by Tone » Fri Jul 27, 2007 12:09 pm
I am really enjoying this post. Thanks guys for the great infos and debate.
I still maintain that writing in 32nd is useless pursuit for two reason.
One is because of the very essence of feel. Which gives to the bar cycle a certain wave like form ,weaving in and out of the grid. I believe it is a continuous form and not a discrete one, for which a grid can only be an approximation and won't give you the information if you are slighlty ahead or behind. Also, like as been said here, another crucial information linked to the subposition in the bar is accents. In Brazilian traditional rhythms there are rhythms that are written exactly the same but have different names depending on the accents.
Now of course in 32nd with a new accent notation ( to be developed) you could get a pretty good approximation to play the same pattern over and over again but it wouldn't inform you as to how to play variations or improvisation.
You could in theory cover every 32nd and assign a position and an accent, but I think that is were the feel really comes into play in its highly complex and dynamic way. Now those things exist in computers, for example in Logic it is called a groove template. They do all that and they are useless, believe me I have tried!
Take Samba which has a fairly simple swing. Listen to a few sambas from different people, different times and different regions. Not two have the same swing! It all depends of the energy of the song, the particular swing of the percussionists and then the combination of swings of different persons in the band. Every body is playing against everybody else's swing. The whole thing is alive! It changes with time within the song depending of the intensity of the moment, the variations of tempo, what instrument is to the front,...
Needless to say it is impossible to write down.
I would grant you that you could write in 32nd a template which would be pretty useful for the very beginning of your learning but then you would really have to breathe life into it and be prepared to adapt it. This thing has to be elastic!
Maybe you could write it on plastic paper and stretch it when you need it!
There is a real life example of that grid in the guaguanco, when players start with only playing the heel toes Matanza style.
HTTH
RLRL
Clave is another example which provide swing information but only for a few sub dibvisions, and not two people play clave exactly the same. You probably wouldn't use the exact same displacements for a Yambu or a fast guaguanco, and you might change it from day to day and then also react to the other players style,...it is endless.
I guess what I am trying to say is notation and grid are only useful to help us understand and remember but they can never describe such a complex, ever changing, and alive thing such as music. And it is important to understand that so that you know that you have to be flexible and also free to use your flair and artistic feelings.
tone