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joevidetto

 

Posts: 191
Joined: Jun. 15 2013
 

Flamenco Keys 

Recently had a lesson with Roberto - 3 thumbs up - he's an excellent teacher with a wealth of knowledge and experience.

Prior to working with Roberto, I had worked for years with another amazing flamenco teacher, Enrique Vargas (who transcribed the Paco Almoraima album and and several multi-book anthologies of flamenco music from the masters - with microscopic accuracy) - here you can find his books for sale (https://vgediciones.com/)

It occurred to me that in the transcription of flamenco music, there are some differing ways of describing the key one is in

In western music - we describe a key as beginning with a scale, and building chords using the notes in that scale - which become the 7 diatonic chords. When you play ALTERATIONS of some of those chords - are you still in the same key ? I think of it that way - you are still in the key of C, but adding color and variation with altered tones, and you must modify your diatonic scale to accomodate and prevent clashing with the colors you add. So if you plan C minor pentatonic over a diatonic progresssion in C major scale, it can work. You may not want to linger on certain notes, but it can sound really good.

The way it is approached in Enrique Varga's books (and I hope I express this correctly), is that if you want to use the western way of beginning with a particular scale and building the diatonic chords, in flamenco, the 'diatonic scale' for "por medio" is built on "A Hijaz" (A Bb C# D E F G A) - or the 5th mode of D harmonic minor. So modulations to F major (relative minor is D harmonic minor) are often used in the coplas for por medio.

Building the diatonic chords from the A hijaz scale results in 7 diatonic chords that are essentially "por medio". Now, that does not mean that some of those chords should not be changed in order to create stable flamenco progressions that resolve on A add b2 (not b9), which is so often the resolution chord in flamenco. The flamenco cadence - what 'key' is that in, and what is the 'diatonic' scale from which it is derived ? The closest is A hijaz. So for this cadence, the closest way to describe it is that 3rd diatonic chord of A hijaz is MODIFIED to C major for the sake of accomodating the Andalusian cadence. When this is done, for a moment, you must use A PHRYGIAN to avoid that clash that staying in A Hijaz with the C# would cause. Now when you use that C natural over the 3 chord - are you still in A Hijaz with an ALTERED note, or are you in A Phrygian ? With my thinking, and I believe as is consistent with the Enrique Vargas books, you are STILL in a MODE of A HIJAZ, but over that 3 chord - you should use the 'mode' of A hijaz with a flat 3rd - which can also be described as A phrygian. BUT, if you are resloving to A add b9 (which is a MAJOR chord), and NOT A minor or a variation of it, you are clearly in A Hijaz and not A phrygian - if not, what key are you in ? A phrygian is a way to describe the group of notes you use for that one chord, but you are NOT in A phrygian. You would have to be resloving to A minor to consider being in Phrigian mode. Modes, in my way of thinking, are defined by the notes they use, AND most importantly by the resolution chord (sometimes but less frequently the starting chord). And "por medio" is best described diatonically with the notes A Bb C# D E F G A, which is called "A Hijaz".

The theoretical terminology can be somewhat arbitrary and approached in different ways - but it is helpful to either have a common vocabulary, or understand what your flamenco teachers or friends mean when they use these words.

How do you think of por medio ? Does your terminlogy or way of thinking differ from that above ? How so ?
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 24 2021 15:45:26
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to joevidetto

quote:

How do you think of por medio ? Does your terminlogy or way of thinking differ from that above ? How so ?


Unfortunately we have had massive discussions on this topic, not all of which ended very nicely. There is nothing “wrong” with what you learned and are thinking, but I feel that it is convoluting multiple disciplines and theory approaches for the sake of communication of flamenco (which has it’s own discipline and language far removed from what you describe, and never needed it to function) to people that MIGHT have knowledge of OTHER disciplines and theory such as western classical tonal music, and Jazz (again both use very different approaches and terminology). I normally find conflicts in delivering my personal view of it all simply because the people arguing are also using conflated terms and approaches with their OWN personal understanding they already had.

In other words, if you are well versed in Jazz, then I would approach flamenco with a modal concept where each chords or scale or melody is a single 13th chord and explain it as such. But if one is versed in doing harmonic analysis CORRECTLY of Bach chorales and such, using western tonal harmony, I could explain flamenco a different way. The problem I have found is the people I am talking to might not understand either of those that well, so it’s frustrating how to move forward. As and example, in one thread there was a very intelligent gentleman who insisted that the harmonic minor scale contains implications of the existence of the harmony VII natural dominant chord. For example the A harmonic minor ABCDEFG# somehow allows for the existence of a G7 chord. The very definition of the scale does not allow this, even though music that might use the harmonic minor scale might also use OTHER scales such as A natural minor, which in fact DOES use the G7...so we stand arguing about the definition and what it means “harmonic minor scale”.

