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Size: 50 x 30 x 30 cm. (19.5 x 11.7 x 11.7 inches)
This cajón (box-drum) comes with a small padded cushion that has been especially designed taking the size of the cajón into account.
Professional La Perú cajón. Manufactured using alder wood.
The lid is made of walnut burl which has undergone the special "black eyes" treatment. Features the La Perú tuning system.
Guaranteed delivery: Esflamenco.com sends the flamenco cajones perfectly packaged to ensure that they arrive in a perfect condition. If for any reason the cajón were to arrive in a faulty condition, we will replace it for a new one without any further charges.
The cajón, from Peru to Andalusia
The cajón is a percussion instrument that has been recently introduced into flamenco music. Its origins are Peruvian, Afro-Peruvian to be precise, as they were invented by African slaves who were transferred to the viceroyalty of Peru, who used the boxes that they used to carry merchandise as musical instruments.
The cajón only made its appearance in flamenco music in the seventies, when it was introduced by Paco de Lucía. Since then, the Peruvian cajón has been progressively adapting to the needs of flamenco, in terms of both sound and rhythm, as it requires more high-pitch sounds than were produced by the original Peruvian design.
Over a short period, the cajón has become firmly established in flamenco. It contributes to creating the rhythm that each flamenco palo (form) possesses. The way in which it works is very simple: by and large, it is a wooden box with one of the side boards missing, in its oldest and most basic version, or which has a hole in one of its sides.
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The flamenco heartbeat We look at the main percussion instruments in flamenco.
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