Cumbia

Cumbia

Cumbia is a music genre popular across Latin America. The cumbia originated in the Caribbean coast of Colombia, where it is associated with an eponymous dance and has since then spread as far as Mexico and Argentina, giving way to numerous sub-genres and local scenes.

It originated in Colombia's Caribbean coastal region, of the musical and cultural fusion of Indian, black slaves from Africa and, to a lesser extent, of the Spanish during the time of the Cologne in the old country Pocabuy settled in the Momposina Depression.

In Panama, cumbia dates from colonial times and has its epicenter in the central provinces. The different regional variations have a choreographic and musical composition descent mainly of Africa. They further point out the instrumentation and original dance steps from Spanish (Andalusia and Galician), and to a lesser extent from indigenous.[1][2]

In Mexico, cumbia dates from mid-20th century, Colombian band leaders such as Pacho Galan and Lucho Bermúdez orchestrated this Caribbean folklore and brought it to different parts of Latin America, where it gained particular popularity in Mexico, Argentina, and the Andean region. Mexico created new style beats.

Cumbia began as a courtship dance practiced among the African slave population that was later mixed with European instruments and musical characteristics. Cumbia is very popular in the Andean region and the Southern Cone and was until the early 1980s more popular in these regions than the salsa.[3]

The Panamanian cumbia was also internationalized, there were many song versions in other Latin American countries, mainly in Colombia where Alfredo Gutierrez played many Panamanian songs and composed songs dedicated to Panama. was popularized throughout the Pacific coast of South America by Toby Muñoz where "La Parranda de Panamá" was known primarily in Chile Peru and Ecuador. The cumbia "cocaleca" of the Panamanian Victor Cavalli was a success in Mexico. The "Cocaleca" became popular after it was featured as the soundtrack of the Mexican film "The Adventurer" or "Victim of Sin." was also adapted to the Mambo by Benny Moré. In Puerto Rico, was popularized by Silvia de Grasse, who successfully introduced the cumbia in that country and in Venezuela was popularize by the "Billos Caracas Boys" that played many Panamanian cumbias.

Contents

Origins

It is often asserted that cumbia is a variant of Guinean cumbé music. However, it should be noted that the rhythm of cumbia can be found in music of Yoruba (more specifically, the rhythm is associated with the god Obatala), and in other musical traditions across West Africa. Cumbia started in the northern coast of South America, what is now Colombia, mainly in or around The Momposina Depression during the period of Spanish colonization. Spain used its ports to import African slaves, who tried to preserve their musical traditions and also turned the drumming and dances into a courtship ritual. Cumbia was mainly performed with just drums and claves.

The slaves were later influenced by the sounds of the new world instruments from the Kogui and Kuna tribes, who lived between the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta and the Montes de María in Colombia and Kuna Yala in Panama. Millo flutes, Gaita flutes, and güiros were instruments borrowed from these new world tribes. The interaction between Africans and natives of the new world under the Spanish caste system created a mixture from which the gaitero (cumbia interpreter) appeared, with a defined identity by the 1800s. (These gaiteros' are not the same as the Venezuelan Zulian gaiteros.) The European guitars were added later through Spanish influence. According to legend, the accordion was added after a German cargo ship carrying the instruments sank as a load of accordions washed ashore on the northwest coast of Colombia.

In Panama, the processes that shaped the culture and idiosyncrasies of the Colombian Caribbean through the three aspects (Hispanic, black and Indian) from the Spanish colonial period until today, also occurred in the isthmus. Research in the field talk about their appearance in the Colonial era, in the evening Creole families gathered to recite poetry and perform typical music of spain and of Europe, other nights they brought their slaves to play their traditional drums and dances. Among his favorites African dances was El Punto, that representation consisted in intrinsic and abdominal movements and an African woman dancing alone. Another dance was the cumbia, for this the couples advanced to the center of the room, men versus women and was gradually formed a circle of couples. The dance step of the man was a kind of leap backwards as the woman slid forward carrying a lighted candle in her hand holding a colored handkerchief very alive.[4] Also is recorded on the dance in the religious holiday celebrated in the month of May that had the name"The Wake of the Cross" and the people gathered to pray rosaries, litanies chanted and then formed a dance cumbias ran, still exist today in inland communities and the nation's capital.[5]

