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>Ok, how about this :) > >Anyone familiar with African M'bira music? A friend of mine >just introduced it to me. Very nice ostinato-based. The notes >are in patterns of 3, but the accompanying shaker beat is >in 2. > >Jim Ohh yeah, I played in a marimba band for 3 years that played music derived from the Zimbabwean M'bira tradition. really fascinating stuff. Actually there are 2 main shaker, called "hosho", patterns in the Zimbabwean styles, one is 2 against 3, the other is in 2. But there are some really deep 2 against 3 and 3 against 4 polyrhythms in that stuff, and some wild interacting parts. We played some gigs with Ephat Mujuru, a Zimbabwean master M'bira player, and one of the most transcendental people I've ever known. There's a good ethnomusicological study on theis music, called "Soul of the M'bira", sorry, but I can't remember the author right now, that goes deeply into the music and it's cultural/spiritual meanings. Very interesting stuff! I've got a M'bira from Zimbabwe, with a cheap electrostatic pickup. Makes great looping fodder... ________________________________________________________ Dave Trenkel : improv@peak.org : www.peak.org/~improv/ "...there will come a day when you won't have to use gasoline. You'd simply take a cassette and put it in your car, let it run. You'd have to have the proper type of music. Like you take two sticks, put 'em together, make fire. You take some notes and rub 'em together - dum, dum, dum, dum - fire, cosmic fire." -Sun Ra ________________________________________________________