It is no coincidence your own description of “hi jazz”, and your attempts to justify the C natural chord in that context is hittting the exact same rocky road, for the exact same reasons. What I have tried to do, quite simply, is to point people toward the direction of “labeling” music, or music passages, as either “tonal” as in in a “key”, OR “modal”, but not really BOTH at the same time. The entire thing is very frustrating because to me the situation is black and white, but to most others it is very “grey”. So when you ask about the outnotes and colorful harmony, there are specific situations that this addressed but you need to approach from one angle or the other. NOT BOTH at the same time. If your question was looked at from a jazz view, then the key doesn’t matter. The chords exist as stand alone modes. If it was addressed from the Tonal harmony view, then you are dealing with either a “tonicization” using secondary dominant function, OR, a “modulation”. The difference between these two would have to do with context ie...what happens NEXT or before the passage in question. That is what learning proper harmonic analysis (of Bach chorales for example) teaches you. And there exist excellent examples where the situation is deliberately ambiguous. But what is the point of going down that road if the BASIC concept is not yet understood?

Flamenco already exists in a form with it’s own terminology and methods for learning that don’t need this western type analysis. To make it worse, despite the clear tonal harmony techniques at play, EASTERN elements are always (even if superficially) present in the overall sound of flamenco. In other words, it would be possible to translate flamenco into a structure of the closest Indians ragas, talas, or the Makkams etc. But there, again, before doing that EVERYBODY needs to understand those systems at a pretty deep level in order to not translate some concept wrongly.

For your specific question about hi jazz scale and it’s chords, I would say first understand, fully, how the basic KEY OF D MINOR works and accounts for all of it’s chords and modulations and scalar melodies. The saddest of all keys, but plenty of examples to look at. Flamenco is not really operating very different than that, at least where the accidentals come in and really matter.

_____________________________

CD's and transcriptions available here:
www.ricardomarlow.com
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 24 2021 20:54:23
 
mark indigo

 

Posts: 3626
Joined: Dec. 5 2007
 

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to joevidetto

quote:

The way it is approached in Enrique Varga's books (and I hope I express this correctly), is that if you want to use the western way of beginning with a particular scale and building the diatonic chords, in flamenco, the 'diatonic scale' for "por medio" is built on "A Hijaz" (A Bb C# D E F G A) - or the 5th mode of D harmonic minor.


Isn't "Hijaz" a Middle Eastern/Arabic Maquam? Do they have harmony and chords? I often wondered why Enrique Vargas used that term for the scale. Maquam would be a third musical system in addition to Western Tonal and Jazz.

_____________________________

  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 24 2021 21:49:08
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to mark indigo

quote:

ORIGINAL: mark indigo

quote:

The way it is approached in Enrique Varga's books (and I hope I express this correctly), is that if you want to use the western way of beginning with a particular scale and building the diatonic chords, in flamenco, the 'diatonic scale' for "por medio" is built on "A Hijaz" (A Bb C# D E F G A) - or the 5th mode of D harmonic minor.


Isn't "Hijaz" a Middle Eastern/Arabic Maquam? Do they have harmony and chords? I often wondered why Enrique Vargas used that term for the scale. Maquam would be a third musical system in addition to Western Tonal and Jazz.


Since hijaz is not equal tempered, it is based on a different tuning system, it is an approximation that is pointing the “Arabic sound”. There has been various pushes in flamencology to account for flamenco sounding stuff to derive from Greeks and Arabs specifically. Since we learned the Turkish tetrachords and such was already considered BS by actual Turkish musicians (for example) I think it is safe to say these false equivalences should all be taken with a grain of salt. The modern western term in use is simply “phrygian dominant”.

_____________________________

CD's and transcriptions available here:
www.ricardomarlow.com
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 24 2021 22:05:26
 
joevidetto

 

Posts: 191
Joined: Jun. 15 2013
 

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to joevidetto

quote:

Isn't "Hijaz" a Middle Eastern/Arabic Maquam? Do they have harmony and chords? I often wondered why Enrique Vargas used that term for the scale. Maquam would be a third musical system in addition to Western Tonal and Jazz.


Studying with Enrique Vargas, if one reads his theory book volume 2, flamenco has a strong Maquam influence, and there are different names for groups of notes with 4 or 5 tones. Putting 2 of these groups of notes (or "ajna") together creates the flamenco modes. No, there are no chords or harmonies until we build them (and they were added later)

Originally in Maquam music, there were no chords or harmonies, just single note melodies (I can't speak for microtones, I don't know much about that aspect, other than that there are smaller and more intervals than in the western scales)

So as Maquam ideas - single note melodies, were brought into flamenco, where chords were used. In order to accompany these Maquam melodies with chords, and lay it out with western ideas of diatonic progressions, he does so by using the Maqam building blocks and creating the harmonies diatonically, then altering the chords - for stability - where necessary to accomodate the Andalusian cadence.

Here is one concrete exampe: from the "ajna" the scales are derived; here are the ajna used to create the por medio Hijaz mode, which Enrique states is the most common scale in flamenco:

HIJAZ (tetrachord) - 1/2 step, 1 and 1/2 step, 1/2 step - (A Bb C# D)
Nahawand (tetrachord) - whole step, 1/2 step, whole step (D E F G)

Maquam Hijaz - A Bb C# D E F G A

And with the other Ajna, he goes on to describe the different Flamenco modes.

