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The Roots of Timba - Part II - Yo bailo de todo - The Bloques
audio 
 MIDI con efecto 
 MIDI - slow - without efecto

 transcription edited by Rob Holland
This is one of the great bloque passages in Cuban music and a textbook example of la Ritmo's con efecto style. After some variations on tumbao 1 (only the basic tumbao is written) comes a series of three con efecto bloques, each one funkier than the last, culminating in a folkloric triplet figure and a return to tumbao 1.
1975                    Ritmo Oriental- Que crezca la mujer  (Frank                    Pérez) 
 bass: Humberto Perera -- drums: Daniel                    Díaz
 source: La                    historia de la Ritmo, Vol. 1
xx0x 0xxx 0xx0 xxx0 2-3 rumba clave
 xxxo xxxx xxxx 0x0x toms playing kick-like                    pattern
0x0x                    xxxx xxx0 0x0x 
 0x0x                    0xx0 x0xx 0x0x
 0x0x                    xxxx xxx0 0x0x  
 0x0x                    xx0x x0xx xxxx tumbao                    1 - MIDI                    example
notes: Bass tumbaos often repeat the same rhythm for every clave, varying the notes if the chord progression lasts longer, but here, although the chord progression is two claves long, Humberto creates a 4-clave bass tumbao.
00xx                    xx00 x00x                    x00x
 00xx                    xx00 x00x                    x00x tumbao                    2 - MIDI                    example
00x0 0x00 x0x0 0000
 00x0 0x00 x0xx 0x0x tumbao                    3 - MIDI                    example
notes: As would become standard practice in the best timba of the 90s, each additional coro gets its own interesting new tumbao.
Que crezca la mujer, (a rare example of feminism in Cuban lyrics!), has a cuerpo that's as imaginative and perfectly executed as Yo bailo de todo, and well worth transcribing and studying. Frankly, from this point on, every track Humberto Perera recorded could be used as a textbook example of perfection in Cuban bass playing. He'd be a very worthy subject of a book similar to the James Jamerson masterpiece discussed above.
1975 Ritmo Oriental                    -  La chica mamey   (Juan Crespo Maza) 
 bass: Humberto Perera
 source: La                    historia de la Ritmo, Vol. 1
xx0x 0xxx 0xx0 xxx0 2-3 rumba clave
 0x0x                    xx0x xxx0                    0x0x  
 0x0x                    xx0x x0xx 0x0x basic                    tumbao -- MIDI
notes: The transcription is just a basic template. Humberto plays dozens of variations. Although the tumbao for the montuno section, unlike the cuerpo, has almost no R&B flavor, this bass performance very much recalls the aesthetic approach of James Jamerson -- creating endless melodic improvisations around a basic idea without ever sacrificing the groove or conflicting with the other parts. To demonstrate, listen to this bizarre computer-altered version. The tempo is slowed down, but the pitch raised an octave. Then the high frequencies are rolled off dramatically to attenuate the annoying "chipmunk" effect in the voices. Once you get used to the odd geeky sound of the track (some people never do!), you can hear the bassline in all its melodic splendor.
 La                    chica mamey, like Yo                    bailo de todo, is on the short list of Ritmo Oriental's most famous tracks and has been quoted by many timba bands, including La Charanga Forever in this excerpt from Sueño                    equivocado (source).                    Mamey is a wondrous tropical fruit that Gabriel from Yemayá's                    Verse tells us is famously consumed in the form                    of a milkshake called batido de mamey.
La                    chica mamey, like Yo                    bailo de todo, is on the short list of Ritmo Oriental's most famous tracks and has been quoted by many timba bands, including La Charanga Forever in this excerpt from Sueño                    equivocado (source).                    Mamey is a wondrous tropical fruit that Gabriel from Yemayá's                    Verse tells us is famously consumed in the form                    of a milkshake called batido de mamey. 






















