by jorge » Tue Aug 15, 2006 1:09 pm
Afrocubarico,
I didn't get to see Jimmy Delgado and Pequeno Johnny play, I was over at the rumba and couldn't tear myself away!
About the rumba, if you want to play, hay que meter mano ahora! Don't wait til next year, you never know what might happen. A few years ago, Mayor Guilliani and his boys decided to shut down the Central Park rumba, and there was no rumba in the park for 3 or 4 years. Now that he is gone, the rumba is back con cojones. We are usually at Central Park (the path by the lake near the bridge, around 72nd St - follow your ears) and/or at Orchard Beach every nice Sunday that it is warm enough, mostly the same cats every week, starting 3 or 4 pm.
Practice playing claves along with some rumba records at home until you can lock in with the guagua and tres dos (segundo) drum. You can tell your timing is right when you can play soft and not be able to hear the clave on the record because you are exactly on top of them. Then bring your claves to the park and jump right in. Listen to the drums and guagua, and keep your timing straight (no cruce la clave!). Relax, but play as if the whole rumba depends on you (it does). Sing some coro, the lead singer and the crowd will usually give you the coros. Playing clave and singing coro at the same time comes with time and practice, practice it at home first. Watch the good drummers, try to see how their part fits into the whole rhythm, ask us to show you parts, don't be shy.
Then go home and practice the part (with a good rumba record) until your hands do it automatically, and come back to the park and play a drum next time. Don't try to learn more than one part in a week, but learn it right. Usually the clave, tres dos, and guagua are the easiest parts to learn at first. Practicing at home, start with a slower tempo, like a guaguanco Matancero, or a yambu Habanero, then gradually increase your speed as you become more comfortable with the part. The rumbas in the park are usually really fast (too fast sometimes!), and you need to practice at home to get up to speed.
Hope to see you out there the next few weeks, before it gets cold again. Sigue tocando la rumba que no termina!
Jorge
Edited By jorge on 1155647932