So there are 7 modes in por arriba would be

A Maquam Hijaz
A Maquam Shanaz
A Maquam Kurd, etc.
A Maquam Saba ZamZam
A Maquam Saba ZamZam Extended
A Maquam Zanjaran
A Maquam Zanjaran b5

I'm wondering if anyone else has a deep understanding of Enrique's approach.

In Enrique's book, this is well-developed, well-documented, and consistent. I am not a music major, and cannot say I understand the other approaches to Flamenco. I will say that looking at a chord in isolation as it's own separate key or mode doesn't work for me (right now), and feels very disjointed. That might make a lot of sense - it could be my level of sophistication and expertise hasn't reached that point. My ear hears chords that follow each other and my mind wants at least 2 or more to belong to a key, tonal center, mode, whatever you care to call it to conceptualize the MOVEMENT. My working memory is too small to hear a bar of 4 beats as it's own key.


When I work with other teachers and players, I'd like to be able to 'speak their language" when discussing Flamenco progressions and substitutions.

If you've studied with Enrique, you will be familiar with the approach above.
So that I can speak the "same language" regarding theory with other teachers and players on this website - can you share a well-documented reference of the terminology that other teachers and advanced players use when discussing Flamenco progressions ?

CAVEAT - with a good ear, and a good teacher - all can be learned without any music theory terminology....until we care to communicate with each other and compose based on a theoretical basis

When I work with anyone else, I'd like to be sure I'm speaking the same language - otherewise, there is confusion and chaos lol...not really - but a lot of time wasted on semantics and not on playing : )
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 25 2021 1:09:03
 
joevidetto

 

Posts: 191
Joined: Jun. 15 2013
 

[Deleted] 

Post has been moved to the Recycle Bin at Jan. 25 2021 2:02:51
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 25 2021 1:12:38
 
kitarist

Posts: 1732
Joined: Dec. 4 2012
 

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to joevidetto

quote:

So as Maquam ideas - single note melodies, were brought into flamenco, where chords were used. In order to accompany these Maquam melodies with chords, and lay it out with western ideas of diatonic progressions, he does so by using the Maqam building blocks


Sorry to say, but we looked at this fairly recently. I am afraid he likely created a completely artificial construct starting from a belief or idea (turns out incorrect) and working backwards to fit the pieces even if they don't fit. And the whole tetrachord business (more popular with theorists in the last century) was always just a nod to the ancient greeks by constructing - willing - a historical and conceptual connection where one did not exist.

You might say "So what if it is completely artificial and ahistorical, if it is at least consistent and complete representation?" Sure, IF it is a consistent and complete representation of flamenco (I doubt that), its users can probably communicate with and understand each other; but what about everyone else? And why do that instead of learning the actual thing?

_____________________________

Konstantin
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 25 2021 2:32:41
 
Piwin

Posts: 3566
Joined: Feb. 9 2016
 

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to joevidetto

I think this is the thread people are mentioning, if you want to read through it:
http://www.foroflamenco.com/tm.asp?m=320753&mpage=1&p=&tmode=1&smode=1&key=scales

(edit: reading Ricardo's response, apparently this isn't the thread they're referencing lol my bad ^^)

I'm sure there's plenty of value in looking into this kind of thing (and I personally enjoy these kinds of discussions), but if your purpose is really to just speak the language and communicate with flamenco players, I'd drop all of it. The common flamenco vocabulary doesn't include terms like maqam, alterations, flat 2s, 9s, 11s or whatever else. It's also not bothered with the fact that frigio doesn't perfectly line up with what that term means in other musical disciplines.

This isn't a diss on Vargas. I haven't read his book. Just that when Vargas tries to import maqams, or when Sanlucar tries to import old Greek music or whatever, it should be understood that they are proposing their own thing. It's not the norm, and certainly not needed if your purpose is just to be able to communicate with flamenco performers. I mean...if you want to avoid confusion and chaos when speaking with other flamenco performers...yeah, don't bring up maqams
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 25 2021 11:20:06
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to joevidetto

quote:

HIJAZ (tetrachord) - 1/2 step, 1 and 1/2 step, 1/2 step - (A Bb C# D)


The thread I think this came up in detail about makkams started as a discussion about Solfegio (edit, no I found it though). Anyway, the quote above has to be understood as a WESTERN APPROXIMATION...you don’t want to deal with micro tones but it is NO SMALL DETAIL. The reason is, the hijaz that starts on a proper “A” equivalent pitch, does not in fact use a “Bb” in the equal tempered sense. It is SHARP of that pitch. Some western minded folks would actually rather call it B natural, and if possible bend the pitch flat a hair. So the TRUE note hijaz requires, relative to an A note, does not really exist on a piano. You could cheat it on guitar by de tuning the B string for example and hearing it relative to the fretted or open A. However there is another problem....the C# is also not a C# ...it needs to be flat a hair. This one might be easier for guitar players to hear as we often detune the third of a major chord where ever it is in the voice to sweeten it up for a certain song since the equal tempered one is annoying. While that might seem like a minor grevience, the truth is in the Arab world it is a BIG deal that the distance between the “Bb” and the “C#” is much smaller than the western augmented second. The reason it is a “big deal” is because they actually use the equal tempered version notes in OTHER CASES...so the ear has to get used to the fact the micro tones are different so they are playing the CORRECT makam. (In other words you won’t need B half flat and Bb in the same makkam, but you need to know if you use one or the other, it is designed to fit a specific makam).

