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Txalaparta



 
 
The txalaparta (IPA: [t?a'lapa?ta] or [t?ala'pa?ta]) is a specialized Basque music
Basque music

The strict classification of Basque music remains a controversial issue, complicated in part by the growing diversification of such music, but by and large it may be argued that it is made in the Basque Country , that it reflects traits related to that society/tradition, and that it is devised by people from the Basque Country....
 device of wood
Wood

Wood is an organic material; in the strict sense wood is produced as secondary xylem in the stems of woody plants, notably trees but also shrubs, etc....
 or stone
Rock (geology)

In geology, rock is a naturally occurring solid aggregate of minerals and/or mineraloids.The Earth's outer solid layer, the lithosphere, is made of rock....
, similar to Romania
Romania

Romania is a country located in Southeastern Europe Central Europe, North of the Balkan Peninsula, on the Lower Danube, within and outside the Carpathian Mountains, bordering on the Black Sea....
n toaca. In Basque, zalaparta (with /s/) means "racket".

inally, the txalaparta was a communication
Communication

Communication is commonly defined as "the imparting or interchange of thoughts, opinions, or information by speech, writing, or signs...",, 1: an act or instance of transmitting and 3 a: "a process by which information is exchanged between individuals through a common system of symbols, signs, or beha...
 device used for funeral
Funeral

A funeral is a ceremony marking a person's death. Funerary customs comprise the complex of beliefs and practices used by a culture to remember the dead, from the funeral itself, to various monuments, prayers, and rituals undertaken in their honour....
 (hileta), celebration (jai) or the making of slaked lime
Calcium hydroxide

Calcium hydroxide, traditionally called slaked lime, hydrated lime, or pickling lime, is a chemical compound with the chemical formula Calcium2....
 (kare), or cider
Cider

Cider is an alcoholic beverage usually made from the fermentation juice of apples, although pears are also used.While any variety of apple may be used, certain cultivars are preferred in some regions, and these may be known as cider apples....
 (sagardo). After the making of cider, the same board that pressed the apples was beaten to summon the neighbours.






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The txalaparta (IPA: [t?a'lapa?ta] or [t?ala'pa?ta]) is a specialized Basque music
Basque music

The strict classification of Basque music remains a controversial issue, complicated in part by the growing diversification of such music, but by and large it may be argued that it is made in the Basque Country , that it reflects traits related to that society/tradition, and that it is devised by people from the Basque Country....
 device of wood
Wood

Wood is an organic material; in the strict sense wood is produced as secondary xylem in the stems of woody plants, notably trees but also shrubs, etc....
 or stone
Rock (geology)

In geology, rock is a naturally occurring solid aggregate of minerals and/or mineraloids.The Earth's outer solid layer, the lithosphere, is made of rock....
, similar to Romania
Romania

Romania is a country located in Southeastern Europe Central Europe, North of the Balkan Peninsula, on the Lower Danube, within and outside the Carpathian Mountains, bordering on the Black Sea....
n toaca. In Basque, zalaparta (with /s/) means "racket".

Communication

Originally, the txalaparta was a communication
Communication

Communication is commonly defined as "the imparting or interchange of thoughts, opinions, or information by speech, writing, or signs...",, 1: an act or instance of transmitting and 3 a: "a process by which information is exchanged between individuals through a common system of symbols, signs, or beha...
 device used for funeral
Funeral

A funeral is a ceremony marking a person's death. Funerary customs comprise the complex of beliefs and practices used by a culture to remember the dead, from the funeral itself, to various monuments, prayers, and rituals undertaken in their honour....
 (hileta), celebration (jai) or the making of slaked lime
Calcium hydroxide

Calcium hydroxide, traditionally called slaked lime, hydrated lime, or pickling lime, is a chemical compound with the chemical formula Calcium2....
 (kare), or cider
Cider

Cider is an alcoholic beverage usually made from the fermentation juice of apples, although pears are also used.While any variety of apple may be used, certain cultivars are preferred in some regions, and these may be known as cider apples....
 (sagardo). After the making of cider, the same board that pressed the apples was beaten to summon the neighbours. Then, a celebration was held and txalaparta played cheerfully, while cider was consumed; evidence gathered in this cider making context reveals that sound emitting ox horn
Blowing horn

