Sounds
Rudiments Rhythms Care
Conga Tones
The expressiveness
of hand-drums comes from the ability to get a wide variety of sounds according
to the manner in which the hands strike the head. The following is no substitute
for being shown how to get the various sounds from someone who knows how, but
may give the beginner a hint on to how to proceed.
Every person is
different and the true test of any drum "note" is the sound you get out of the
drum. If the note sounds great, you are doing it "right" no matter what anyone
says. If you hear some other player getting a great tone that you don't,
perhaps you'd better ask how he/she is doing it! The ability to call up the
various drum sounds (notes) at will in a pattern is called "tone
separation".
Bass Note:
The bass note is the lowest pitched sound you
can get from any given drum. The basic move is simulated by having the hand and
arm held out and then allowing the hand to fall onto the drumhead. It is the
palm of the hand that produces the most bass so that is most important.
Some
people teach that the whole hand should fall onto the head but a Cuban player
told me that he prefers to slightly flex the hand backwards ("as if controlling
a, how you say, marionette"). In that technique only the palm tends to produce
the bass note with the fingers perhaps touching but not actually hitting the
drumhead. In any case, a conga head is quite strong and thick so that the bass
note continues to vibrate even when the hand stays on the head after the strike.
This is unlike a thin-headed djembe, for example, where the hand must be
immediately lifted or the note is damped out. Since the hand in conga playing
is not immediately lifted except in the case of open tones, it is commonly said
that one plays "into" a conga
drum
head.
It is most important for the player to understand that the shell of the
conga drum forms a low frequency resonant chamber.
In physics this particular
device is known as a Helmholtz resonator. [Although the principle was actually
discovered and applied in the construction of djembe
drums in the Mali Empire of Africa long before Herr Doktor Helmholtz came on the
scene] Because of this structure, the hole in the bottom of the conga drum,
which is an essential part of the resonator, must not be obstructed or the drum
will not produce a full rich bass tone.
Conga players often recognize three
separate bass tones.
- The first is where the drum is flat on the floor and the
hole actually is obstructed. This note tends to sound flat and weak without deep
bass.
- The second is where the drum is tilted slightly either to a side or
forward or backward which opens up the bottom hole of the drum slightly. Some
people put a 4 ft. cloth-covered bungee cord of the type used to tie luggage
etc. around their waist and hook it to the tuning bolts to stabilize the drum
when it's played in this tilted position. Since the hole is open but partially
blocked, this note is deeper in pitch but somewhat softer than the third note
where the hole is unobstructed.
- For the third bass note the player uses his/her
legs to lift the drum completely off the floor providing a totally open
resonator hole. This produces the loudest bass note. This is the bass note the
drum sounds when conga stands are used. We should also mention that the conga
shell also forms a high frequency echo chamber, which modifies the character of
open tones, slaps and other notes, but is not much of an issue with bass tones.
The shell acoustic properties do however, affect the general sound of the drum
such as providing the different sound between wood and fiberglass shells.
It might be mentioned that lifting modern conga drums with your legs can be something of a
trick. The problem is that Americans love to make instruments all glossy and
shiny! If you examine older authentic Cuban congas you will observe that not
only are they a somewhat smaller diameter, but also are crappy looking and rough
on the outside side as well.
However, these features do make them much easier
to lift with the legs than say heavy, glossy, fiberglass modern congas. Wearing
shorts so the bare legs can grab the drum can help in drum lifting.
Open Tone:
The open tone is the characteristic song
of the conga. It is the open notes of the conga that most tend to "cut through
the mix" and add the conga flavor to the music
An open tone is produced by keeping the fingers close together and bringing the
hand down such that the crease where the fingers join the hand comes down on the
bearing edge (bend) of the drumhead.
The fat pads on the bottoms of the first
and second phalanges (segments) of the fingers strike the head just inside the
rim producing a loud clear melodic tone from the drum. Since this is the note
that "cuts through" it needs to be practiced until is it loud and strong. In
this note, however, the hand must be quickly removed from the head to let the
note "sing" otherwise the note becomes a "muff" which is different.
To get the
hand position, it helps to think of making a military salute and then bringing
your "salute" down and strike the drumhead as described.
Conga Tuning
Usually a conga is tuned according to the
open tone. When playing two drums (conga and a tumba) a typical tuning would be
an interval of a 4th (as in "here comes the bride"). And the conga is often
tuned to a "C" and the tumba to a "G". However this tuning may vary to fit the
keys typical for the music being played.
Some dual conga players prefer an
interval of a 3rd rather than a 4th. Be sure to tilt the conga off the floor
when tuning the open note or the note may be found to be tuned sharp when you
play later with the drum tilted. While the open tone does change slightly as the
bottom opening is obstructed or the drum is lifted, it does not change radically
in pitch like the bass tone. This is why the open tone is used for
tuning.