Next the tetra chord construction is based on a theoretical adecemic concept imposed on the systems and not an actual method for construction of makkams by musicians themselves. I frustratingly realized this during one long discussion about makkams with a guy who actually plays the stuff. So with that in mind, what Vargas is laying out (I assume) is the western equivalent modes of the D harmonic minor or mixture:

DEFGABbC#
EFGABbC#D zanjaran b5? Just a guess we need the notes.
FGABbC#DE
GABbC#DEF
ABbC#DEFG Hijaz
BbC#DEFGA
C#DEFGABb

Without knowing the equivalent note names, I am not sure which specific modes Vargas wants his reader to think important. The above is a guess, but “zanjaran vs zanjaran b5” implies mode mixture. (If my guess was correct then EFGABC#D is melodic minor mode 2 so his list would be a mode mixture).

While it is interesting to point out similarity of western modes used by flamenco to Arabic ones, it is important to understand they are superficial approximations, and dealing with equal tempered western instruments like guitars, it is a little more useful to know the modern church mode terminology. I might spend the time to look up those makkams to give the notes unless you have them already.

Read the exchanges with Mavi from here on:
http://www.foroflamenco.com/tm.asp?m=328785&mpage=3&p=&tmode=1&smode=1&key=makam

_____________________________

CD's and transcriptions available here:
www.ricardomarlow.com
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 25 2021 15:01:40
 
joevidetto

 

Posts: 191
Joined: Jun. 15 2013
 

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to joevidetto

quote:

if your purpose is really to just speak the language and communicate with flamenco players, I'd drop all of it. The common flamenco vocabulary doesn't include terms like maqam, alterations, flat 2s, 9s, 11s or whatever else.


I'm very eager to learn the modern flamenco vocabulary with respect to describing the harmonies and chord progressions. Can you recommend a link, website, or pdf that would help me along with this ? I know the ear is the ultimate judge, but I'd like to be able to describe progressions using more than just the particular names of each chord, so that I can more easily remember them. Also, so I can use that theoretical basis to compose my own pieces and find new sounds rather than solely relying on my ear.
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 25 2021 16:29:05
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to joevidetto

quote:

I'm very eager to learn the modern flamenco vocabulary with respect to describing the harmonies and chord progressions. C


His point was THE FLAMENCOS DON’T...other than solfegio. The chords are called “tonos” (Do, re, si bemol, LA, Fa, etc), the keys are named by palos (tonos de minera, por Rondeña, por granaina, por levante etc) and the rhythms are based on compas structures (por bulerias, por tangos, por tanguillo, abandolao, etc). They don’t talk or describe modes and scales other than “escalas” and when doing so refer to whatever specific scale a falseta uses and just play it, which can be ANYTHING including chromatic. Notation is not used. Transposition is often done with barres even for scales. A C scale (do) is transported to minera key by barring at 4, and it is understood as “Mi mayor” in the key of minera because that is how the cante is viewed in that form. So a flamenco doesn’t think about scales and keys in the western sense, they think “if I play the Do re mi scale from por Arriba in minera key, it’s barre 4 same exact notes”. He already knows that the cante in Minera goes to E major (Mi mayor). The Vargas book must be assuming the reader KNOWS this already if it was not explained.

The student has the option to dive in and learn the traditional way using those terms, or they can get a translation of those terms into some more common western terminology, like a Rosetta Stone of chords and scales, ASSUMING the student already has a good understanding of the terms you are trying to translate into. I assume your Vargas book was attempting to do this with makkams. But using makkams are losing something in the translation to western scale, because to do it right, half flats and such MUST be included, which simply don’t exist in the western scale. Flamenco is guitar based, and despite claims to the contrary, so is the singing, so flamenco can translate perfectly well to western nomenclature. But different disciplines use or discard portions of the nomenclature such that you need to decide how your Rosetta Stone will look...Rock jazz blues or classical? I personally would use which ever school the student is most familiar with. If none of those, then there would not be much point.

_____________________________

CD's and transcriptions available here:
www.ricardomarlow.com
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 25 2021 17:10:50
 
kitarist

Posts: 1732
Joined: Dec. 4 2012
 

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to Piwin

quote:

This isn't a diss on Vargas. I haven't read his book.


I found the (very detailed) Table of Contents of the three volumes of 'Flamenco Improvisation' (direct links to pdfs below):

1. https://www.shermusic.com/new/sample_pages/1883217962-toc.pdf
2. https://www.shermusic.com/new/sample_pages/1883217970-toc.pdf
3. https://www.shermusic.com/new/sample_pages/1883217989-toc.pdf

_____________________________

Konstantin
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 25 2021 17:36:32
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to kitarist

quote:

ORIGINAL: kitarist

quote:

This isn't a diss on Vargas. I haven't read his book.


