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Groove in Cuban Son and Salsa Performance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 June 2021

Abstract

Using a combination of ethnography, empirical measures of microtiming between rhythm-section musicians and ethno/musicological analyses, this article examines and measures groove in three real-world performances of the popular dance tradition of Cuban son and salsa. The findings paint a complex picture of groove that is shaped by rhythmic-harmonic structure, shared concepts of timing, individual preferences, group dynamics and rhythmic interactions between musicians as they work together to negotiate a groove with the ‘correct’ feel. Microtiming analyses produce a snapshot of how rhythmic timing relationships are ‘played out’ between musicians in live performances and provide quantitative measures of the level of synchrony and separation within the rhythm section. They also suggest that microtiming is influenced by certain metric locations within the rhythmic-harmonic structure, particularly those locations that anticipate harmonic changes and mark the beginning of repeated rhythmic-harmonic sequences.

Type
Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Royal Musical Association

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Footnotes

I would like to thank Graciela Rodriguez for her help with Spanish translations. Thanks also to JRMA’s anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments. And I am especially grateful to the talented musicians that gave their time and offered thoughtful insights that deepened my understanding of groove and made this research possible.

References

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26 Sound clips of these instrumental parts in the selected extracts from the three recordings by the groups Riamba, Havana Club Descarga and Asere may be accessed in the Supplemental Material online at <sound clip 1>, <sound clip 2> and <sound clip 3> respectively. For details of the three performances, see Table 2 below.

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51 Hamish Balfour, interview, 9 April 2009.

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53 Mauleón, Salsa Guidebook, 201.

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59 Doffman, ‘Making It Groove!’

60 Michel Salazar, interview, 23 July 2010.

61 Tres player. The Cuban tres is a guitar-like instrument with three pairs of strings.

62 Changüí is a musical genre that originated in the Guantánamo region in the east of Cuba. Although related in style and evolution to son, it ‘constitutes a unique complex of music, dance, and social behaviour’. Lapidus, Benjamin, ‘The Changüí Genre of Guantánamo, Cuba’, Ethnomusicology, 49 (2005), 4974 (p. 69).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

63 Adolfo Gonzalez, interview (translated from Spanish), 23 July 2010.

64 Mauleón, 101 montunos, 31.