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    Son perpetuum

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    From Mexico all the way to Argentina, many Latin American countries share a very strong tradition of music in 6/8 meter that emerged from the blend of music traditions from Spain, the native cultures, and the African descendants. In this musical tradition there is a constant rhythmic device, not unique to this kind of music, but certainly one of its main characteristics: the hemiola. For the last five years I have been working at the Latin American Music Center (Indiana University), and ā€œSon Perpetuumā€ is an abstraction of multiple styles that have influenced my compositional work during my doctorate. Rhythms such as Son Husteco, LandĆ³, and Zamacueca, among others, are blended into an energetic rush of color, texture, and harmony in perpetual motion. ā€œSon Perpetuumā€ does not have breaks; it does not slow down; it is always energetic. The interest of the piece depends on a wide variety of timbral, textural, harmonic, dynamic, and registral ranges
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