I found the (very detailed) Table of Contents of the three volumes of 'Flamenco Improvisation' (direct links to pdfs below):

1. https://www.shermusic.com/new/sample_pages/1883217962-toc.pdf
2. https://www.shermusic.com/new/sample_pages/1883217970-toc.pdf
3. https://www.shermusic.com/new/sample_pages/1883217989-toc.pdf


So the thing joe specifically talks about is book two page 168. If anybody has the actual western scales equivalents of those makkams that would be helpful. Simple put, book 1 seems to have plenty of basis for understanding modern flamenco. There might be some more exotic scales and chords needed to describe what’s going on but in general it seems to be “jazz rock” based concepts there that could be translated easily to describe flamenco.

_____________________________

CD's and transcriptions available here:
www.ricardomarlow.com
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 25 2021 18:22:04
 
kitarist

Posts: 1732
Joined: Dec. 4 2012
 

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to Ricardo

quote:

If anybody has the actually western scales equivalents of those makkams that would be helpful.


I don't know if this is what you mean, but on the Arabic maqam website maqamworld you can find them notated:

Hijaz, Shahnaz and Zanjaran are all part of the Hijaz family of maqams and can be accessed from here: https://www.maqamworld.com/en/maqam/f_hijaz.php

Kurd is here: https://www.maqamworld.com/en/maqam/kurd.php

Saba Zamzam is a rare maqam not pat of any maqam family and is here: https://www.maqamworld.com/en/maqam/saba_zamzam.php

Also, by clicking and holding over any note you can here it play.

_____________________________

Konstantin
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 25 2021 18:41:13
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to kitarist

quote:

A Maquam Hijaz
A Maquam Shanaz
A Maquam Kurd, etc.
A Maquam Saba ZamZam
A Maquam Saba ZamZam Extended
A Maquam Zanjaran
A Maquam Zanjaran b5

I'm wondering if anyone else has a deep understanding of Enrique's approach.


Getting there...
A Phrygian Dominant ABbC#DEFG
A Double Harmonic ABbC#DEFG#
A Natural Phrygian ABbCDEFG
Mode 3 F harmonic major ABbCDbEFG+(Ab Anat Bnat C)
Assumed synthetic scale adding in chromatic alterations to above mode OR the alterations above are used in place of certain notes. The actual scale is not based on a “makam family” as Kitarist link shows so it is vague what Vargas wants to do with this scale exactly.
Mode 5 D harmonic major ABbC#DEF#G
Mode 5 D double harmonic ABbC#DEbF#G

So a lovely mixed mode mess Combine all you have ABb(Bnat)C(C#orDb)D(Eb)EF(F#)G(G#orAb)...yep that covers por medio lol.

I can quickly deduce that Vargas wants us to use those 7 “modes” to justify the observed Flamenco harmonies used in the phrygian flamenco keys. (Specifically por medio but it would apply then to all phrygian key palos). To put into perspective how over complex that is think about the relative minor key of D minor (which has potential to use 100% match of any por medio or F major song) and how it’s harmonies are created.

D natural minor (aeolian) i iidim III iv v VI VII
D harmonic minor i iidim III+ iv V VII #viidim
D melodic minor i ii III+ IV V #vidim #viidim

Without getting into the actual way the makkams are supposed to be tuned or used (as opposed to pointing out the superficial western scale equivalence of the pitches) we can see a design that on one hand is “too many notes” than simply necessary to justify flamenco harmony, and also is missing TOO MANY scales used in actual practice to be considered all encompassing picture.

but the books taken as a group of 3 volumes seem to be very involved so I can imagine there is a lot missing pieces to his overall description. Book 1 for example could be the doorway to flamenco world for a rock or general music enthusiast. Book 2 for people with some understanding of Arab or Turkish makams, book 3 for those with jazz chops? Just a guess.

_____________________________

CD's and transcriptions available here:
www.ricardomarlow.com
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 26 2021 1:22:27
 
Piwin

Posts: 3566
Joined: Feb. 9 2016
 

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to joevidetto

quote:

I'm very eager to learn the modern flamenco vocabulary with respect to describing the harmonies and chord progressions. Can you recommend a link, website, or pdf that would help me along with this ? I know the ear is the ultimate judge, but I'd like to be able to describe progressions using more than just the particular names of each chord, so that I can more easily remember them. Also, so I can use that theoretical basis to compose my own pieces and find new sounds rather than solely relying on my ear.


Sorry, but I can't really think of anything that would match what you're looking for. Like Ricardo said, my point was that flamencos don't usually do that kind of thing. I guess you could go try sites like flamencopolis or canteytoque. There they use scale degree notation like II-I, I-iv, that kind of thing. But even that, as helpful as it is, is not part of the common vocabulary. They'd just use the basic chord names.

quote:

Also, so I can use that theoretical basis to compose my own pieces and find new sounds rather than solely relying on my ear.


