Latin American Music I INTRODUCTION Tito Puente Playing the Drums Since the 1950s American drummer Tito Puente has popularized Latin American music, especially the mambo, in the United States.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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Panpipe Music of BoliviaWell before the Spanish conquest, native peoples such as the Quechua and Aymara living in the Andes Mountains inBolivia, Peru, and Ecuador, developed a rich musical tradition.
Panpipes (set of tuned pipes), made of ceramic, sugarcane,or bone were paired with shell trumpets, cane flutes, and drums, which accompanied dancers during religious and secularceremonies.
Large ensembles of 4 to 20 panpipe players are still the norm, and Spanish influences have since beenintegrated into the music, resulting in the unique polyphonic (playing two or more melodies together as in harmony)structure of Andean panpipe ensembles.Kevin Healy/"Sicuriada" from Music of the Andes and Argentina (Cat.# Music of the World T-112) (p)1988 Music of the World, Ltd.
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Contemporary Quechua and Aymara musicians of the Andean area continue to play indigenous trumpets (without stops), single- and double-row panpipes ( antaras and sikus ) and vertical end-notched flutes ( kenas ).
These instruments are often played in large communal ensembles accompanied by drums.
In the central and southern Andes, these instruments are played for both indigenous and Catholic religious festivals and for communal agricultural, animal-fertility, and life-cycle ceremonies.
Thereremains a preference for high-pitched instruments and female singing in upper and falsetto ranges.
Although the flute-drum combination is still used among highland Native Americans in Mexico, locally constructed stringed instruments, such as the violin, harp, andvarious types of guitar, have become more important.
First introduced by colonial missionaries during the 16th century, these stringed instruments are now central toLatin American music generally, and, as in Mexico, they have been incorporated by highland Native Americans in the Andes.
Lowland Amazonian Native Americans use a variety of flutes, panpipes, trumpets, drums, and shakers.
Songs are particularly important and are used for rituals ofcuring, for the maintenance and telling of the group's history and myths, for subsistence activities, and for dance accompaniment in a variety of communal festivals,including initiation ceremonies and events related to family and social relations.
Indigenous Andean music is characterized by a preference for dense, fuzzy timbres (tone colors) and, as with Native American music in Mexico and among lowland groups, for intense repetition of short musical ideas within a piece.
Long repetition of the same piece is also favored, primarily because repetition adds aesthetic powerby inviting collective participation in the music and dance.
The pieces tend to comprise short, repeated sections (such as AABB, ABAB, ABCABC), and descendingmelodies are frequent among both highland and lowland societies.
A variety of scales ranging from two pitches to more than seven pitches are found among lowlandand highland groups.
Simple binary meter, such as 2/4 time, generally is common in Native American music.
The degree of rhythmic complexity and syncopation variesby region and by specific group.
Indigenous music tends to be monophonic (consisting of a single, unharmonized melody) or heterophonic (consisting of two or moreparts playing the same melody in varied ways), although in southern Peru and Bolivia the use of parallel fourths and fifths ( see Harmony) is common for panpipe and flute ensembles.
Vocal styles among lowland groups range from a soft, relaxed timbre to a gruff, chantlike style.
Indigenous Andeans favor high throat and headsinging, often utilizing sliding pitches and other vocal ornaments, but without vibrato.
III RURAL MESTIZO MUSIC
The term mestizo describes Latin Americans whose lifestyles combine European and indigenous (and rural and urban) ideas, values, practices, and other cultural elements.
Their music reflects both European and indigenous influences.
Within the varied mosaic of musical cultures in Latin America, certain aspects of mestizo musicare perhaps the most widely diffused throughout the region.
Stringed instruments—particularly the diatonic harp, violin, guitar and regional guitar variants, and mandolin and mandolin variants—are, in varied combinations, centralto mestizo regional ensembles.
By the beginning of the 20th century, brass bands became common to rural villages and popular in urban festivals, as did the diatonicbutton accordion and the piano accordion.
In addition to these European-derived instruments, the African marimba (a type of xylophone) was adopted as a key mestizoinstrument in southern Mexico, Guatemala, and other parts of Central America.
Conical drums and other drums and percussion instruments from the African heritagewere also adopted for mestizo music making.
Over time, these different classes of instruments were recombined to create new ensemble types.
For example, the rural string band from Michoacán, Mexico, wascomposed of a guitar, vihuela (a small, convex-backed, five-string guitar), one or two violins, and a harp or guitarrón (a large bass guitar).
This type of ensemble became popular in motion pictures and on the radio in Mexico City after the 1930s, at which time one or two trumpets were added as a standard feature.
Since then,these ensembles, known as mariachi bands, have become a musical emblem of Mexico and are among the most internationally famous of the Latin American musicalensembles.
In the Atlantic coastal region of Colombia, indigenous flutes were traditionally accompanied by African-style drums, as well as by shakers and scrapers, toperform cumbia, by now one of the most famous Latin American dances.
During the 20th century, the diatonic button accordion replaced the flutes to play cumbia in what are known as vallenato ensembles.
In contemporary Cuzco, Peru, mestizo festival dance bands combine the pre-Columbian kena (an end-notched flute) with violins, a diatonic harp, a piano accordion, and a European marching-band bass drum.
Mestizo dance orchestras in Junín, Peru, combine saxophones and clarinets withthe violin and diatonic harp.
Mestizo music tends to be strophic—that is, the same music is repeated in each stanza of a song—with song texts in the Iberian-derived copla (four-line stanzas), decima (ten-line stanzas), and other forms.
The European major and minor scales are used most frequently, as are basic European harmonies.
Vocal and instrumental melodic lines are often performed in parallel thirds ( see Harmony).
A common feature of rural mestizo music throughout Latin America is hemiola, or the simultaneous or sequential juxtaposition of duple and triple rhythmic patterns, within a moderate or quick 6/8 meter ( see Musical Rhythm).
This type of rhythm is basic to the Mexican songs performed by mariachi ensembles; to the national dance of Chile, the cueca; to the popular Venezuelan dance the joropo; to Paraguayan harp music; and to many other Latin American musical forms..
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