The
Clave Page
'Claves' is the name for an instrument
used in Caribbean music, composed of two short but thick sticks,
usually of as hard a wood as possible, often rosewood. They have
great cutting power despite their small size, and play a very important
role in certain types of music, especially Latin music.
The Term 'clave' also refers to the
rhythms played on these instruments, and to the concept which is
embodied in these rhythms. The clave acts as a sort of backbone,
a guide, if you will, to which the other instruments and the dancers
synchronize themselves..If the other rhythms line up properly with
the clave rhythm, the music is said to be "in clave".
Traditionally the clave rhythm was always heard on the claves, but
nowadays, a timbalero or other percussionist may be playing the
clave rhythm on a wood or plastic block, along with other parts.
If you watch, for example, Horacio
El Negro play drumset, you will even see him play the clave
rhythm with his left foot, using a special pedal apparatus called
a "Gajate" pedal, named after "Gajate"
Richie Garcia, who invented it. The first person I personally
saw using the Gajate pedal to play clave was Alex
Acuna. Michael
Spiro made excellent use of it when Talking Drums did a workshop
at a Guitar Center here. Quite a few people are doing it now.
So, people have taken the clave concept
and developed its application, but it has been around for a very
long time, longer than written history can document. My music therapist
friend Kwasi Siaw-Lattey , from
Ghana tells me that they have the same type of concept there, but
that it is known as the 'timeline'. Suffice it to say that the clave
concept has African roots, and while it is more obvious in Latin
music, it is also often present in funk, Hip Hop, R&B, and many
other styles, although it doesn't always appear with the claves
themselves, or starting at the same place in the loop. It is also
interesting to note that many of the popular West African djembe
and djun djun dance rhythms such as Fanga and Yankadi Macru also
are 'in clave', although claves (the sticks) are not actually used..
Clave Patterns
There
are different forms of clave rhythms, some which fit into 4/4 and
some into 6/8, and so on. The two forms of clave we will look at
today include the 4/4 Son clave and the Rumba
clave, in both forward and reverse versions.
Musicians often write clave patterns as 2 measures
or bars of 4/4 time, but dancers will often see this same length
of loop as a single 8 count. We will be counting here as two bars
of 4/4.
About "forward" and "reverse"
clave: Forward (three-two) and reverse (two-three) clave
patterns are really the same pattern started from different points
in the loop. This is true for Son, Rumba, and 6/8 clave patterns.
Son Clave
Son Clave is, as one might expect, the clave pattern used with the
Cuban rhythm known as the Son, a sort of grandparent of modern Salsa.
This is also the main clave pattern for the Cha-Cha, Merengue, the
Guajira, and a number of other rhythms. It is here counted as two
bars of 4/4.
Forward
Son Clave (Click to Listen)
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Reverse
Son Clave As you can see and hear, we simply started the
loop above halfway through to get "reverse"
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(Reverse)
Son Clave with cascara
It isn't crucial to line up with every single
note of the clave. As you see in the example below of son clave
with cascara, only four of the five notes are lined up with
the ride pattern. (In the rumba clave example, ALL the notes
line up with the ride pattern. See below.)
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For intermediate students who already know the basics -
Try this: Play the green part with your strong hand and
the red part with the other hand, then, when you get comfortable,
switch hands. Learn to go back and forth, playing clave with either
hand while playing cascara with the other one. Practice slowly at
first. Speed will come automatically with familiarity.
Rumba Clave
Forward Rhumba
Clave
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Reverse Rhumba
This is the way you might hear rumba clave most often zx used in
Guaguanco..
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Reverse rumba with cascara counted in 4
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Listen to the rumba
pattern with cascara (normally 2-3, we recorded and represent
it that way here. Notice that we counted it here as one bar of sixteenth
notes, as often happens.)
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These LP
jam blocks at right are found in a great many percussionists'
setups, and folks often play clave patterns on them. In the
mp3 example above, however, we played the example above using
a couple of actual wooden blocks..many different sound sources
will work..
There is a proto-ride pattern,
which contains all the points of clave plus downbeats and upbeats.
By playing this pattern and simply altering the tones without
altering the timing, one can play clave related patterns all
day without losing the groove. it works for conga, djembe ashiko,
timba bongo, etc...Coming soon
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