Category: videos

  • Sunu Jams, and other exercises for handing and timing

    Sunu Jams, and other exercises for handing and timing

    Do you know the feeling of a rhythm that knows you so well it always shows itself when you sit down to play? So you can’t shake it, as if it doesn’t want to let you go. You might call it your song. At least until the next one comes along.

    Lately (like, the last ten years) I’ve been obsessed with a kind of Sunu groove, which I feel is the core of Sunu, the opening g – P T in 4/4, and so many variations thereof. Also what attracts me to the Sunu feel is its flexiblity to become triplets, or 6/8 meter, interchangeably with the 4/4, simply by an adjustment of timing between the notes, sometimes obvious and abrupt, sometimes nuanced, imperceptible.

    So often what starts out as a straight Sunu soon morphs into a Lafe, or Aconcon, with a doubled tone to start. Or, what starts that way veers into Sunu before long, then into triplets and back again. (See the YouTube video I recorded from such a jam, with some patterns as indicated below).

    Here are some of the patterns that turn up in such a solo practice jam, with many more variations just by mixing and matching the half bar patterns. Note that a switch of handing sometimes makes sense when lining up with triplets.

    Note that in many of the above patterns, the key is to keep alternating right and left handing through the sequence of notes. That way the timing can be squeezed or stretched wherever you like, for additional variations whether sticking with 4/4, or giving a triplet twist.

    Happy drumming!
    —Nowick Gray

    YouTube video: Lafe/Sunu practice jam: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KXJbDQl187c

    For more exercises and studies in djemberhythms, see the Roots Jam books available at DjembeRhythms.com (PDF and audio) or Amazon (PDF or print).

  • Samba du Soleil

    Samba du Soleil

    Samba du Soleil, based on Salt Spring Island, BC, has been playing Brazilian batucada music–arranged by Sam Miller and inspired from Brazilian master Celso Machado–for almost twenty years now. Personnel changes and musical variations continue, but the band plays on with ever zestful flavors of Carnival.

    The Samba du Soleil set list is featured in the latest Roots Jam 4: World Beats compilation.

    Watch video footage from our latest event, a fundraiser for the Amazon: 

     

     

     

     

    Hear audio samples from a recent rehearsal (sorry garage-quality audio!)

    And finally, some photos from gigs over the past year (2019):

    Visit the Samba du Soleil Facebook group for more photos and videos.

    Access the full Samba du Soleil Set List:

    –chapter in Roots Jam 4: World Beats – Rhythms Wild!

    –conventional music notation (partial set) at Musescore

  • How to Play Ballet Style Dununs

    How to Play Ballet Style Dununs

    How to Play Ballet Style Dununs

    Playing dununs in the old village style–the traditional setup with bells on top of each drum, one drummer each–is great if you have enough skilled players for each of the three drums: dununba, sangban, and kenkeni. But often only one competent drummer is available to play duns, so the solution is to play all three, upright, as shown in the photo on the left.

    This upright, tandem setup is called ballet style, since it reflects the change when West African drumming moved from the village to the stages of Conakry, Europe, and beyond. I have just started releasing a new series of free videos on YouTube to show you how to play some of the most popular dance rhythms on the ballet style duns. A few years of experience playing these rhythms at the Little Beach Maui drum jams on Sundays has served as a testing ground to learn and select the best of these patterns for you to use in your own locale… or at Little Beach!

    Here is the playlist at YouTube.
    The first three of these free videos are:

    IntroductionKakilambeKassa