Pitch Bending:
When playing tumbao "melodically" or
perhaps just as a show-off solo trick, the pitch of the open tone can be
"bent". This is done by playing the open note with one hand and using the elbow
of the other arm to raise the pitch of the note by pressing on the drum
head.
You press with the hard bone at the end of the elbow to keep from damping out
the open tone and you place your elbow just inside the rim of the drumhead. You
do not place it in the center of the drumhead as is done when pitch bending
certain other types of drums. A "bent" tone is not a commonly used tone in
patterns.
Muff Tone:
A "muff" describes a drum note where the hand is
pressed into the head after the initial note to damp it out quickly. In conga
playing this is typically an open tone in which continued finger pressure damps
it out quickly. The key is to regulate the damping of the note to just the right
amount. You should always hear the pitch of the open tone but it should damp out
quickly. If there is no pitch to the note you have damped it too much. If it
rings nearly as long as a normal open tone, you haven't damped it enough.
While muff notes are common, they are much less common that the standard
bass, open and slap notes.
"Closed" Conga Slap Note:
The usual conga slap note is
done with the fingers slightly curved and the idea is that the palm comes into
the rim of the drum
and the fingertips "slap" down against the head. There is a slight "grabbing"
action to this as well as a certain wrist motion. In conga slaps (unlike djembe
slaps where the fingers bounce back off the head) the fingers stay "stopped"
against the drum head in a style analogous to the bass note. Except with the
slap only the fingertips remain touching the head. It takes some practice to get
nice slaps easily. One teacher has described the wrist action as "slapping your
little sister's arm when she gets into your toys" The sound should be a single
bright "crack" with no ring.
and
Muted
Slaps:
Open or djembe-style slaps are not common on congas though certain
players can be seen using a slap that is slightly more open than that above.
Usually they keep the hand quite low to the drum.
Open slaps on a conga tend to
create a lot of the characteristic open tone pitch in the sound. For this reason
open slaps on a conga are usually played muted to kill the open tone ring. In
playing this note the one hand is simply laid on the drumhead and an open or
closed slap is played as usual with the other hand. The hand damps the open
slap into a more traditional conga slap sound.
Beginners often find it easier to
get a nice sound with a muted slap first. The advantage of using open slaps
with a mute is that executing fast double stroke open slaps is much easier than
doing closed slaps, while the mute still insures a traditional conga slap
sound. Obviously the "heel-toe" hand can easily play the muting role.
"Touch" Note:
A "touch" is simply where the fingertips are
brought down against the head to make a sound. Unlike a slap where the tips are
slammed against the head to make a sharp sound, here the fingertips are pressed
flatter, with the pressure going further back from the tips. Usually the fingers
are together as in an open tone. A "touch" should never produce any open-like
tone. If you hear an open tone pitch the note you are playing is a "muff"
rather than a "touch". A "touch" is also the "toe" half of the Heel-Toe
technique. Whether or not the "heel" of the hand is on the drumhead when a
finger "touch" is done will also modify the sound of a "toe" stroke.
When a
louder "touch" note is desired it is sometimes played by bunching the thumb and
four fingers together and then bringing them straight down tips first into the
head. Cuban players often do a "touch" with the whole hand quite flat so that it
appears to the observer as a bass note, but the palm does not strike the drum,
or does so lightly, so the note is actually a "touch" sound rather than a bass
note.
At other times these players will play a "heel" (see below) where even
though the hand appears flat the base of the palm strikes first giving a
bass-like tone. One has to listen to determine which note is being played as
both moves can appear quite identical to the eye. The location of the "touch"
on the drumhead will help determine the exact sound of the given note.
Heel-Toe:
"Heel-toe" is a Cuban playing technique essential to the rhythmic
patterns known collectively as "tumbao". In Spanish the technique is often
called "mano secreta" which means
"Secret of the hands" in English. The basic idea is to use a single hand to
produce rapid successive notes. The technique produces rapid patterns that in a
sense can simulate the rapid beats of the snare drum of the drumset
player.
- The first motion of the heel-toe is
the "heel". This is a note that simulates a bass tone. Here the hand and wrist
is flexed such as when throwing out a rug or sheet to shake it out. In doing
the motion, the heel of the hand, consisting of the fat pad at the base of the
thumb, (known in palmistry as the "mount of venus") and the pad directly across
from that, are forced into the drum head giving a bass-like note. For speed some
players just use the base of the thumb pad alone with a twisting motion to the
hand to do heel-toe rather than the whole base of the palm.
- The second motion is the "toe" in
which the fingertips come down in the "touch" note as described above which then
lifts the "heel" off the head. There may be a slight pulling backward to
accomplish this smoothly.