Cumbia as a courtship ritual

The slave courtship rit, which featured dance prominently, was traditionally performed with music played by pairs of men and women and with male and female dancers. Women playfully wave their long skirts while holding a candle, and men dance behind the women with one hand behind their back and the other hand either holding a hat, putting it on, or taking it off. Male dancers also carried a red handkerchief which they either wrapped around their necks, waved in circles in the air, or held out for the women to hold. Until the mid-20th century, cumbia was considered to be an inappropriate dance performed primarily by the lower social classes.

Style

The basic rhythm structure is 2/4. Due to its origins, both African and new world natives influences can be felt in cumbia.

In Colombia is played with a rhythm structure in 2/4 and 2/2. In Mexico is played with a rhythm structure in 2/2. In Panama is played with a rhythm structure in 2/4 and 6/8.

Musical instruments

Traditional instruments used in cumbia:

  • Drums: Cumbia drums were of African origin and were brought along with slaves to the new world by the Spanish conquerors. natives used wood, ropes made out of sisal (Agave sisalana), and dried animal skins to make their drums. The drums were played either with hands or with sticks. The ends of the sticks were sometimes wrapped with dry skin to prevent wearing of the drums. Cumbia interpreters produce variations of the sound emitted by the drum by hitting it on almost every area of the wooden base and dry skin. Today, modern deep-toned drums are used in cumbia as well.

The tambora is a bass drum, played in the very first Cumbia rhythms before the accordion entered the cumbia scene. It is rarely seen today as most of the percussion instruments of traditional Cumbia have been replaced by the more versatile conga, güira, claves, and timbales. Now, Colombian and Panamanian tamboras are generally only seen at folkloric presentations.[6]

  • Claves: These percussion instruments are a pair of hard thick sticks and usually set the beat throughout the song.

Cumbia genres and movements

During the mid-20th century, Colombian musicians such as Pacho Galán and Lucho Bermúdez created a more refined form of Cumbia that became very popular through all of Colombia, Mexico, and Latin America. This period is known as "The Golden Age of Cumbia". Linda Vera was known as "The Queen of Cumbia". She was a Mexican singer.

Due to the diversity of Latin America, Colombian Cumbia has undergone major changes as it mixed with the regional music styles of several countries (especially in Mexico, Ecuador, and Peru). There are several distinct variations of the music:

Cumbia Chicha

Peruvian cumbia, particularly from 1960s to mid-1990s, is generally known as "Chicha", although this definition is quite problematic as both Peruvian cumbia and Chicha currently co-exist and influence each other (good examples include Agua Marina's popular cover of Los Eco's "Paloma Ajena" and Grupo Nectar's cover of Guinda's "Cerveza, Ron y Guinda"). Peruvian cumbia started in the 1960s with groups such as Los Destellos, and later with Juaneco Y Su Combo, Los Mirlos, Los Shapis, Cuarteto Continental, Los Diablos Rojos, Pintura Roja, Chacalon y la Nueva Crema and Grupo Nectar. Some musical groups that play Peruvian cumbia today are: Agua Marina, Armonia 10, Agua Bella, and Grupo 5. These groups would be classified as Cumbia but often take songs and techniques from Chicha and Huayno (Andean Music) in their stylings or as songs (see Armonia 10's "Quise Morir"). Grupo Fantasma was a Peruvian-Mexican cumbia group. Andean Cumbia, is a style that combines Andean music and cumbia. This style has even become popular in Mexico, as some groups like Grupo Saya claim to be Cumbia andina mexicana, Mexican Andean Cumbia.

Cumbia sonidera

Technocumbia

from Mexico.