The blowing horn or winding horn is a sound device by and large shaped like a horn or actually a cattle horn arranged to blow from a hole in the pointed end of it....
s were sometimes blown alongside txalaparta. Actually, cider and cider houses
Sagardotegi

A sagardotegi is a type of cider house found in the Basque Country . Modern sagardotegis can broadly be described as a cross between a steakhouse and a cider house....
 are the only traditional context for the txalaparta we have got to know first-hand. The same background applies to a related Basque percussion instrument, the kirikoketa
Kirikoketa

The kirikoketa is a specialized Basque music device of wood akin to txalaparta closely related to working activity, and it is classified as an idiophone ....
, since it is directly associated to the pounding resulting from grinding down the apples. Another instance of the same instrument class and geographical area should be noted here, the toberak.

Some claim that txalaparta has been used this way for millennia
Millennium

A millennium is a period of time equal to one thousand years . The term may implicitly refer to calendar millenniums; periods tied numerically to a particular calendar, specifically ones that begin at the starting point of the calendar in question or in later years which are whole number multiples of a thousand years after it....
; the Romans
Ancient Rome

Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew out of a small agricultural community founded on the Italian Peninsula as early as the 10th century BC....
 described hearing rhythm
Rhythm

Rhythm is the variation of the length and accentuation of a series of sounds or other events....
ic poundings on wood. What they were hearing might be a defensive rallying call going up through the Pyrenees mountains
Pyrenees

The Pyrenees are a mountain range in southwest Europe that form a natural border between France and Spain. They separate the Iberian Peninsula from the rest of continental Europe, and extend for about from the Bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean Sea ....
. It is worth mentioning that the very similar Romanian toaca or Greek semantron
Semantron

The semantron or semanterion ; also called a xylon is a percussion instrument made of a long, well-planed piece of timber, usually heart of maple , from 12 feet and upwards in length, by 1? feet broad, and 9 inches in thickness....
 is used as a call for prayer, so less epical interpretations link txalaparta with a common Christian
Christian

A Christian is a person who adheres to Christianity, a Monotheism#Christian view religion centered on the life and teachings of Jesus and interpreted by Christians to have been prophesied in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament....
 practice before the schism between the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church
Eastern Orthodox Church

The Eastern Orthodox Church is the second largest single Christian communion in the world with an estimated 225 million members worldwide. It is considered by its adherents to be the Four Marks of the Church established by Jesus Christ and his Apostles nearly 2000 years ago....
.

Instrument and music

The txalaparta's musical use evolved out of its original use. Traditional txalaparta was almost extinct in the 1950s with a handful of couples of peasants maintaining the tradition. It was then revived by folklorists, such as Jesus and Jose Antonio Artze from the group Ez dok amairu. Innovators started to labour and assemble the boards to achieve some melody. Other materials started to be pressed into service.

The txalaparta today is a music
Music

Music is an art form whose media is sound organized in time. Common elements of music are pitch , rhythm , dynamics , and the sonic qualities of timbre and texture ....
al instrument used in Basque music
Basque music

The strict classification of Basque music remains a controversial issue, complicated in part by the growing diversification of such music, but by and large it may be argued that it is made in the Basque Country , that it reflects traits related to that society/tradition, and that it is devised by people from the Basque Country....
. It is classified as an idiophone
Idiophone

An idiophone is any musical instrument which creates sound primarily by way of the instrument vibrating itself, without the use of strings or membranes....
 (a percussion instrument
Percussion instrument

A percussion instrument is any object which produces a sound by being hit with an implement, shaken, rubbed, scraped, or by any other action which sets the object into vibration....
). In its traditional construction (known as the txalaparta zaharra), the txalaparta is made of a pair of long wooden boards held up horizontally on two ends and then beat vertically with special thick drum stick
Drum stick

A mallet or drum stick is an object used to strike drums and other percussion_instrument to produce sound. Some specialized mallets are called beaters, drumsticks, or brushes....
s, makilak (IPA: [ma'ki?ak]), held upright in the hands. On the two ends, between the long board and the supports, corn
Maize

Maize , known as corn in some countries, is a cereal domesticated in Mesoamerica and subsequently spread throughout the American continents....
 husks are placed for vibration
Oscillation