Well, that's a bit different than wanting to know the language to communicate with others. The times I've watched flamencos working on a composition, they were basically basing it all on ears and fingers. By that I just mean that it was focused on what they were hearing, and also very pragmatically on "what happens if this finger goes there" kind of thing (obviously not starting from scratch though; basing a lot of it on standard flamenco chord shapes). A process of trial and error, where they'd throw out what they didn't like and keep what they did. I don't think they were using any kind of explicit theoretical framework of the kind you're looking for. Whether that's representative of how most people do it, I have no idea.

What they did have is an understanding of the harmonic rhythm used for cante. If I could go back in time and start over, I'd probably spend less time at the beginning learning falsetas, and more time just getting really familiar with the harmonic rhythm.

Anyway, this probably isn't very helpful. I'm just saying that if I were in that place of starting to compose, I wouldn't worry all that much about the theory behind the vertical how-do-these-notes stack up aspect; I would worry more about when the chords should change so it sounds flamenco. Dunno if that makes sense.
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 26 2021 9:54:55
 
MichaelSheridan

 

Posts: 14
Joined: Jan. 10 2021
 

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to Ricardo

quote:

The chords are called “tonos” (Do, re, si bemol, LA, Fa, etc), the keys are named by palos (tonos de minera, por Rondeña, por granaina, por levante etc) and the rhythms are based on compas structures (por bulerias, por tangos, por tanguillo, abandolao, etc). They don’t talk or describe modes and scales other than “escalas” and when doing so refer to whatever specific scale a falseta uses and just play it, which can be ANYTHING including chromatic. Notation is not used. Transposition is often done with barres even for scales. A C scale (do) is transported to minera key by barring at 4, and it is understood as “Mi mayor” in the key of minera because that is how the cante is viewed in that form. So a flamenco doesn’t think about scales and keys in the western sense, they think “if I play the Do re mi scale from por Arriba in minera key, it’s barre 4 same exact notes”. He already knows that the cante in Minera goes to E major (Mi mayor).


I really loved reading this. Are there any old threads that give advice on learning and internalizing this approach for those of us that weren't lucky enough to grow up in the culture? Under normal circumstances I would just try to find places where it's being played and see it live as much as possible but NYC is pretty shut down these days.
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 26 2021 13:39:02
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to MichaelSheridan

quote:

ORIGINAL: MichaelSheridan

quote:

The chords are called “tonos” (Do, re, si bemol, LA, Fa, etc), the keys are named by palos (tonos de minera, por Rondeña, por granaina, por levante etc) and the rhythms are based on compas structures (por bulerias, por tangos, por tanguillo, abandolao, etc). They don’t talk or describe modes and scales other than “escalas” and when doing so refer to whatever specific scale a falseta uses and just play it, which can be ANYTHING including chromatic. Notation is not used. Transposition is often done with barres even for scales. A C scale (do) is transported to minera key by barring at 4, and it is understood as “Mi mayor” in the key of minera because that is how the cante is viewed in that form. So a flamenco doesn’t think about scales and keys in the western sense, they think “if I play the Do re mi scale from por Arriba in minera key, it’s barre 4 same exact notes”. He already knows that the cante in Minera goes to E major (Mi mayor).


I really loved reading this. Are there any old threads that give advice on learning and internalizing this approach for those of us that weren't lucky enough to grow up in the culture? Under normal circumstances I would just try to find places where it's being played and see it live as much as possible but NYC is pretty shut down these days.


Before I went to Spain I was picking up some or most of the terminology from the Encuentro video/book series...hearing these guys talk about compas “rematar en el seis”, tuning the guitar, the techniques used, the “tonos”....Mi Fa....I was like “whoa wait minute....doe a deer a female deer, re a drop of golden sun....mi...ok got it!”. My first trip to Spain I missed the tuning change Gerardo gave us “mi bemol, la bemol, re bemol...” I thought “wow what is that? My spanish sucks!” I had to tune the guitar UNDER MY FINGERS until the chord sounded the same. Later realized how my guitar was tuned and thought, “oh he said EFlat A Flat and D flat!”....and of course working with singers early on they would say “sevillanas al tres, Mi menor”...or “al tres por Arriba...mi fa...” to be clear. Only because I was well versed in OTHER music systems did I need to TRANSLATE what I was hearing to western terminology I learned in English. But a beginner can just learn the terms from scratch which is perfectly fine.

Key relationships are based mainly on Palos (sevillanas in 3 different keys is a start, fandangos based forms constitute most of the different guitar keys showing phrygian and relative major and minor). I don’t know what books or methods do this, but the ones that try to translate to western terminology I always found lacking or failing to translate correctly the way I see it. In the end, the most efficient thing is to simply get a maestro that shows you what to do...later to accompany one needs to do that alone with dancers and singers.

