Material about Latin/Afro American rhythms?

Discussion in 'Education' started by ArticStorm, May 13, 2025 at 1:34 PM.

  1. ArticStorm

    ArticStorm Moderator Staff Member

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    Hello,

    i am looking for sheet music, technics about these rhythm families. Latin part includes:
    Tango, Rhumba, cha cha, Samba, etc - For the Afro part, i think this ivery wide spread!

    I prefer really books for that over any video tutorials.
    Short articles are also very good to quickly work through.

    Looking forward.
     
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  3. PulseWave

    PulseWave Kapellmeister

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    Hello @ArticStorm,

    Beats - Pattern - Rhythm - Music Styles (by Sonic Sirius 2016)

    A Guide for Drumcomputer & Sequencer (Free - 512 MB)Content- 47 Music Styles with BPM Information (some Musical Styles Instrumentation)- 192 Pattern Templates (self-created) Idea and Concept by Sonic Sirius- 192 Piano Roll Images (from Presonus - Studio One)- 192 Sound Examples - Short (*.WAV - 24 Bit) - A blank Template for print out (Din A4)

    47 Music Styles with BPM (Tempo)
    • Rock - Pop • Funk - Disco • Latin Rock • Reggae • Blues - Rock • Boogie
    • Bossa • House • Drum ' n ' Bass • Techno • Hip Hop • Samba • Salsa • Ska
    • 8Beat • Electropop • Soul • Country • R & B Dance • Trance • Garage • Shuffle
    • Tango • Funk • Ballad • Blue Grass • Twist • Charleston • Foxtrot • Cha Cha Cha
    • Merengue • Rhumba • Swing • Fusion • 16Beat • Punk • Polka • Latin Pop • Waltz
    • Paso Doble • Mambo • Beguine • Musette • Bachata • Heavy Rock • Intro • Ending • March

    http://ohlenbostelhelge.magix.net/public/contact.htm
     
  4. Somnambulist

    Somnambulist Rock Star

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    The Clave is the singularly most important part about Latin, Cuban and Brazilian music to understand. Knowing the 2:3 and 3:2 Clave and which one is right is important.
    It is important to know the piano and bass patterns that go with the various Latin styles as well.
    Perhaps getting your ears used to hearing them before diving in might work better as a first step? Just a suggestion. :)


    There are a lot of books out there. A good one is 101 Montunos by Rebecca Mauleon-Santana but you have to read music to use it to its full potential. Victor Lopez has some good things as well. True Cuban Bass is also a good book.
    It's a language of music all of its own.

    If you simply want to hear what they sound like, the EZDrummer libraries Latin-Cuban Drums, Latin-Cuban percussion play most of the patterns all correctly with the right clave. They also include the Songo, Mozambique, Caballo, Guaganco, Tumbao, 6/8, 6/8 Malangos, Samba, Bossa, ChaCha, Rhumba, Salsa, Mambo, and most patterns you may wish to play with. They also load into Superior drummer. PLUS you can drag the MIDI patterns into your DAW.
     
    Last edited: May 13, 2025 at 2:43 PM
  5. Somnambulist

    Somnambulist Rock Star

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    It's good to listen to the various approaches too.
    As a small example, use YouTube and check out a few like:
    Puerto-Rican - Tito Puente, Any of the Escovedo family
    Cuban - Pedro Martinez, Chano Pozo, Luis Conte
    Brazilian - Hermeto Pascal, Flora Purim, Airto Moreia

    The Latin Real Book also has a lot of Latin tunes central to South America, Cuba and Puerto Rico.

    @ArticStorm check your PM
     
    Last edited: May 13, 2025 at 2:54 PM
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