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I asked Ramirez about son clave and his answers were consistent...basically he does not use the word "son" when associated with clave...I understand what he said but I suspect that the more common terminology of son vs. rumba clave will prevail. IMHO his practices for learning clave while singing are very worthwhile. -- Aché Dennis M. Reed "Califa" (http://dmreed.com) My home page includes my musical autobiography which contains anecdotes, audio recordings and photos of groups I have worked with from the late 50s to the present (with 1960s recordings by pianist Carlos Federico, 1970s photos of Celia Cruz and Pete Escovedo, and recent photos of some of my wife's now famous PR dinners with Larry Harlow, Yomo Toro, etc. ), and selected LP and CD recordings from my Latin music collection of CDs, LPs, tapes, books, and instructional materials. http://dmreed.com/rumbarama.htm contains audio links to rumba recordings on my site and to other links. http://dmreed.com/santeria_ifa_yoruba.htm is a new page in progress. http://dmreed.com/us-inter_keyboard.htm contains information about the US-International Keyboard (WINDOWS 95/98) and a large printable keyboard image. "Chris Smalt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > >>Bobby teaches you in three easy steps how to > >>play the 3-2 Rumba clave while signing a melody. > >>Go to: http://www.latinsheetmusic.com/free.html > > > Dennis wrote: > > > except that it seems like son clave to me...not rumba clave????? > > > And how can you sign a melody with your hands full? <g> > > > Chris > > ______________________________________ > Please remove the r from my address to reply by email > >
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