- Ttakuna
Pronounced [caˈkuna] (IPA) as well as "txakuna" ( [tʃaˈkuna] ). The "ttakuna" is a basic two beat pounding played by each player of the
txalaparta with the sticks. It provides the grounds for the traditional txalaparta alongside the "herrena " within a binary pattern. In that instrument, played by two performers, each one takes on a part on the performance, either the "ttakuna" or the "herrena". The ttakuna represents the balance or the regularity, meaning that this performer shall steadily play two even beats on the boards when it is their turn. However, the herrena may choose to play the ttakun too as they please.These two beats are fairly even in the traditional txalaparta, with a slight stress on the first strike, but it's not uncommon listening to ttakunas being performed markedly tilted to the second beat (resulting in an emphasized second beat), driven by
inertia .On the strength of the development the
txalaparta has gone through, these boundaries between the two parts played by each performer have gradually eased off, and the person playing ttakuna may break their part and alternate with other combinations (eg a single beat or a rest), so destabilizing the former balance and starting off a dialectical struggle between both players.
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