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Re: OT: 5/4 challenge
On 7/22/64 11:59 AM, Petri Lahtinen wrote:
Recently I made a challenge to myself, could I write something based
on 5 time?
Here are the results. Its gonna end to my EP that I'm releasing by the
end of this month.
Not so loopy, but...
--
Petri Lahtinen
http://www.petrilahtinen.com
Very cool, Petri.
I , too, am really in love with rhythmic groupings in 5.
For what it is worth, I've been very slowly working on an E.P. called
5:55:55
which is broken down into 5 different pieces that are all in either 5/8
or 5/4
time signature.
I started it because I kept seeing 5:55 on my clock whether it was A.M.
or P.M.
It was freaky how frequent that would happen and I also love playing in
subdivisions
of 5.
It was also inspired because I had just turned 55
(very, very slowly I said, because i just had my 58th birthday last
Sunday)
The songs on it are called:
1) 5
2) 55
3) 5:55 (Music for Music Box, Bowed Banjo, Glass Ghatam and Synthesizer)
which is the lead off track on the latest Loopers Delight Compilation
CD, Volume IV
4) 5:55:55 (Farewell Kim)
(which is here on youtube with an accompanying video I made)
*_http://www.youtube.com/looppool#p/u/2/jQPLjy8PsJU_*
5) Hamsa' Hand (which is the arabic word for both the number 'five' and
the noun 'hand'
and also is an homage to Hamsa Al Din, who was one of my two spiritual
musical fathers,
the great Nubian Oudist and Frame Drummer (and the first person who ever
gave me a lesson
on the frame drum)
On the 5:55 track I programmed the polyrhtym 5 against 4 using the
limitation
of the diatonic tuning in C of the music box.
And lastly, and please forgive the OCD nature of this post but I truly
love 5,
I've been working really hard on playing the Dave Brubeck song, 'Take
Five' with local
jazz luminaries and getting into wilder and wilder improvisations
against 5/4 in the solo......
going vastly and psychedlically beyond what the great jazz drummer Joe
Morello did on this,
the first million selling single in jazz history.
Essentially, I tell whatever pianist I'm working with to play the
ostinato part when the solo occurs
and to NOT listen to me, because I really try to take it way, way
outside rhythmically and yet always
pay homage to the spirit of 5/4 (whether using groups of 1/8ths, 1/16ths
, triplet 8ths or triplet 16ths.)
Okay, I"ve geeked out enough................now for 24 hours of intense
cleaning of my house to prepare for
all the loopers who are coming.
yours, Rick