Oscillation is the repetitive variation, typically in time, of some measure about a central value or between two or more different states. Familiar examples include a swinging pendulum and Alternating current power....
. However, as the txalaparta evolved, that kind of equipment has been phased out and only showcased in special festivals (such as the Txalaparta Festival held in the town of Hernani
Hernani

Hernani may refer to:* Hernani Jos? da Rosa, a Brazilian footballer known as "Hern?ni"* Hernani , a Romantic drama by Victor Hugo* Ernani, a Romantic opera based on Hugo's play...
 in May) featuring the former and rural outfit of the txalaparta. Actually, nowadays the most usual equipment for the txalaparta consists of two trestles with foam attached to the tops usually wrapped up in various fabrics. As for the boards, they have become increasingly shorter in order to fit the musical needs and convenience of the performers, exactly like the sticks, following that the former 2 odd metre planks stemming from the old cider press may rarely go beyond 1.50 metres, while the 50 cm sticks or more so the light, easily handled 37.5 cm sticks have become a standard, as opposed to the old-time long and heavy strikers.

The boards, which may number no less than three in modern txalaparta, are laid on the trestles hip high, while formerly the boards were arranged at slightly above knee high. The material of the boards has often shifted from locally available timber (chestnut, alder, cherry, etc.) to more beautifully sounding wood from other geographical reaches (Caribbean, West Africa...) such as iroko
Iroko

Iroko can refer to:* iroko * Telfairia occidentalis, vine grown for food...
, sapele
Sapele

Sapele, Sapelli or Aboudikro is a large tree, up to 45 m high , native to tropical Africa. The leaf are deciduous in the dry season, alternately arranged, pinnate, with 5-9 pairs of leaflets, each leaflet about 10 cm long....
, elondo etc. Furthermore, stone (the group Gerla Beti called this variant harriparta) and metal tubes have been added, so widening the range of sounds and contrasts available. In some instances, they have even substituted the customary wooden boards. Big cardboard tubes can be beaten vertically on the floor. It is worth highlighting the manufacture by the group Oreka TX of a txalaparta based on ice blocks on their Scandinavian tour, a making recorded in their 2006 documentary film Nömadak Tx.

Operation

Music is made using the txalaparta by having one or more performers, known as txalapartariak, txalapartaris or jotzaileak produce differing rhythms, playing with wood knots and spots of the boards for different tones. Nowadays the boards have often been arranged to play notes and even melody along the lines of the score, which may on the one hand further widen for the txalapartaris the possibilities to sophisticate the music. On the other hand, some txalaparta players rule out this novelty as alien to the instrument, essentially rhythmical.

Both players perform consecutively by striking with the sticks on the boards. The performance is played by ear, except for the main lines of the playing, say rhythmic pattern (binary, ternary), main beat pattern (fours...) etc., which both txalapartaris may agree on in advance of the performance. In addition, they may use ready-made passages embedded in a specific part of the playing, notably at the beginning and the ending. It is worth mentioning in this category the Sagardo Deia, meaning the Cider Call, a popular set beginning for a traditional txalaparta performance that may differ slightly from some txalapartaris to others. A pre-established whole composition may be arranged as well, while that kind of playings are rare to be seen.

Much of the success of the performance relies on the collusion between both players, so the more they are acquainted with each other's ways, tricks and likings (the flaws too!) the smoother the performance will go and the easier will be for the txalapartaris to show their aptitudes and excel in their playing.

Beats


There are two distinctive types of beat
Beat (music)

A beat is the basic time unit within much Western music; for example, each tick sounded by a metronome would correspond to a beat. More technically, "the beat is the pulse of the mensural level", also known as the beat level, the meter level at which pulses are heard as the basic unit?"the denominator of the time signature,"...
s used on the traditional txalaparta: the ttakuna
Ttakuna

Pronounced [ca'kuna] as well as txakuna . The ttakuna is a basic two beat pounding played by each player of the txalaparta with the sticks....
 and the herrena
Herrena

Herrena is one of the parts performed by the traditional txalaparta players, the other one being the ttakuna; another lesser known traditional term for herrena is urguna....
. The former represents the balance (two beats of one of the players), while the latter names the person who tries other combinations that break it or twist it ("herrena" means lame). However, the person playing the regularity can nowadays become a balance-breaker, so triggering an argument between both sides of the performance that struggle to restore the balance.