At a glance, here are the guitar palos that would translate on the western circle of 5ths via key signature

(Modern key developed first by David Serva) mi bemol flamenco/Si mayor/Sol sostonido menor (5#)
Minera sol sostonido flamenco/Mi mayor/do sostonido menor (4#)
Rondeña (altered tuning montoya invention) do sostonido flamenco (Velez invention)/La mayor/Fa sostonido menor (3#)
Por Levante (Taranta) Fa sostonido flamenco/Re mayor/si menor (2#)
Por Granaina Si flamenco/Sol mayor/mi menor (1#)
Por Arriba mi flamenco/Do mayor/La menor (0#/b)
Por medio La flamenco/Fa mayor/re menor (1b)
Por abajo re flamenco/Si bemol mayor/sol menor (2b)

Believe it or not, every flamenco guitarist understands perfectly well the above system and terms...they might make enharmonic exchanges such as “La bemol flamenco” instead of sol sostonido for “minera” but the relation to major and minor is perfectly well understood. (Mi bemol flamenco is supposed to be re sostonido, but it’s rare a flamenco will make a distinction between right or wrong note spelling theory). This is all learned via trad falsetas and accompanying cante. They will also recognize that each adjacent palo (in the order I have written) utilizes the same exact scale as the neighbor excepting ONE NOTE difference, that note being the raised “cambio” note going up, or flattened cambio note going back down. (In por medio a singer sings B natural it is understood as shifting to por Arriba, and if por Arriba introduces the Bb it is understood as going to por medio). However, they certainly wouldn’t understand the overall 5ths relationship I laid out the entire system in above, nor the sequence of adding or subtracting sharps and flats over all. Only those adjacent moves are clearly understood.

Also they know very well parallel key changes on one tonic (por medio->la mayor->La menor). Modern flamenco players have also explored more than the above 8 key centers (most often a result of special tunings) and simple parallel or adjacent modulations. Modern flamenco player like vicente has no fear about say modulating from mi bemol flamenco to Granaina key and back. His solea “cordoba” moves from por Arriba to mi bemol flamenco and back.

EDIT: forgot to add that the 4 missing key centers (Sol-do-Fa-si bemol flamenco and their relative majors/minors) seems like a lot of unexplored territory (1/4 of what’s available). However, it is no coincidence most guitar based genres of music tend to avoid those same keys for the same reasons.

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 26 2021 14:15:21
 
kitarist

Posts: 1732
Joined: Dec. 4 2012
 

Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: Flame... (in reply to Ricardo

quote:

ORIGINAL: Ricardo
(Modern key developed first by David Serva) mi bemol flamenco/Si mayor/Sol sostonido menor (5#)
Minera sol sostonido flamenco/Mi mayor/do sostonido menor (4#)
Rondeña (altered tuning montoya invention) do sostonido flamenco (Velez invention)/La mayor/Fa sostonido menor (3#)
Por Levante (Taranta) Fa sostonido flamenco/Re mayor/si menor (2#)
Por Granaina Si flamenco/Sol mayor/mi menor (1#)
Por Arriba mi flamenco/Do mayor/La menor (0#/b)
Por medio La flamenco/Fa mayor/re menor (1b)
Por abajo re flamenco/Si bemol mayor/sol menor (2b)

EDIT: forgot to add that the 4 missing key centers (Sol-do-Fa-si bemol flamenco and their relative majors/minors)



I've been meaning to do this for a while, so here's the 'Flamenco Circle of Fifths'. Please let me know what needs to be changed or fixed. Once it's finalized I'd also post a link to the pdf version.



Images are resized automatically to a maximum width of 800px

Attachment (1)

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Konstantin
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 26 2021 18:47:19
 
mark indigo

 

Posts: 3626
Joined: Dec. 5 2007
 

RE: Flamenco Keys (in reply to Ricardo

quote:

forgot to add that the 4 missing key centers (Sol-do-Fa-si bemol flamenco and their relative majors/minors) seems like a lot of unexplored territory (1/4 of what’s available). However, it is no coincidence most guitar based genres of music tend to avoid those same keys for the same reasons.


Not sure if this is altered tuning, but... G Phrygian?



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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 26 2021 20:26:16
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: F... (in reply to kitarist

quote:

ORIGINAL: kitarist

quote:

ORIGINAL: Ricardo
(Modern key developed first by David Serva) mi bemol flamenco/Si mayor/Sol sostonido menor (5#)
Minera sol sostonido flamenco/Mi mayor/do sostonido menor (4#)
Rondeña (altered tuning montoya invention) do sostonido flamenco (Velez invention)/La mayor/Fa sostonido menor (3#)
Por Levante (Taranta) Fa sostonido flamenco/Re mayor/si menor (2#)
Por Granaina Si flamenco/Sol mayor/mi menor (1#)
Por Arriba mi flamenco/Do mayor/La menor (0#/b)
Por medio La flamenco/Fa mayor/re menor (1b)
Por abajo re flamenco/Si bemol mayor/sol menor (2b)

EDIT: forgot to add that the 4 missing key centers (Sol-do-Fa-si bemol flamenco and their relative majors/minors)



I've been meaning to do this for a while, so here's the 'Flamenco Circle of Fifths'. Please let me know what needs to be changed or fixed. Once it's finalized I'd also post a link to the pdf version.




