Bobby Sanabria teaches the basics of the Bembe rhythm.
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 29
@gruber59373 жыл бұрын
Fantastic lesson - I love how you went into its origin, the word meanings and the culture. Thank you.
@ceciliaderico21582 жыл бұрын
Fabulous. Thank you for telling the story and history of these incredible rhythms. I'm tapping along the cow bell rhythm with a drum stick on a shoe because it's at midnight in an apartment ... Fun!
@DavidePettirossi3 жыл бұрын
Great teacher; great lesson! Thank you, Bob and LP!!!
@rahvens11 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much I was looking for so long for a class of this great style ... Once again learning something with the great teacher ...
@nenissaK7 жыл бұрын
It's funny how Opeth (prog-metal) took bembe bell pattern (especially Martin Lopez who was the first drummer, also current drummer Martin Axenrot) and put it all over their songs, which is one reason why they sound so good. Master's apprentices (end), the Devil's orchard (middle section) and so many others I can't remember, haven't listened to their music for a while now.
@SAHBfan
7 жыл бұрын
But don't forget, Ginger Baker was using the bembe pattern starting with the Graham Bond Organization in the mid 1960 and then developed it extensively in a lot of his later playing. He would consider it to have been based in the African tradition though, rather than cuban. With a name like 'Lopez' maybe Martin draws on his Latin roots... but just as likely he was a Ginger Baker fan :)
@JanWynd
5 жыл бұрын
@@SAHBfan Its African regardless so what you said makes no since. The Bembe rhythm is an African rhythm that was imported to Cuba. It never stopped being African, it simply traveled wherever Africana migrated to. Bembe is even prevalent in Afro-American music as well to further illustrate the point. Be clear, African rhythms our the foundation of all diasporic African music: Whether Afro-American music, Afro-Latin music, or Afro-Caribbean music.
@SAHBfan
5 жыл бұрын
@@JanWynd - I said Ginger Baker would consider Bembe to have been based on the African tradition - (because he listened to African rhythms, not Cuban). How does the fact that you consider it to be African, too, mean my comment doesn't make sense? I never claimed the rhythm was Cuban. It was Bobby Sanabria who was describing how the rhythm is played in CUBA - I suggest you try telling him he doesn't know what he is talking about ;)
@JanWynd
5 жыл бұрын
@@SAHBfan I dont *consider it to be African. I *know* its African. That is a fact. Your ambiguous terms have no weight here and do much to showcase your cultural ignorance as it pertains to Yoruba African Culture in Cuba. The fact that Bembe is African isnt even debateable(hence the rhythms African name just like Rumba, Bomba, Samba etc...) Even Sanabria concedes that. Any Afro-Cubano will tell you that Afro-cuban rhythms are African in origin. Sanabria is a student of the African-rhythm tradition that survived in Cuba despite oppression. You're a fool if you think he would deny that, especially in light of the fact that he clearly paid homage to Africa for originating Bembe in this very video. You seem to lack cultural understanding as it pertains to Latin America in direct referrence to Africa's indelible cultural impact there. As an African percussionist, composer, multi-instrumentalist, and diasporic African well-versed in diasporic African cultures of the Americas, I suggest you try telling *me* that I dont know what Im talking about. Be clear, Sanabria isnt an authority on Afro-Cuban culture, he is merely a *student of it. And thats no disrespect to him but the facts are the facts. Get it straight.
@petesheehan69278 жыл бұрын
Informative and concise. Thank you so much,from England.
@royalhartigan5 ай бұрын
thanks, bobby, true, west african origins and deep rhythms!
@DrumsEngineering3 жыл бұрын
Perfect lesson!
@flreport2311 жыл бұрын
I saw him today at njpac and loved it
@slappyboxer11 жыл бұрын
this guy is awesome..
@jaystechroom3 жыл бұрын
I love the color or these tama kits
@screwmaster40411 жыл бұрын
Da Bomb
@wimgui3 жыл бұрын
Hermano muchas gracias. Sería más efectivo para los menos avanzados si dividieras un poco más las diferentes partes y mostraras la anotación en la pantalla. Es sólo una sugerencia para la próxima ocasión. Gracias por adentrarnos en los lindos ritmos afrocubanos!
@ArmandDelaville2 жыл бұрын
Now, there’s some basic things that you need to know 😳
@niall23536 жыл бұрын
Does the song that Bobby played st the start of the video have a name? Thank you
@OboeFiles
3 жыл бұрын
Same question?
@Bhazalt7 жыл бұрын
One to tree fofa siss !
@danny16892 жыл бұрын
he looks like a latin Gavin Harrison
@juanligorria86064 жыл бұрын
any example of a song that actually uses this?
@wompswag9532
2 жыл бұрын
Cuba Libre by Irakere is my favorite example! The ending of the song transitions from a straight ahead salsa beat to bembe.
