Hi, I was listening to a Salsa song and trying to differentiate the Mambo bell from the Bongo bell. At 2:22 in this video (ruclips.net/video/HQ24fSFDDe8/видео.html), there's one kind of bell playing, and then another one comes in at 2:28. I'm pretty sure that the second one is the Bongo bell. Is the first one (at 2:22) the Mambo bell pattern?
That is a GREAT tune! Thanks for sharing. From what I understand, the bongo bell is played by the Bongosero/a while the Timbalero/a is playing the mambo bell - all percussion is considered "up" e.g. during the coro, with horns, and generally louder sections.. but each song and arrangement is unique :) Have fun!
@@STEAMAcademyMusic thanks so much. I now believe that the section at 2:22 is in fact the mambo bell pattern, but it sounds different because of accented playing and some notes bring drowned out.
Hi, I was listening to a Salsa song and trying to differentiate the Mambo bell from the Bongo bell. At 2:22 in this video (ruclips.net/video/HQ24fSFDDe8/видео.html), there's one kind of bell playing, and then another one comes in at 2:28. I'm pretty sure that the second one is the Bongo bell. Is the first one (at 2:22) the Mambo bell pattern?
That is a GREAT tune! Thanks for sharing. From what I understand, the bongo bell is played by the Bongosero/a while the Timbalero/a is playing the mambo bell - all percussion is considered "up" e.g. during the coro, with horns, and generally louder sections.. but each song and arrangement is unique :) Have fun!
@@STEAMAcademyMusic thanks so much. I now believe that the section at 2:22 is in fact the mambo bell pattern, but it sounds different because of accented playing and some notes bring drowned out.
I absolutely love this! Amazing. Thank you
Clave is to be felt not heard! It's the left hand that plays in zink with the tumbao on the tumbadora.
Hello teacher fron paraguay me exected jamb block blue tank yo fron you class man