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Caribbean
Music,
diverse variety of musical styles and traditions
from the islands of the Caribbean Sea. It ranges
from traditional folk genres, such as the Puerto
Rican aguinaldo and Jamaican mento, to contemporary
popular idioms such as calypso, soca, salsa and
reggae. The Caribbean Islands,
also known as the West Indies, include the Greater
Antilles (Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, and
Puerto Rico), the Lesser Antilles (Martinique and
Guadeloupe), the Netherlands Antilles and Aruba, and
Trinidad and Tobago.
Caribbean folk and popular music are a mixture of West
African and European (primarily Spanish) influences.
West Africans who were brought as enslaved people to the
islands of the Caribbean made music with percussion
instruments such as drums, bells, and shakers. They
brought their unique musical style elements as well:
special tempo-setting rhythms (time lines) played by
claves or bells, multi-layered and syncopated rhythms,
and songs in call-and-response formats. Europeans
brought with them the guitar, Spanish dance forms, and a
Western European use of harmony.
The styles of Caribbean music vary from island to
island. In Cuba, the most important style of music is
the son (sohn), a rural style of songs for
dancing. It includes mambo dance music, among others.
The ending of most Cuban sones features a quick
alternation between a soloist improvising a "call" and
the rest of the group playing and singing the
"response." Another popular Afro-Cuban dance is the
rumba, which became popular as an American ballroom
dance in the 1930s.
The Dominican merengue is a dance form that is
also popular in Puerto Rico, Haiti, and Venezuela.
Accordions, drums, and marimba are frequently used in
ensembles that play merengue dance music.
Jamaican reggae, popularized by a group called
Bob Marley and the Wailers, was preceded by styles
called ska and rock steady.
Puerto Rican musical styles include the bomba,
which uses a call-and-response format and has drum
accompaniment, and the plena, which is a ballad
(story song) style similar to some found in Mexico.
Calypso developed mainly in Trinidad and Tobago.
It is a popular style of song that often contains
comical social criticism and satire. A less well-known
style is tamboo bamboo, which involves using
stamping tubes made of bamboo. Trinidad and Tobago are
also known as the birthplace of steel drum bands.
Caribbean Musical
Instruments

Conga drums: Cuban barrel-shaped, one-headed hand
drums, played in sets of two to four
Bongo drums: a set of two small one-headed drums
held between the knees and played by hand
Timbales: a set of two one-headed metal
shelled drums played with a stick
Steel drums: also known as "pans," are made from
oil drums heated and hammered into an instrument with
multiple pitches played with rubber-headed mallets.
Steel drums are often played in bands of many
instruments.
Claves: concussion sticks made of Cuban hardwood,
which often play a time line, or tempo-setting rhythm
Maracas: gourd rattles played in pairs throughout
Latin America
Guiro: a notched hollow gourd played with a stick
Tamboo bamboo: hollow bamboo tubes hit or
stamped on the ground
Tiple: In Puerto Rico, a small instrument
of the same general type as the cuatro, with four or
five single strings
Other instruments used in the Caribbean Islands today
include the violin, electric bass, acoustic bass,
trumpet, trombone, saxophone, and the six-string Spanish
guitar. |