NormanKliman -> RE: The Cante accompaniment challenge!! Finally (Jul. 12 2009 23:13:55)
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Hi Munin, quote:
how the hell do I know which chord to play at which point of the cante? By following the words to know which line of verse is being sung. At any given point, the singer's notes determine the chords, but in a more general sense the series of chords is almost always going to be one of a few variations on a single pattern. The chords that Jason mentioned are the ones most often used in these variations. In blues, the V chord (a G chord in C blues) creates maximum harmonic tension (it makes you want to hear the guitar go back to C). In this kind of flamenco (Phrygian), you can think of the II chord (B flat por medio, C por granaína, G por Levante, etc.) this way, because it "wants" to resolve to the tonic (the I chord: A por medio, B por granaína, F sharp por Levante, etc.) So you have to know what line of verse the singer is singing. If there are three lines of verse, the II chord might be used in the first line, it's almost never used in the second line, and it will "always" be used in the third line. For four-line verse, you're "never" going to use the II chord in the third line. It's logical to save that moment of maximum harmonic tension for the end. Hope you see what I mean![:)]
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