zata -> RE: Mario Escudero (Jul. 8 2007 10:28:54)
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>> Gm7 would not be any more "modern"than Gm barre, since it (Gm7) is in Escudero's "Impetu", and it also appears that he was one of the first to ever use in the "por medio"key. << Sevenths are always more modern, in flamenco at least. Before Paco, you learned falsetas from a teacher, and used them accompanying, or built your own solos, no one was teaching whole compositions. Escudero was ahead of his time, and incorporated contemporary harmonies in his solos that he didn’t use in accompanying. You’re probably right about Gm7, but the barred Gm had been used before as a passing chord, especially in falsetas, though never as a substitute for Bb in cante accompaniment, partly because there are no styles of soleá or siguiriya that have the peculiar descent to G that is so enhanced by Gm (it’s hard to go back to Bb once you’e heard how “right” the Gm sounds). With rare exceptions, it’s newer styles of tangos and bulerías that benefit most from the use of this chord/position. >> I would venture to ask Zata's opinion about "Impetu"specifically, if she consider's her teachers composition to be traditional flamenco guitar? She already pointed out that his chords were "exotic"for the time, I would not disagree. The issue I had was if they were "jazz inspired". << I’m not qualified to talk about jazz in any academic way, and can only say when something “feels” like jazz to me. Impetu is amalgamated phrygian...it doesn’t get much more flamenco than that, despite some novel harmonies. >> Regarding the modal rumba. If it is the same A Chili bum I find myself and friend jamming on in juergas, it is not a Dorian Vamp, it would be considered Aeolian. AT least when you take into account the melody AND the chords. (Am-G). More famous is Paco's Buana Buana King Kong. But maybe we mean a ifferent type of rumba jam. Dm-G IS Dorian more like that tune by Ketama. Toma ketama something or other. Similar to Oye como Va by Santana. Another famous modal vamp is Caballo Negro by Sanlucar. That is mixolydian. << I have no idea what scale is the Aeolian, but years ago someone told me A Chili Bum was Dorian, and since the sound is so distinctive, the label stuck. Buana Buana King Kong (I bet some people reading this think we’re kidding about the title) is clearly (to my ears) the same scale. As I mentioned before, there’s also a rumba by Arte4 called Mari Tere in the same scale. Caballo Negro is another bit I hadn’t considered (I can’t contemplate Caballo Negro without hearing Niño Miguel’s “Vals Flamenco” in my head...Niño Miguel became famous overnight thanks to his Vals, and a couple of months later, Sanlúcar surfaced with Caballo, vastly inferior IMO). >> Sanlucar is a good example of a guy doing very Modern flamenco, like on Tauromagia, but not doing any jazzy stuff. In fact it was specifically mentioned before that Sanlucar talked about the importance of modes in flamenco rather than modulating harmonies. To me, pure modality, like more traditional Rondenas for guitar, or siguiryas for cante, is the "color"Zata is refereing too. Not any borrowing from other keys, very sweet and pure modality. I would tend to agree that the more borrowing and modulating done, them more the ear loses the cadence and tonic. << The deformation of the color of flamenco has been swift but smooth, like removing a beach one grain of sand at a time, but very quickly. There was no point at which you could point and say “that’s where they lost the script”, and yet, here we are, staring at our empty hands wondering how it happened. Son de la Frontera, the group from Morón, makes a point of using only traditional harmony, and have been outrageously successful with rather simple music. I suspect part of the collective ear would like to hear more of those sounds, and let jazz be jazz (that probably sounds closed-minded, but it’s my true belief).
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