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Tres and Cuatro
by David Brown
The guitar was the companion of the Spanish as they colonized the Caribbean,
and in time several regional variants developed. From Cuba came the tres, a
small 3-double course instrument, and from Puerto Rico, the now 5-double course
cuatro. Each was originally associated with a regional, rural but sophisticated
musical style with roots in Spain. Now both are used in other contexts, particularly
in Salsa.
The cuatro was the instrument of the jibaro, rural farmers, and also the name of
the music they played on cuatros and guitars and guiros. It also was used to sing
aguinaldos, the Puerto Rican Christmas songs, from house to house. The
instrument is sort of violin-shaped, more rounded like a guitar but with points at
the inner bouts like a fiddle. The bridge is a classic guitar type, but the instrument
is steel strung and tuned from low to high B E A D G, with the B and E in octaves.
It is played with a flatpick and sounds like a cross between a 12-string guitar and
a mandolin.
The Cuban tres originated in Oriente province, the most eastern part of the island,
and was the instrument of the Cuban rural farmers called guajiros. They, as did
the jibaros, kept alive the Spanish decima vocal style; but added African elements
to produce the son, the Cuban music style that was the ancestor of Salsa. A
typical son conjunto was made up of a tres, a guitar, a bass, a bongo, maracas,
clave and guiro; sometimes a trumpet was also employed.
The tres is notable for having three pairs of strings, once triple, now double, tuned
with the central pair unison and the outside pairs in octaves. Two tunings are
used; Gg cc Ee and Gg bb Ee, one making an open C chord and the other, one
1/2 step different giving an open E minor. Most playing is single line with limited
use of double and triple stops, and employs a flatpick.
A tres made from the factory as a tres has a small body with a straight upper bout
and often had a classic guitar bridge but with a tailpiece. Very often a small
normal guitar is altered to be a tres, by changing the strings and adding grooves
to the nut and drilling 3 extra holes in the bridge, sometimes adding a tailpiece.
Often a student size guitar makes a nice sounding tres for another reason. Many
tres tops are plank, not quarter sawn, and some of the cheaper guitars give a
reasonable sound when made into a tres. However, a dedicated tres, designed
as such with the proper top and bracing, gives a superior tonal color with enough
projection to play with congas and bongos.
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Reprinted with permission from Lark in the Morning
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