davidpenalosa wrote:I don’t mean to be beating a dead horse here, but awhile back there was some question as to the importance of two American musicians who extensively used the rhythmic figure tresillo. I recently discovered a 1995 series of ten US postage stamps honoring jazz pioneers. Jelly Roll Morton was one of the ten. I also found a 1997 series of eight stamps honoring American composers and conductors. Louis Moreao Gottchalk was one of the honored eight.
The influence of the Cuban Habanera on Gottchalk and Morton led to tresillo becoming a staple of American popular music.
-David
pcastag wrote:OMG! I just stumbled on this one! This is hilarious! Congamyk you have truly exposed yourself! Dude, you are hilarious! 90% percents of jazz r&b and rock comes from European influences?
davidpenalosa wrote:I think you may be right. How about that? You and are both in that 00.0000000000000000000001% !!!
-David
congamyk wrote:pcastag wrote:OMG! I just stumbled on this one! This is hilarious! Congamyk you have truly exposed yourself! Dude, you are hilarious! 90% percents of jazz r&b and rock comes from European influences?
I think you expose your whack politics every time you disagree with someone.
The chords, melodies, language and all of the instruments used for all musical genres that started in the US (R&B, jazz, Rock) are from Europe.
If you have a problem with that or it harms your politics I could care less. We can argue about how close a certain rhythm sounds when compared to a rhythm from a past culture, but the chords, melodies, instruments and language (English) are all of European descent.
pcastag wrote:So again, I do question your 90% data.
pcastag wrote:PS Whack politics? Wow you're really going out on a limb here. Where the hell in this forum have I EVER mentioned politics! Or my political affiliation! For all you know I could be a die-hard southern christian conservative republican.
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