Music 102 Mid-Term
Santeria
Afro-Cuban hybrid religion → combines Catholicism with Yoruba religion, uses bata drums and chants, as well as idea of spirit possession
huehuetl
Aztec drum, type of membranophone
Julian Carillo
Composed a song called Mass for Pope John Paul III, wrote in style of more experimental classical musicians... big on microtonal music (music that doesn't exist on a piano), wrote quarter-tonal music as a political protest, his way of fighting against the West (Spain and Spanish music)
congas
Cuban, cylindrical drum
merengue
Dominican Republic, uses button accordion, saxophone, bass, style of dance and music
art music
European classical music
Aztec Renaissance
Going back to Aztec roots around 1920, Carlos Chavez piece Sinfonia India... reaffirmation of indigenous past. Shown mostly in arts, like architecture, dance, and music
marimba
Guatemalan (is national instrument), also from Chiapas (Mexico)
güiro
Güira → metal version that is scraped, güiro is the hollowed out gourd in Puerto Rico and Cuba to make similar sound
harpa jarocha
Harp from Veracruz used in son jarocho
jarana
Mexican 4 stringed instrument, small and guitar-like → that plays only chords and rhythms... several notes at a time and is strummed
falsetto
Mexican mariachis using voices an octave higher through part of the song
corridos
Mexican song that tells a story, poor people's newspaper
mariachi
Mexican, jaranas, requintos, trumpets, guitarrón, occasionally the harp
Manuel Garcia
Opera singer from Spain who introduced bel canto
Tito Puente
Played timbales, Puerto Rican who was a jazz musician that studied classical music and usually did band leading and composer (had 106 albums released in his lifetime)
plena
Puerto Rican music, with strong Afro-European influence
orishas
Santería gods, connected to saints
sonido trece
Sounds Carillo experimented with that went beyond traditional 12 notes of western music
Tex-Mex
Texas music mixed with Mexican sounds, bajo sexto and accordion always used
timbales
Tito Puente was most famous player
aerophones
Wind instruments (Latin America → Ocarina, flutes, trumpets)
shekere
a hollowed out gourd found in Cuba with beads around it, used in Santería and is originally from Africa
sesquialtera
alternating patterns between six beats and three (ba ba ba ba ba ba baaaa baaaa baaaaa, ba ba ba ba ba ba baaaa baaaa baaaaa)
membranophone
any drum that has a skin or membrane (see huehuetl)
guitarrón
bass guitar instrument, used in mariachi
ostinato
clave pattern
ocarina
clay flute that is an aerophone, usually in the shape of animals
Miguel de Zumaya
composer of beautiful choral music in the European style, wrote for Catholic church
bachata
dance from the Dominican Republic, Romeo Santos is most famous practitioner
bongas
drums created in Cuba
maracas
duh, shakers used everywhere
son jaliscience
early Mariachi, came from state of Jalisco
Carlos Chavez
famous Mexican composer, prolific man who studied in Mexico, NY, and Europe
Sexto Habanero
first famous group of son musicians, moved to Havana and were the first to record it
button accordion
found in Tex-Mex music, also in some corridos... a German influence along border of USA/Mexico, accordion found its way south
son jarocho
from Veracruz
tres
guitar with three sets of two strings, found in Cuba → Arsenio Rodriguez played this
cuatro
guitar, with four sets of two strings from Puerto Rico... found in plena style
teponatzli
idiophone used by Aztecs, hollowed out log used for music and sacrifice
ayotl
instrument played by Aztecs, tortoiseshell hit by deer antler
timpani
large kettle thingy
Yoruba
largest West African tribe, and the vast majority of Africans taken as slaves to Latin America
iya
largest drum in Cuban Santería
okonkolo
medium sized drum in bata
pandereta
membranophone from Puerto Rico, used in plena and is a flat hoop that you hold and play
commercial music
music for commerce
bomba
music style in Puerto Rico, born on the coast and heavily African influence... highlighted by connection between dancer and lead drummer, found in ghettos of Puerto Rico today (can also mean party or gathering, also the name of the dance)
bombas
name of the drum played at bomba celebration
orquesta tipica
name of type of orchestra that played danzóns
mambo
now called salsa
Orestes Lopez
one of the two brothers (he and his brother Israel) that created the mambo style, now called salsa
vacunao
part of guaguanco, symbolically impregnating the female in the dance
guaguanco
part of the rumba, the couples dance that uses idea of flirtation and sexuality
folk music
passed on from person to person (generation to generation) without being written down
mestizo
person who is native and spanish combined
Sinfonia India
piece written by Chavez for Aztec Renaissance
Arsenio Rodriguez
played the tres from Cuba, changed and developed music in the 40s and 50s by adding instruments to the son (like congas and trumpets)
cinquillo
rhythmic pattern of five beats found in danzón (from Cuba)
clave
rhythmic pattern that keeps everyone together
idiophones
self-sounding instrument → triangle, woodblocks, teponatzli, cymbals
tambora
side drum used in Dominican music, typically in merengue
requinto
small guitar that opposes the jarana... plays melodies while jarana plays chords
itotele
smallest drum in Cuban Santería
columbia
solo male dance in rumba
chordophones
strings → guitar, bajo sexto, etc.
bel canto
style in which opera singers sang, in italian. Means beautiful song/sound, Manuel Garcia made it popular... many mexicans and mariachis use this style
Cuban son
style of music from turn of the 20th century, lasted until 1930s, basis for modern Cuban Music → Arsenio Rodriguez spread the musical style by adding trumpets and congas
yambu
style of rumba associated with older generation, slower
mestizaje
term about appreciating the blendedness of your heritage
bajo sexto
tex-mex instrument, six stringed with bass strings and guitar (used only in corridos and other songs from border region)
claves
the literal instrument that keeps them together... Cuban, found in bomba, in PR, in danzón
cabildos
the social clubs allowed by Catholic church to permit slaves to maintain dances, language, and culture at large on Sundays in Afro-Cuban society
bata
three drums → iyá (larger), okonkolo (medium), and itotele (smaller). From Yoruba and then Cuba, with Santería religion (played the same way)
rumba
three kinds, including columbia, guaguanco, and yambu (slowest version, associated with the older generation)
punta
type of dance from Honduras, African influence from Garifuna people
flute
used primarily in danzón, also occasionally in salsa
danzón
uses cinquillo, classical in style because it was made for the upper class... instruments → trumpets, violins, timpanis, piano, clarinet, flute, bass, and güiro
son huasteco
uses violin as main instrument, whereas son jarocho does not... additionally, men use falsetto more often than son jarocho (in son jarocho, harp is played)