Cumbia villera

In Argentina, due to its identity crisis, there is a social divide that is exemplified by the cumbia villera phenomenon that represents and resonates with the poor and marginalized dwellers of villas miseria, (shanty towns, and slums). Argentinian cumbia lyrics typically glorify theft and drug abuse. Pablo Lescano, ex-member of Amar Azul and founder of Flor Piedra and Damas Gratis is known to be the creator of the cumbia villera "sound". However, it must be noted that a lighter form of cumbia enjoyed widespread popularity in Argentina during the 1990s (see Argentine cumbia). Antonio Rios (ex-Grupo Sombras, ex-Malagata) is a good representative of the Argentinian cumbia from the 1990s. The emergence of cumbia as a massively popular form of music in Argentina came perhaps with the release of Tarjetita de Invitacion by Adrian y Los Dados Negros (from Jujuy, northern Argentina) in 1988 which was certified platinum, a first back then for a cumbia act.

Tropical movement

Chilean Romantic Cumbia

New Chilean Cumbia Rock

Nowadays, Cumbia is gaining new attention as the result of an emergence of acts formed by younger musicians usually labelled as "La Nueva Cumbia Chilena" (The new Chilean Cumbia), including bands such as Chico Trujillo, Banda Conmocion, Juana Fe, Sonora Barón, Sonora de Llegar, Chorizo Salvaje, Sonora Tomo como Rey, Villa Cariño, Sepamoya, Guachupe among others. These new bands offer some of the classic tones and sounds of Chilean cumbia blended with Rock or other folk Latin American styles.[7] La Noche and Americo are also very popular acts, although they perform a more traditional style of Chilean cumbia, to some extent related to the style that dominated during the 90s.

Cumbia "Sound"

The Chilean cumbia style is called "sound" and continues to be the most popular cumbia style in the northern part of the country (from XV region of Arica and Parinacota to V Region of Valparaíso and some regions of Southern Chile). Its better-known exponents are: Amerika'n Sound, Alegria, Amanecer and Pazkual y su Alegria, although into the late 90s and early 2000s there were dozens of groups that died with the style's crisis in mid-2005.

A resilient cumbia style from the early 1990s is Chilean 'technocumbia', sometimes known as "Sound". It is a style partially based on the Peruvian, Bolivian and Mexican cumbia with some Andean styles, although it has his own identity based on a faster beat and better arrangements.

Chanchona

"Chanchona" is a neoligism to describe a musical band that follows a cumbia rhythm and uses instruments such as the accordion, electric bass, conga, güira, and the occasional keyboard. This genre is popularized by artists such as La Chanchona de Tito Mira and La Chanchona de Arcadio. Chanchona sometimes also features a marimba, made famous in the genre by Fidel Funes.

Digital Cumbia

Digital Cumbia or "nu-cumbia" refers to a global movement of electronic music producers such as Toy Selectah, Frikstailers and El Hijo de la Cumbia who mix Cumbia traditional rhythms and samples with electronic music styles. The style varies greatly, incorporating influences from genres such as Dancehall, Hip-Hop, Moombahton and Electronica. Notable labels include Generation Bass, ZZK Records, Mad Decent, Bersa Discos and Urban World Records.

See also

References

  1. ^ Garay, Narciso, traditions and songs of Panama: folk essay, editorial Belge De L'exoansion, 1930, Belgium.
  2. ^ Mallet, Obarrio Matilde Vda. of, sketch of colonial life, Panama: Panama Printer, 1961. 61: illus., 22 cm.
  3. ^ Luis Vitale. Música popular e identidad Latinoamericana.
  4. ^ Mallet, Matilde Vda Obarrio. of, sketch of colonial life, Panama: Panama Printer, 1961. 61: illus., 22 cm.
  5. ^ Castillero, Ernesto, table manners, social divisions of the Panamanian, Times magazine Oct. 13, 1949. p.. 6-7
  6. ^ Youtube video of Colombian tambora music
  7. ^ http://www.ar.terra.com/terramagazine/interna/0,,OI1700975-EI8878,00.html

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