The basics of txalaparta is quite simple as regards the rhythm. Within a binary scheme the player's choice was originally to play two beats each with a different stick, a single beat or none. When no beat is played on the boards, it is called "hutsunea" (rest), or it can be played once, and if the performer opts to strike all two possible beats, then it is "ttakuna", named after the two onomatopoeic sounds emitted. These choices apply currently to both players.

Yet the binary pattern belongs to the traditional txalaparta (despite qualified remarks that point to a wider rhythmical range, see below), so when the instrument was carried from the couple of farmhouses it was confined to over to wider Basque cultural circles, the txalaparta evolved into more sophisticated rhythms and combinations, such as the ternary pattern. In that pattern, each player may use their own time lapse to play three even strikes on the boards ("ttukuttuna"), or any other combination available, eg strike - rest - strike, strike - rest- rest, etc. (a sort of 6/8 time). As for the order of the hands, the first and the third beat may usually be struck with the same stick, so creating a pendulum like, come-and-go motion with the arms.

Starting out from those two schemes, all other modalities developed, eg fours (four possible even beats per each player, which may be described as four semiquavers in 2/4 time) or the so-called Papua pattern, among others, where while sticking to a ternary pattern the players add a fourth strike onto the lapse of time belonging to their mate by overlapping their first strike, resulting in a stressed beat repeated every turn of a player that conjures up a tribal like movement.

Players

Txalaparta was about to die out when it was called back from the cold limbo by activists concerned with the Basque culture. By then, only a few players remained, namely, Miguel and Pello Zuaznabar (Lasarte
Lasarte-Oria

Lasarte-Oria is a town located in the province of Gipuzkoa, in the autonomous community of Basque Country , in the North of Spain....
), Asentsio and Ramon Goikoetxea (Astigarraga
Astigarraga

Astigarraga is a town located in the province of Gipuzkoa, in the autonomous community of Basque Country , in the North of Spain. It's famous for its hard cider....
), Jose and Jose Mari Zabalegi (Martutene), who every so often performed traditional txalaparta. In the 60s, in step with the Basque cultural and musical revival movement, Josean and Juan Mari Beltran, a founder of the School of Hernani
Hernani

Hernani may refer to:* Hernani Jos? da Rosa, a Brazilian footballer known as "Hern?ni"* Hernani , a Romantic drama by Victor Hugo* Ernani, a Romantic opera based on Hugo's play...
 himself, took up txalaparta and encouraged its expansion. Other two brothers teaming up to play txalaparta were the brothers Jexux and Jose Anton Artze, who should be considered within the wider framework of the Ez dok amairu cultural movement, made up notably of musicians, poets and theoreticians of the Basque culture (Jorge Oteiza
Jorge Oteiza

Jorge Oteiza Enbil , was a Basque people sculpture, painting, designer and writing, renowned for being one of the main theorists on Basque modern art....
...).

After establishing the School of Hernani, a steady expansion of txalaparta ensued in the 80s among younger generations and out to other regions of the Basque Country
Basque Country (historical territory)

The Basque Country as a cultural region is a European region in the western Pyrenees that spans the border between France and Spain, on the Atlantic Ocean coast....
. The Txalaparta Festival was established in 1987, adding to the interest for the instrument and acting as a showcase for fresh trends. Josu Goiri should be cited here, from Arrigorriaga
Arrigorriaga

Arrigorriaga is a town and municipality located in the province of Biscay, in the autonomous community of Basque Country , northern Spain....
, who adopted a pretty mystical approach on the instrument and has released several books on the topic. Another significant couple that got together in the 80s is Gerla Beti, standing for Perdi and Ruben, from Araia
Aspárrena

Asp?rrena is a town and municipality located in the province of ?lava, in the Basque Country , northern Spain. The municipality comprises various population nuclei, the main one being the town of Araia....
. They started to try new materials with the txalaparta.