@TheArtofBlues5 ай бұрын
Anyone seen my cowbell? 😂
@raphaelpaz90436 жыл бұрын
Bembe another 100% cuban rithem. Bembe en el Solar de la California asere.
@JanWynd
5 жыл бұрын
Wrong. Its a 100% African rhythm imported to Cuba by Yoruba Africans. The dude even said it at the beginning of the video. Learn the cultural history and get that racism out of your system.
@w.tibbsclemens6364 жыл бұрын
LP it would have been much more helpful to have the parts notated out on screen
Пікірлер: 29
Fantastic lesson - I love how you went into its origin, the word meanings and the culture. Thank you.
Fabulous. Thank you for telling the story and history of these incredible rhythms. I'm tapping along the cow bell rhythm with a drum stick on a shoe because it's at midnight in an apartment ... Fun!
Great teacher; great lesson! Thank you, Bob and LP!!!
Thank you so much I was looking for so long for a class of this great style ... Once again learning something with the great teacher ...
It's funny how Opeth (prog-metal) took bembe bell pattern (especially Martin Lopez who was the first drummer, also current drummer Martin Axenrot) and put it all over their songs, which is one reason why they sound so good. Master's apprentices (end), the Devil's orchard (middle section) and so many others I can't remember, haven't listened to their music for a while now.
@SAHBfan
7 жыл бұрын
But don't forget, Ginger Baker was using the bembe pattern starting with the Graham Bond Organization in the mid 1960 and then developed it extensively in a lot of his later playing. He would consider it to have been based in the African tradition though, rather than cuban. With a name like 'Lopez' maybe Martin draws on his Latin roots... but just as likely he was a Ginger Baker fan :)
@JanWynd
5 жыл бұрын
@@SAHBfan Its African regardless so what you said makes no since. The Bembe rhythm is an African rhythm that was imported to Cuba. It never stopped being African, it simply traveled wherever Africana migrated to. Bembe is even prevalent in Afro-American music as well to further illustrate the point. Be clear, African rhythms our the foundation of all diasporic African music: Whether Afro-American music, Afro-Latin music, or Afro-Caribbean music.
@SAHBfan
5 жыл бұрын
@@JanWynd - I said Ginger Baker would consider Bembe to have been based on the African tradition - (because he listened to African rhythms, not Cuban). How does the fact that you consider it to be African, too, mean my comment doesn't make sense? I never claimed the rhythm was Cuban. It was Bobby Sanabria who was describing how the rhythm is played in CUBA - I suggest you try telling him he doesn't know what he is talking about ;)
@JanWynd
5 жыл бұрын
@@SAHBfan I dont *consider it to be African. I *know* its African. That is a fact. Your ambiguous terms have no weight here and do much to showcase your cultural ignorance as it pertains to Yoruba African Culture in Cuba. The fact that Bembe is African isnt even debateable(hence the rhythms African name just like Rumba, Bomba, Samba etc...) Even Sanabria concedes that. Any Afro-Cubano will tell you that Afro-cuban rhythms are African in origin. Sanabria is a student of the African-rhythm tradition that survived in Cuba despite oppression. You're a fool if you think he would deny that, especially in light of the fact that he clearly paid homage to Africa for originating Bembe in this very video. You seem to lack cultural understanding as it pertains to Latin America in direct referrence to Africa's indelible cultural impact there. As an African percussionist, composer, multi-instrumentalist, and diasporic African well-versed in diasporic African cultures of the Americas, I suggest you try telling *me* that I dont know what Im talking about. Be clear, Sanabria isnt an authority on Afro-Cuban culture, he is merely a *student of it. And thats no disrespect to him but the facts are the facts. Get it straight.
Informative and concise. Thank you so much,from England.
thanks, bobby, true, west african origins and deep rhythms!
Perfect lesson!
I saw him today at njpac and loved it
this guy is awesome..
I love the color or these tama kits
Da Bomb
Hermano muchas gracias. Sería más efectivo para los menos avanzados si dividieras un poco más las diferentes partes y mostraras la anotación en la pantalla. Es sólo una sugerencia para la próxima ocasión. Gracias por adentrarnos en los lindos ritmos afrocubanos!
Now, there’s some basic things that you need to know 😳
Does the song that Bobby played st the start of the video have a name? Thank you
@OboeFiles
3 жыл бұрын
Same question?
One to tree fofa siss !
he looks like a latin Gavin Harrison
any example of a song that actually uses this?
@wompswag9532
2 жыл бұрын
Cuba Libre by Irakere is my favorite example! The ending of the song transitions from a straight ahead salsa beat to bembe.
Anyone seen my cowbell? 😂
Bembe another 100% cuban rithem. Bembe en el Solar de la California asere.
@JanWynd
5 жыл бұрын
Wrong. Its a 100% African rhythm imported to Cuba by Yoruba Africans. The dude even said it at the beginning of the video. Learn the cultural history and get that racism out of your system.
LP it would have been much more helpful to have the parts notated out on screen
onetwothreefourfaces