Yaron,

Thanks for this distinction. I’m going to play around with these differences.

~Erik Hoffman
Oakland, CA

From: Musicians [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Yaron Shragai via Musicians
Sent: Friday, February 24, 2017 2:10 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Musicians] Learning/sharing/remembering rhythms

The 123-123-12 rhythm appears in Middle Eastern, Balkan, and African music; I 
would more than suspect that its occurrence in contra dance music has come 
mainly via the African route, both via the slave influence in Appalachian music 
and via the hippy/funky influence in modern contra.

The klezmer/Romanian 123-123-12 has a different inflection to it - a different 
articulation - the late great Balkan dance/int'l folk dance teacher Dick Crum 
called it a "Get your Papers Here" rhythm - more of a 2;1,2;1,2 articulation 
than a 3;3;2 articulation.

...Unless the rhythm you're thinking of is the rock-n-roll 
boom-chuckboom-boomchuck - in which case we're back to the African influence...

- Yaron


On Fri, Feb 24, 2017 at 3:31 AM, Erik Hoffman via Musicians 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:
Hi Max & All,

Interesting that you learned the 3-3-2 rhythm as Klezmer.

- Klezmer rhythm (123-123-12)


So many of the people I've studied from say the 3-3-2 came from Africa. It has 
invaded many other genres. When I first learned about it (other than the 
clave), it came at me three times in one year:
   * A bunch of fiddle bowings used in Old-Time Appalachian tunes (highly slave 
influenced)
   * A doumbek rhythm (an Arabic drum)
   * In hamboning--body rhythm with African roots, from when slaves had their 
drums taken away.
__

Erik Hoffman
Oakland, CA


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