In the 90s and later, new couples have come out from the txalaparta school network linked to the Txalaparta School of Hernani in the area of Donostia, besides establishing new schools and workshops all over the Basque Country
Basque Country (historical territory)

The Basque Country as a cultural region is a European region in the western Pyrenees that spans the border between France and Spain, on the Atlantic Ocean coast....
. A few txalaparta projects of this period worth highlighting:

  • Tomas San Miguel (Gerla Beti): The piano and accordion player teams up with Gerla Beti and they perform together since 1984. In 1994, the album Lezao is released featuring txalaparta to critical acclaim. Two further txalaparta related albums have been released since, Ten (1996) and Dan-Txa (2005), so wrapping up the trilogy. In this latest album, the swinging duo Ttukunak, ie young twin sisters Maika and Sara Gomez, has taken over the sticks from Gerla Beti.
  • Ttakunpa: In 2003, the 8-people group releases an album under the same name. They feature a txalaparta made of wood and marble blended with various African (Mali, Senegal...) percussion instruments, songs and influences, such as djembe
    Djembe

    A djembe also known as djimbe, jenbe, jymbe, jembe, yembe, or jimbay, or sanbanyi in Susu; is a skin covered hand drum, shaped like a large Goblet drum, and meant to be played with bare hands....
    s, kenkenis, sanbaghs.


  • Felipe and Imanol Ugarte: After taking up txalaparta at the beginning of the 90s, Felipe trains brother Imanol and in no time they start playing in the streets and festivals. They are renowned for their performances at the Donostia Boulevard in summer, they have toured several times all over the world and have edited a couple of albums under their own label.


  • Oreka TX ("Balance Tx(alaparta)"): Igor Otxoa and Harkaitz Martinez de San Vicente team up late in the 90s out of other couples and join the Kepa Junkera
    Kepa Junkera

    Kepa Junkera is a Basque people musician and composer. A master of the trikitixa, the diatonic accordion, he has recorded 13 albums....
     band in his concerts and album releases, mostly playing along with trikitixa
    Trikitixa

    Trikitixa or eskusoinu is a two-row Basque music diatonic button accordion with right-hand rows keyed a perfect fifth apart and twelve unisonoric bass buttons....
     accordions and other folk instruments of the ensemble. They feature a txalaparta tuned along the notes of a score (melody
    Melody

    In music, a melody , also tune, voice, or line, is a linear succession of musical tones which is perceived as a single entity....
    ) and made of exotic wood. After a period of rest, under the patronage of Kepa Junkera they draw up the album Quercus Endorphina (2000) with the contribution of many celebrated folk musicians, eg Phil Cunningham
    Phil Cunningham (folk musician)

    Phil Cunningham, Order of the British Empire in Edinburgh, Scotland is a Scottish folk musician and composer....
    . Then, they engage in a more independent project, taking to travel to various countries (India, Finland...) trying to blend txalaparta with other instruments and cultures, with a view to highlighting diversity and mutual comprehension among the peoples of the world. The result of the experience, the documentary Nomadak TX (2006), proved an outright success, earning them numerous awards in Film Festivals around the world.


Discussion and prospects

It has been a general assumption that txalaparta evolved out of a simple binary pattern. Yet in an interview to Juan Mari Beltran, a pundit on the issue that did major field work and has afterwards elaborated on the topic, he holds that ttukuttunas (three-strike sets), even fours, were occasionally played by the last old txalaparta performers. Notwithstanding this comment, it may be contended that they were not ternary or four-strike patterns, but isolated ready-made beat sets inserted in an otherwise simple binary pattern.

As regards melody in txalaparta, the issue turns out contentious to some degree, due to the rhythmic nature of the instrument. During the last years, txalaparta has broken new ground by playing along other instruments, interacting with them, following that the txalaparta has sometimes been tuned for melody to fit in the ensemble. On the one hand, not only accompanies it other instruments by contributing to the bassline, but it also provides melody arranged in advance, which entails establishing the playing beforehand. Therefore some argue that doing so it is taking on a xylophone
Xylophone

The xylophone is a musical instrument in the percussion instrument family which probably originated in Slovakia. It consists of wooden bars of various lengths that are struck by plastic, wooden, or rubber drum stick#Malletss....
 like role devoid of its own primary musical features at the expense of adopting a subsidiary and decorating function, eg txalaparta in Kepa Junkera
Kepa Junkera

Kepa Junkera is a Basque people musician and composer. A master of the trikitixa, the diatonic accordion, he has recorded 13 albums....
's band.

