Sorry for the confusion.
I was refering to the crisp slap with little resonant tone following. Of all the conga tones, it seems to stand out as the most accentuated by it's distinctive lack of tonality and highly percussive nature, as opposed to the other pitch related tones. It is not a mere muffled slap or a toneless dampening manuever, but a beautiful crisp pop, short in duration but adding an exciting spark to the rhythm, not ulike a popping log in a fire, catches you by surprise, twists your ear, and provides the rhythmic flow with a sense of heightened drama and anticipation. The layman could possibly interpret the phenomenon as a pop sound, however, I was hoping a tip from one of the distinguished message posters on this forum would elucidate the baffling technical stumbling blocks that seem to confuse novice percussionists like myself seem to struggle with when trying to spice up, add drama, create tension, or otherwise turn simple responses to rhythmical explorations into musical expression, that is playing with dynamics, rhythmically, melodically, and taking advantage of a full invententory of one's aquired elements of interpretive rhythm collaborations, while keeping a free ear, a scout if you will, on the sonic textures being layed out by the ensemble as it is being created.
Raptor
Email:
redgenghis@hotmail.com