Controversy over use and origins The musical usage and historical origins of the clave are debated. This section presents examples from non-Cuban music, which some musicians hold to be representative of the clave. The most common claims, those of Brazilian and subsets of American popular music, are described below.
In Africa A widely used bell pattern Clave is a Spanish word and its musical usage as a pattern played on
claves was developed in the western part of Cuba, particularly the cities of
Matanzas and
Havana. Some writings have claimed that the clave patterns originated in Cuba. One frequently repeated theory is that the triple-pulse African bell patterns morphed into duple-pulse forms as a result of the influence of European musical sensibilities. "The duple meter feel [of rumba clave] may have been the result of the influence of marching bands and other Spanish styles..."— Washburne (1995). However, the duple-pulse forms have existed in sub-Saharan Africa for centuries. The patterns the Cubans call
clave are two of the most common bell parts used in
Sub-Saharan African music traditions.
Natalie Curtis,
A.M. Jones, Anthony King and
John Collins document the triple-pulse forms of what we call “son clave” and “rumba clave” in West, Central, and East Africa. Francis Kofi and C.K. Ladzekpo document several
Ghanaian rhythms that use the triple or duple-pulse forms of "son clave". Percussion scholar royal hartigan identifies the duple-pulse form of "rumba clave" as a timeline pattern used by the
Yoruba and
Ibo of
Nigeria, West Africa. He states that this pattern is also found in the high-pitched boat-shaped iron bell known as atoke played in the Akpese music of the Eve people of Ghana. There are many recordings of traditional African music where one can hear the five-stroke "clave" used as a bell pattern.
Popular dance music Cuban music has been popular in sub-Saharan Africa since the mid-twentieth century. To the Africans, clave-based Cuban popular music sounded both familiar and exotic. Congolese bands started doing Cuban covers and singing the lyrics phonetically. Soon, they were creating their original Cuban-like compositions, with lyrics sung in French or Lingala, a lingua franca of the western Congo region. The Congolese called this new music
rumba, although it was based on the son. The Africans adapted guajeos to electric guitars and gave them their regional flavor. The guitar-based music gradually spread out from the Congo, increasingly taking on local sensibilities. This process eventually resulted in the establishment of several different distinct regional genres, such as
soukous.
Soukous The following soukous bass line is an embellishment of clave. Banning Eyre distills down the Congolese guitar style to this skeletal figure, where clave is sounded by the bass notes (notated with downward stems).
Highlife Highlife was the most popular genre in Ghana and Nigeria during the 1960s. This arpeggiated highlife guitar part is essentially a guajeo. The rhythmic pattern is known in Cuba as
baqueteo. The pattern of attack-points is nearly identical to the 3–2
clave motif guajeo shown earlier in this article. The
bell pattern known in Cuba as
clave, is indigenous to Ghana and Nigeria, and is used in highlife.
Afrobeat The following
afrobeat guitar part is a variant of the 2–3
onbeat/offbeat motif. Even the melodic contour is guajeo-based. 2–3 claves are shown above the guitar for reference only. The clave pattern is not ordinarily played in afrobeat.
Guide-patterns in Cuban versus non-Cuban music There is some debate as to whether or not clave, as it appears in Cuban music, functions in the same way as its sister rhythms in other forms of music (Brazilian, North American and African). Certain forms of Cuban music demand a strict relationship between the clave and other musical parts, even across genres. This same structural relationship between the guide-pattern and the rest of the ensemble is easily observed in many sub-Saharan rhythms, as well as rhythms from Haiti and Brazil. However, the 3–2/2–3 concept and terminology are limited to certain types of Cuban-based popular music and are not used in the music of Africa, Haiti, Brazil or in Afro-Cuban folkloric music. In American pop music, the clave pattern tends to be used as an element of rhythmic color, rather than a guide-pattern and as such is superimposed over many types of rhythms.
In Brazilian music Both Cuba and Brazil imported Yoruba,
Fon and
Congolese slaves. Therefore, it is not surprising that we find the bell pattern the Cubans call
clave in the Afro-Brazilian music of
Macumba and
Maculelê (dance). "Son clave" and "rumba clave" are also used as a
tamborim part in some
batucada arrangements. The structure of
Afro-Brazilian bell patterns can be understood in terms of the
clave concept (see below). Although a few contemporary Brazilian musicians have adopted the 3–2/2–3 terminology, it is traditionally not a part of the Brazilian rhythmic concept. Bell pattern 1 is used in
maculelê (dance) and some
Candomblé and
Macumba rhythms. Pattern 1 is known in Cuba as
son clave. Bell 2 is used in
afoxê and can be thought of as pattern 1 embellished with four additional strokes. Bell 3 is used in
batucada. Pattern 4 is the
maracatu bell and can be thought of as pattern 1 embellished with four additional strokes.
