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Cuba based rap duo, Zona Franka, blends traditional rhythms with the grit and swagger of hip-hop and rap vocal phrasings. Their clever shout choruses create instant tropical dance classics using their unique self-titled "changui con flow" style.
Authentic Latin Music Catalog for SYNC - TV & Film Music

The Roots of Timba, Pt I - 1948-Tumba palo cucuyé

1948 Arsenio Rodríguez - Tumba palo cucuyé
0xx0 xx0x xx0x 0xxx
3-2 son clave
0xx0 xx00 xxx0 000x
MIDI example
bassist:
Lázaro Prieto
source:
Legendary Sessions

notes: The opening coro and piano solo are played over a bass tumbao which strongly marks the clave. It reinforces the coro and then answers it with a quick 4-note figure. The section that comes after the piano solo is unusual for two reasons. First, almost all of the solos on Arsenio's recordings are followed by a bloque, but in this case a second coro comes in before the bloque. The other oddity is that the second coro comes in on the pickups to the 2-side and implies 2-3 clave, (if you're inclined to hear it that way), but the second coro is only repeated two and a half times before the piano takes over again briefly and builds up to the bloque. Here's the whole section, with a MIDI example which isolates the transcribed parts:

C=Coro, P=Piano, B=Bloque

0xx0 xx0x xx0x 0xxx 3-2 son clave
xxxx xCCC CxxC CCCC coro 2: qué cucuyé, hachero tumba
CCCx xCCC CxxC CCCC
palo a ver - qué cucuyé, hachero tumba
CCCx xCCC Cxxx xxxx
palo a ver - qué cucuyé
xxxx xxxx xPPP Pxxx
signature piano lead-in figure
BBBx xBBB xxxx Bxxx
bloque
xxBx xxxx BxBx BBxx
bloque continued audio example - MIDI example

Arsenio influenced timba in many very tangible ways -- the addition of the congas, piano and horn section; the concepts of the mambo, melodic and clave-aligned basslines, and bloques; the incorporation of rumba and Afrocuban influences; the use of Havana's barrios and street language as the subjects of lyrics, and so on. But the passage above illustrates an equally important but much more intangible commonality between Arsenio's music and timba. There's the playful approach to the clave and the predilection for twisting it around in wonderful and unpredictable ways, but the hardest quality to pin down is the attitude. Listen to the audio example again. After the bloque goes out of its way to disrupt the groove, the last four notes of the horns pound out the clave triumphantly, and then, before the coristas can finish their phrase, the horns roar back in with a funky growl. Compare that lusty growl to the one at end of this 1994 passage from Charanga Habanera (source). Arsenio's DNA is all over this crime scene!

Tuesday, 22 March 2011, 07:32 PM