Once the "heel" is raised, it can
again be forced into the head and the cycle repeated. H-T-H-T-H-T etc.
The
"heel-toe" name refers to the similarity to tapping one's foot by first stomping
the heel into the floor and then tapping the toe which raises the heel. For
playing tumbao, Heel-Toe is typically played with the player's weak hand, but
nevertheless needs to be practiced with both hands. There are two ways to
practice.
- One would be: Heel (strong hand), Toe (strong hand), Heel (weak hand),
Toe (weak hand), repeat.
- The other would be: Heel (Strong hand), Heel (weak
hand), Toe (strong hand), Toe (weak hand), repeat.
Practice both ways with a
metronome starting at a slow tempo and then gradually raising it. Also practice
starting with the weak hand.
Rim Shots
and Harmonics:
Other notes commonly used for solos are "rim shots and head "harmonics". For a
"harmonic" a finger of one hand is lightly pressed on the head at it's center
while the tips of the fingers of the other hand come down on the rim of the drum
in a manner typical of a bongo-playing "rim shot". The finger damps the normal
pitches of the head while the rim shot excites higher-order harmonics in the
drumhead which are not damped by the finger, giving a pitch considerably higher
than the normal open tone.
Doing the same thing again, but lifting the center
finger gives a similar note but this time with more of the same pitch as normal
open tones present. This note without the center damping finger is
called a "rim shot" and is performed by striking the drum rim with just the tip
of the first or second finger. Think of this as a kind of "miniature" open tone,
but here just one finger is used and only the first phalange (segment of the
finger) extends onto the head and the first finger joint hits at the bend in the
head. The stroke is such that the finger slides off the head as it finishes and
is like a "glancing" blow even when done straight at the head.
Harmonic notes
and conga rim shots tend to be rather thin sounding. For this reason they are
not notes used in bread and butter rhythms.
This sound from a conga drum, while
not especially significant musically, is often seen in "flash and trash" solos.
And by "flash and trash" I mean drum solos designed to bring the audience
enthusiastically to their feet by show and chops rather than musical content.
["chops" is a musician term originally applied to horn players meaning the
possession of playing ability in terms of speed, command of techniques and
skill. Usually ultra-fast playing is implied.] "Flash and trash" solos are
often characterized by such showmanship as exaggerated arm motions such as
raising the hands so high as to be over the player's head after each stroke.
Head "bowing"
...is typically done by wetting the first finger and then placing the
thumb and first finger together and running the fleshy pad of the finger
diagonally across the drum head in such a manner that a tone is produced. It is
similar to the manner in which a violin string produces a tone when rubbed with
a bow. It takes some practice, but the sound is always a big hit with the
crowd.
Ghost Notes:
"Ghost" notes are very light taps which are not really to be heard but often
"played" by the conguero to keep the rhythm of his/her hands going. Typically
tumbao does not have ghost notes because of its nature of every beat being
played. However, an exception to this rule does happen when the double open
note at the end of the tumbao phrase is played as a single note such that the
usual second open tone is reduced to a ghost note. The term for ghost notes in
Spanish is Notas "fantasmas".
"Ghost" notes played on the metal rim of the conga for "rests" can be a big help
when learning a new rhythm. This insures that the drummer "plays the spaces" so
that the rhythm does not become rushed.
Cascara:
"Cascara" (KAHS-kah-rah) is Spanish
for "shell" and in Latin music refers to a rhythm played on the shell of the
timbales (Spanish teem-BAH-less). Such rhythms are also commonly played
on the conga shell. Usually a timbale stick or a portion of one is used and the
conga is struck either on the side of the shell or on the tuning bolts. The two
sounds are slightly different but some players prefer not to hit an expensive
drum shell. A common cascara rhythm is given below. The Xs refer to shell
strokes. Here italic letters indicate accented beats.
The author strongly
suggests that the player investigate the fiber-composite timbale sticks
manufactured by Mainline. They produce an unsurpassed cascara sound on conga
shells.
Typically Conga drums
are never played with two drumsticks in the manner of drumset drums. However, in
certain African musical styles a single stick is used. (Usually in the strong
hand.) For example, this is typical of Senegalese playing.
There are three
fundamental notes produced by stick playing.
- The first is a typical drum stroke
to the head where the stick is held loosely and allowed to bounce off the head.
- In the second note, the stick is gripped tightly and is brought down at a high
angle into the head and is pressed into the head so as to give a more muted
higher pitched note.
- And finally, there is a "choke tone" where the drum is
struck in the usual bouncing note, but with the weak hand laying on the drumhead
in the manner of the muted slap. This gives a very damped sharp sound.
Usually
a timbale stick or a shortened timbale stick is used for stick strokes. The
"wrong" end of a common drumstick will also work in a pinch.
Next - Conga Rudiments
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