On the other hand, txalaparta has kept a higher profile in other musician groupings that have clustered around the instrument, where it has blended in with other percussion instruments alien to the country (djembe
Djembe

A djembe also known as djimbe, jenbe, jymbe, jembe, yembe, or jimbay, or sanbanyi in Susu; is a skin covered hand drum, shaped like a large Goblet drum, and meant to be played with bare hands....
, triangle
Triangle

A triangle is one of the basic shapes of geometry: a polygon with three corners or wikt:vertex and three sides or edges which are line segments....
..., eg the group Ttakunpa), or rubbing shoulders side by side with autochthonous and foreign melodic instruments, like trikitixa
Trikitixa

Trikitixa or eskusoinu is a two-row Basque music diatonic button accordion with right-hand rows keyed a perfect fifth apart and twelve unisonoric bass buttons....
, alboka
Alboka

The alboka is a double hornpipe or clarinet native to the Basque music Basque Country .Although the alboka is a woodwind instrument, its name is derived from the Arabic language "al-b?q" ....
, accordion
Accordion

The accordion is a portable box-shaped musical instrument of the hand-held bellows-driven free reed aerophone family, sometimes referred to as a squeezebox....
 or keyboards, while clinging to its rhythmic nature. To summarize, the rhythm
Rhythm

Rhythm is the variation of the length and accentuation of a series of sounds or other events....
/melody
Melody

In music, a melody , also tune, voice, or line, is a linear succession of musical tones which is perceived as a single entity....
 issue remains tricky.

Thanks to groups that have sprung up all over the Basque Country
Basque Country (historical territory)

The Basque Country as a cultural region is a European region in the western Pyrenees that spans the border between France and Spain, on the Atlantic Ocean coast....
, txalaparta has spread out of its original haven in the School of Hernani
Hernani

Hernani may refer to:* Hernani Jos? da Rosa, a Brazilian footballer known as "Hern?ni"* Hernani , a Romantic drama by Victor Hugo* Ernani, a Romantic opera based on Hugo's play...
 into all directions, even outside the Basque Country. Besides extending geographically, txalaparta and its performers have soaked up the cultural trends of modern society and mixed with other music coming from different parts of the world, resulting in cultural melange. Additionally, new technologies allow for experimentation and complementarity that formerly was simply unfeasible. Multimedia performances with txalaparta that mix images and sound are not unheard of, as well as DJs playing with txalapartaris, featured for one in the Txalaparta Festival of Hernani.

Miscellaneous

In the pursuit of taking out the most of the materials, a whole range of experimentation is being made steadily, such as the one conducted in the cavern of Mendukilo (Navarre
Navarre

Navarre is a region in northern Spain, constituting one of its autonomous communities in Spain - the "Foral Community of Navarre" ....
) by Juan Mari Beltran, aimed at providing a suitable txalaparta background for visits (as of March 2008) based on sounds created by playing with elements from the very grotto.

Beyond the boundaries of music art, the sculptor native from Usurbil
Usurbil

Usurbil is a town and region located in the province of Guip?zcoa in the Basque Country , in the North of Spain.It lies in an areas well known for its sagardotegiak and the area adjacent to the river for its eels....
 (Gipuzkoa) Jose Luis Elexpe «Pelex» has turned txalaparta into the object of his work. Himself a pupil of the famous txalaparta player Jexux Artze, in the exhibition put on in Usurbil as of 09/05/2008 «Pelex» attempts to cross over the immovability of his discipline. Besides wood, metal is used to fashion figures representing txalapartaris, as well as playing with black&white, on the one hand, and colours, on the other, to stress different approaches.

External links

  • NABO's site
  • (page from the Wayback Machine
    Internet Archive

    The Internet Archive is a nonprofit organization dedicated to building and maintaining a free and openly accessible online digital library, including an archive site of the World Wide Web....
    )
  • Site in French, English, Basque and Spanish
  • Site in Spanish Auñamendi Encyclopedia
  • Site in Spanish
  • Site in Basque, Spanish, French, English and German