History By most accounts, the tres was first used in several related
Afro-Cuban musical genres originating in eastern Cuba: the nengón, kiribá,
changüí and
son, all of which developed during the 19th century. Benjamin Lapidus states: "The tres holds a position of great importance not only in changüí, but in the musical culture of Cuba as a whole." One theory holds that initially, a
guitar,
tiple or
bandola, was used in the son. They were eventually replaced by a new native-born instrument, a fusion of all three, called the tres. Helio Orovio writes that, in 1892, Nené Manfugás brought the tres from
Baracoa, its place of origin, to
Santiago de Cuba. According to
Sindo Garay, the tres itself originated in Baracoa. However, he described the tres as having originated in "time immemorial" among Afro-Cubans, while bearing a strong resemblance to the Spanish guitar and the
bandurria. Similarly,
Fernando Ortiz stated that the wars between Spain and Cuba (
Ten Years' War and
Cuban War of Independence) gave rise to the differentiation between the Spanish guitar and the Cuban tres, the latter becoming a symbol of the creole nation. In the 1950s, Arsenio left Cuba and his sound was continued by Ramón Cisneros "Liviano" and Arturo Harvey "Alambre Dulce" in the
Conjunto Chappottín. Other important
treseros of the 1950s such as
Senén Suárez and
Juanito Márquez began making recordings with electric treses. In the United States, the tres was sometimes featured in
salsa ensembles, especially in the 1970s, when players such as
Nelson González,
Charlie Rodríguez and Harry Viggiano made numerous recordings for
Fania Records. Traditional tres playing has been promoted in Cuba since the first recordings by Grupo Changüí de Guantánamo in the 1980s, featuring
Chito Latamblé, as well as the albums by
Isaac Oviedo and his son
Papi Oviedo. In 2010,
tresero Pancho Amat won the highest accolade awarded to musicians in Cuba, the
Premio Nacional de Música.
Description and variants The Cuban tres is significantly smaller than the Spanish guitar, with a
scale length between and . It has three courses (groups) of two strings each for a total of six strings. From the low pitch to the highest, the principal tuning is in one of two variants in C Major, either: G4 G3, C4 C4, E4 E4 (top course in unisons), or more traditionally: G4 G3, C4 C4, E4 E3 (top course in octaves). Note that when the octave tuning is used, the order of the octaves in the first course is the reverse of the order in the third course (
low-high versus
high-low). Today many
treseros tune the whole instrument a step higher (in D major): A4 A3, D4 D4, F#4 F#4 or A4 A3, D4 D4, F#4 F#3. A musician who plays the Cuban tres is called a
tresero, although the term
tresista has also been used in Cuba in the past. Cuban
trova singer, songwriter and guitarist
Compay Segundo invented a variant of the tres and the Spanish guitar known as
armónico.
Eliades Ochoa plays another variant he calls the
guitarra tres, which is a Spanish guitar with two extra strings tuned like a tres.
Guajeos The typical tres ostinato is the
guajeo. It emerged in Cuba in the 19th century in the musical genres
nengón,
kiribá,
changüí, and
son. The tres playing technique of changüí, and to a lesser extent nengón, has influenced contemporary son musicians, most notably pianist
Lilí Martínez and
tresero Pancho Amat, both of whom learned the style from
Chito Latamblé. Both nengón and kiribá are included in the repertoire of changüí ensembles. For example, the debut album of Grupo Changüí de Guantánamo opens with "Nengón".
Nengón Benjamin Lapidus presents evidence of the "linear view of the son's development from nengón to kiribá and other regional styles, to changüí, and ultimately to son." The nengón has a limited harmonic range, where the tonic and dominant are accentuated, and the tres is usually placed in the traditional octave tuning (G4 G3, C4 C4, E3 E4). As a genre, nengón consists of variations of a single song, "Para ti nengón". The following nengón guajeo is an embellishment of the rhythmic figure known as
tresillo.
Kiribá Closely related to nengón, the kiribá style emerged in the
Baracoa region of eastern Cuba. Like nengón, kiribá is genre that is based on the song or refrain "Kiribá, kiribá". Because of this, Cuban musicologists such as Olavo Alén Rodríguez prefer to categorise kiribá as a style within changüí. Nonetheless, kiribá has a distinct
guajeo and might predate changüí.
Changüí When playing changüí, the tres is again usually given the traditional octave tuning. The following changüí tres guajeo consists of all offbeats.
Son According to Kevin Moore "there are two types of pure son tres guajeos: generic and song-specific. Song-specific guajeos are usually based on the song's melody, while the generic type involves simply arpeggiating triads." The rhythmic pattern of the following "generic" guajeo is used in many songs. Note that the first measure consists of all offbeats. The figure can begin in the first measure, or the second measure, depending upon the structure of the song.
Solos Tres solos were first constructed by grouping guajeo variations together, a melodic/rhythmic approach relying on subtle variation and repetition, that maintains a "groove" for dancers. According to Lapidus, tres solos in changüí typically sound "melodic/rhythmic ideas twice before moving on. This technique allows the soloist to set up a series of expectations for the listener, which are alternately satisfied, circumvented, frustrated, or inverted. The practice has its analogue in what Paul Berliner labels 'a community of ideas,' as motives from these sequences are frequently returned to throughout the course of any given solo." By the mid twentieth century, tres solos began incorporating the rhythmic "vocabulary" of
quinto, the lead drum of
rumba. The counter-metric emphasis of quinto-based phrases break free from the confines of the guajeo, which is normally "locked" to the clave cycle. Thus, quinto-based solos are capable of creating long cycles of tension—release spanning many measures. == Puerto Rico ==