onile wrote:Alafia Mr. Grumpy!
I hope that you are well and abundantly blessed!........Many blessings!
Onile!
zaragenca wrote:Saludos a todos, the situation would depend on the setting, becouse in the Guaguanco, the 'Quinto' would be small,(9/8), in order to reach the high frequency, and in the Conjuntos the percussionists were not trying to 'quintiar', but the play the main articulation/pattern,so they would have a bigger size,(and applying presure with one hand), would reach different chromatic/tones,(as I'm doing in the video)....then later the,'Quinto,' was incorporated as a normal feature in the musica groups...Dr. Zaragemca
BMac wrote:Everybody wants somebody else to keep time and play a solid rhythm. I am that somebody else. I like it like that. Everybody seems to think top percussion and improv is where the real talent lies ... I say F that ... without my solid groove, that top percussion falls on its face.
...who naively believes the only real talent lies in top percussion ... go ahead kid, take the lime light! ... it's just an illusion. I once heard a bass guitarist say that while the girls all watch the lead guitarist play whiney senseless improvs, they shake their butts to the sound of his bass. I know what I want to see when I play.
BMac
BMac wrote:Funny you ask why.
I was wondering why to myself last night.
I came to this.
If I were the last man on earth, I would first choose a conga (segundo). It is the most versatile. Agreed. Next, in this lonely earth scenario, I would choose a tumba in keeping with my love for the lower tones ... can't intellectualize that, just how it is.
But I'm not the last man on earth. My tumba is the only one I have seen played in my community. There just aren't many congas around here at all. Somebody's gotta bring the tumba to the party. People like it when I play my tumba. I like having my own sound space when I play with others. So if I can have only one drum in a scenario where other people can have drums, they'll likely choose everything but tumbas, so I choose a tumba first. I choose a dununba over a djembe for the same reason. Everybody wants somebody else to keep time and play a solid rhythm. I am that somebody else. I like it like that. Everybody seems to think top percussion and improv is where the real talent lies ... I say F that ... without my solid groove, that top percussion falls on its face. In this populated earth scenario, I choose the conga (segundo) second ... to go with my tumba and to fill out the foundation of rhythm that I bring to the party.
In either scenario, I choose a quinto last. In the lonely earth scenario, I'll want to crack some highs once in a while to scare the pigeons in the park and to listen to the echoes off the tree line across the river. In the populated earth scenario, I'll loan the quinto to some beginner who naively believes the only real talent lies in top percussion ... go ahead kid, take the lime light! ... it's just an illusion. I once heard a bass guitarist say that while the girls all watch the lead guitarist play whiney senseless improvs, they shake their butts to the sound of his bass. I know what I want to see when I play.
BMac
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