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Staff: Bill Tilford
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Grupos: Tirso Duarte
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Grupos: Charanga Habaner... : 8. El bla bla bla
Grupos: Pupy y los que S... : Tirso Duarte

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All
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 - Part II - The Conga Marchas of the 70s

Sabroseao con la Ritmo, the "missing link" in the development of Ritmo Oriental's arranging style, also appears to mark a shift in the style of their conguero, Juan Claro Bravo.

Throughout most of the track he plays variations of the generic conga tumbao:

(s=slap, o=tone. x=manoteo)
xxsx xxoo xxsx xxoo
generic conga tumbao

But during the middle section of Sabroseao, Juan Claro plays a marcha, now commonly called bota, which was used extensively by Los Van Van and later become extremely important in the timba of Paulito FG, Manolito y su Trabuco and others.

xxsx xsxs xxsx xsxs bota básica
xxsx xsxs xxsx x0xo bota variation 2
source: The Tomás Cruz Conga Method, Volume 2

By the time La Ritmo recorded again, Claro had all but abandoned the standard marcha for the flexible new guaguancó-based approach that he would use throughout the rest of his career. Here's a typical example from la Ritmo's Baile del azúcar:

xxsx xs00 xoxx xs00 Ritmo Oriental -- Tomasito
sources: RO: Guarachando -- Tomás Cruz Conga Method, Vol. 2

El Yulo had already introduced a similar approach in Los Van Van's 1969 songo recordings, but Juan Claro tended to be stay closer to guaguancó while Yulo's relied more on creative melodic combinations of open tones.

xxsx oo00 ooxs xxxs LVV -- Tomasito
sources: LVV: write EGREM -- Tomás Cruz Conga Method, Vol. 2

cuban music, musica cubanaFor further study, The Tomás Cruz Conga Method, Volume II (co-authored by myself, Orlando Fiol and Mike Gerald) has a full chapter devoted to "songo" with written and video tutorials on a wide variety of Los Van Van and Ritmo Oriental marchas as well as some of Tomasito's own creations.

Meanwhile, Irakere's first conguero, Lázaro "Tato" Alfonso, had his own take on the re-rumbafication of the congas in Cuban pop. Irakere called their version batún-batá. Tato played the congas with one hand and a bell with the other while Oscar Valdés played an interlocking part on an Iyá. We'll have more on this a little later.

Getting Our Bearings

With the "perfect storm" upon us, let's try once again to figure out year it is! We know that Los Van Van Volume I came out in late 1969, and that the next LP by each our three groups didn't come out until 1974. All we have to go on are the EPA numbers of the undated singles and EPs.

6163 - LVV's first EP (1969)
6169 - LVV's second EP (1969)
6233 - Ritmo Oriental's EP Sabroseao con la Ritmo
6281 - LVV's single Aquí se enciende la candela
6332 - LVV's single Y que se sepa
6473 - LVV's single Chirrín chirrán (included on Vol. 2 - 1974)
6556 - LVV's single Llegué llegué (included on Vol. 3 - 1974)

(Chirrín chirrán appeared on Vol. III - Vol. II & III were both released in 1974 - therefore 6473 most likely came out in 1974 as well)

cuban music, musica cubana
EPA-6233 - The Sabroseao EP - 1970? 1971?

Draw your own conclusions -- my guesses are that Sabroseao was either late 1970 or early 1971, and that it was in 1972 that Los Van Van released its first truly great track - Aquí se enciende la candela -- a breakthrough whose lyrical reference to "lighting the fire" is apropo in many ways.

Tuesday, 22 March 2011, 07:32 PM