbau wrote:Early recordings of a LOT of Mardis Gras are NOT in clave! I think that Professor Longhair and a few other New Orleans R & B artists were really MOST responsible for the NOLA penchant for clave. Now when I DO hear clave played in modern NOLA music, the clave is usually the central rhythmic figure without the contrapuntal elements that David referenced in his post. I would have to say much the same regarding James Brown and other funk players of the 60's and 70's. If you find it there, it will be greatly simplified and undoubtably learned from a recording.
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