Bossa nova pattern The so-called "bossa nova clave" (or "Brazilian clave") has a similar rhythm to that of the son clave, but the second note on the two-side is delayed by one pulse (subdivision). The rhythm is typically played as a snare rim pattern in
bossa nova music. The pattern is shown below in , as it is written in Brazil. In North American charts it is more likely to be written in cut-time. According to drummer
Bobby Sanabria the Brazilian composer
Antonio Carlos Jobim, who developed the pattern, considers it to be merely a rhythmic motif and not a clave (guide pattern). Jobim later regretted that Latino musicians misunderstood the role of this bossa nova pattern.
Other Brazilian examples The examples below are transcriptions of several patterns resembling the Cuban clave that is found in various styles of Brazilian music, on the ago-gô and surdo instruments. Legend: Time signature: ; L=low bell, H=high bell, O = open surdo hit, X = muffled surdo hit, and | divides the measure: • Style: Samba 3:2; LL.L.H.H|L.L.L.H. (More common 3:2: .L.L.H.H|L.L.L.H.) • Style: Maracatu 3:2; LH.HL.H.|L.H.LH.H • Style: Samba 3:2; L|.L.L..L.|..L..L.L| • Instrument: 3rd Surdo 2:3; X...O.O.|X...OO.O • Variation of samba style: Partido Alto 2:3; L.H..L.L|.H..L.L. • Style: Maracatu 2:3; L.H.L.H.|LH.HL.H. • Style: Samba-Reggae or Bossanova 3:2; O..O..O.|..O..O.. • Style: Ijexa 3:2; LL.L.LL.|L.L.L.L. (HH.L.LL.|H.H.L.L.) For 3rd example above, the clave pattern is based on a common accompaniment pattern played by the guitarist. B=bass note played by guitarist's thumb, C=chord played by fingers. &|
1 & 2 &
3 & 4 &|
1 & 2 &
3 & 4 &|| C|B C . C B . C .|B . C . B C . C|| The singer enters on the wrong side of the clave and the ago-gô player adjusts accordingly. This recording cuts off the first bar so that it sounds like the bell comes in on the third beat of the second bar. This is suggestive of a pre-determined rhythmic relationship between the vocal part and the percussion and supports the idea of a clave-like structure in Brazilian music.
In Jamaican and French Caribbean music The son clave rhythm is present in Jamaican mento music, and can be heard on 1950s-era recordings such as "Don’t Fence Her In", "Green Guava" or "Limbo" by Lord Tickler, "Mango Time" by Count Lasher, "Linstead Market/Day O" by The Wigglers, "Bargie" by The Tower Islanders, "Nebuchanezer" by Laurel Aitken and others. The Jamaican population is part of the same origin (Congo) as many Cubans, which perhaps explains the shared rhythm. It is also heard frequently in Martinique's
biguine and Dominica's
Jing ping. Just as likely however is the possibility that claves and the clave rhythm spread to Jamaica, Trinidad and the other small islands of the Caribbean through the popularity of Cuban son recordings from the 1920s onward.
Experimental clave music Art music The clave rhythm and clave concept have been used in some modern art music ("classical") compositions. "Rumba Clave" by Cuban percussion virtuoso Roberto Vizcaiño has been performed in recital halls around the world. Another clave-based composition that has "gone global" is the snare drum suite "Cross" by Eugene D. Novotney.
Odd meter "clave" Technically speaking, the term
odd meter clave is an oxymoron. Clave consists of two even halves, in a divisive structure of four main beats. However, in recent years jazz musicians from Cuba and outside of Cuba have been experimenting with creating new "claves" and related patterns in various odd meters. Clave which is traditionally used in a
divisive rhythm structure, has inspired many new creative inventions in an
additive rhythm context. . . . I developed the concept of adjusting claves to other time signatures, with varying degrees of success. What became obvious to me quite quickly was that the closer I stuck to the general rules of clave the more natural the pattern sounded. Clave has a natural flow with a certain tension and resolves points. I found if I kept these points in the new meters they could still flow seamlessly, allowing me to play longer phrases. It also gave me many reference points and reduced my reliance on "one"—Guilfoyle (2006: 10).
Recommended listening for odd-meter "clave" Here are some examples of recordings that use odd meter clave concepts. •
Dafnis Prieto About the Monks (Zoho). • Sebastian Schunke
Symbiosis (Pimienta Records). • Paoli Mejias
Mi Tambor (JMCD). • John Benitez
Descarga in New York (Khaeon). • Deep Rumba
A Calm in the Fire of Dances (American Clave). • Nachito Herrera
Bembe en mi casa (FS Music). • Bobby Sanabria
Quarteto Aché (Zoho). • Julio Barretto
Iyabo (3d). • Michel Camilo
Triangulo (Telarc). • Samuel Torres
Skin Tones (www.samueltorres.com). •
Horacio "el Negro" Hernandez Italuba (Universal Latino). • Tony Lujan
Tribute (Bella Records). • Edward Simon
La bikina (Mythology). • Jorge Sylvester
In the Ear of the Beholder (Jazz Magnet). • Uli Geissendoerfer "The Extension" (CMO) • Manuel Valera
In Motion (Criss Cross Jazz). ==See also==