Looks good. Arriba has two r’s. Only thing I would do personally is not re orient the writing half way down...so a print out version of the circle can be physically turned such that whatever is at 12 o’clock position is always “up”. Same with key signatures. (Maybe have a print out version as set up different than a book version). If you recall what my teacher did in his book was print only sections of the circle.

Cañizares example is great. I have heard that before. Gerardo has C phrygian with altered tuning, I believe that piece by Cortez and JM Gallardo del Rey was F phrygian with weird tuning (3rd is Gb). They all have been touched on in modulation of course. The thing about the circle is that there is no proper “palo” basis for the D# key and the 4 missing ones...so the circle might need to reflect that (I like the idea of the colors, so maybe shade those groups sepatate?) so students are not confused why no traditional material is to be found in those keys. The modern era greatly embraced the version of C# via Velez’s Granaina solo, and the D# “rondeña” by Serva. Obviously Cañizares leaves a stand alone bulerias that may or may not catch on in the future.

Images are resized automatically to a maximum width of 800px

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www.ricardomarlow.com
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 26 2021 23:20:49
 
devilhand

 

Posts: 1707
Joined: Oct. 15 2019
 

RE: Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: F... (in reply to kitarist

Can I get a customized version of Foroflamenco circle of 5ths? Or could you send me the graph so that I can modify it?
I grew up with do re mi fa...So I don't need them. What I need is 3 tier major minor and flamenco.
For example: A minor, C major, E flamenco (Por Arriba). That's all. Nothing more.

What about D# Flamenco (Por David Serva)? C# Flamenco (Por Rondena or Por Velez)?

C and G look almost the same.

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Say No to Fuera de Compás!!!
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 26 2021 23:51:58
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: F... (in reply to devilhand

quote:

ORIGINAL: devilhand

Can I get a customized version of Foroflamenco circle of 5ths? Or could you send me the graph so that I can modify it?
I grew up with do re mi fa...So I don't need them. What I need is 3 tier major minor and flamenco.
For example: A minor, C major, E flamenco (Por Arriba). That's all. Nothing more.

What about D# Flamenco (Por David Serva)? C# Flamenco (Por Rondena or Por Velez)?

C and G look almost the same.


You should make your own with a pencil and sheet of paper. You will learn a lot.

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www.ricardomarlow.com
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 27 2021 0:25:21
 
mark indigo

 

Posts: 3626
Joined: Dec. 5 2007
 

RE: Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: F... (in reply to Ricardo

quote:

that piece by Cortez and JM Gallardo del Rey was F phrygian with weird tuning (3rd is Gb)


don't know that, where can I find it? Does it have a title?

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 27 2021 21:15:17
 
mark indigo

 

Posts: 3626
Joined: Dec. 5 2007
 

RE: Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: F... (in reply to kitarist

quote:

I've been meaning to do this for a while, so here's the 'Flamenco Circle of Fifths'. Please let me know what needs to be changed or fixed




(not any sort of comment on your otherwise superlative chart, just wanted an excuse to post that pic )

Images are resized automatically to a maximum width of 800px

Attachment (1)

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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 27 2021 22:00:49
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: F... (in reply to mark indigo

quote:

ORIGINAL: mark indigo

quote:

that piece by Cortez and JM Gallardo del Rey was F phrygian with weird tuning (3rd is Gb)


don't know that, where can I find it? Does it have a title?


Looks like he tunes low E up to F and G down to Gb. Cortes plays E phyrigian capo 1.



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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 27 2021 23:32:32
 
kitarist

Posts: 1732
Joined: Dec. 4 2012
 

RE: Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: F... (in reply to kitarist

Here is the updated Flamenco Circle of Fifths: two versions - one 'book' and one 'wheel' - the latter can be cut out and rotated around its centre. Other changes - actual symbols now for flats and sharps, improved legibility; different shading for non-palo keys; other small changes.

Let me know if there is anything else, or errors:





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Attachment (2)

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Konstantin
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 28 2021 0:27:12
 
Ricardo

Posts: 15318
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC

RE: Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: F... (in reply to kitarist

Cool, look good!

Oh wait...you have some mirror imaged key signatures.

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CD's and transcriptions available here:
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  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 28 2021 0:56:20
 
kitarist

Posts: 1732
Joined: Dec. 4 2012
 

RE: Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: F... (in reply to Ricardo

quote:

ORIGINAL: Ricardo

Cool, look good!

Oh wait...you have some mirror imaged key signatures.


Oh yeah; fixed now. Also the center marker is now at the center of the wheel, and I drew another circle that can be used as a guide to cut:



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Attachment (1)

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Konstantin
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 28 2021 1:35:15
 
kitarist

Posts: 1732
Joined: Dec. 4 2012
 

RE: Flamenco Circle of Fifths (RE: F... (in reply to mark indigo

quote:

(not any sort of comment on your otherwise superlative chart, just wanted an excuse to post that pic )






Images are resized automatically to a maximum width of 800px

Attachment (1)

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Konstantin
  REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |  Date Jan. 28 2021 2:07:16
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