The Cuban popular music has very particular characteristics
as to its broad rhythmic diversity and sound wealth that
distinguishes it from the rest of the Latin American countries. These
characteristics are associated with the formation process
of this music itself which began with the combination of
musical elements from Europe -mainly from Spain--and elements
from different African cultures that converged in the island.
Our
country did not experience what happened in Mexico and other
Latin American regions who have musical manifestations inherited
from native cultures still present in the music of these
countries. American civilizations like the Aztecs, the Mayas
and the Incas were already strong enough when the Europeans
arrived in our continent. So, in spite of
the consequences of the conquest and the devastating colonization
later on, important elements of these cultures managed to
survive until now.
On the contrary, the overwhelming majority
of our cultural manifestations in the island, with an inferior
development compared with the above-mentioned ones, were
completely destroyed during colonization. The music
of our Taínos and Siboneyes was
never known. Only some musical instruments were
known through written references though nothing about sounds,
rhythms, songs, etc.
The genesis of what today is considered
as Cuban music comes from two fundamental musical sources:
a European source and an African source. For centuries, and when thousands
of Africans -as slaves- arrived in Cuba, these two types
of music, quite different, initiated an interrelationship,
a merging that required a long cross-cultural process which
concluded with the emergence of a new music, neither European
nor African, but purely Cuban.
During the 18th Century the
slave trade intensified, thus the presence of blacks in the
island increased too and, as a consequence, their musical
instruments, rhythms, songs and dances also disseminated
across the country together with men and women imported from
that remote continent. Africans
grouped in the so-called Cabildos , associations
made up by citizens of the same nation or region. They
met in these Cabildos and held parties and rites
that kept their cultures of origin alive, namely, their music.
But
those slaves did not limit themselves to beating the drums
or singing their ritual songs, they were gradually integrated
to the musical life of the country and very soon learned
how to play instruments such as the guitar, the mandolin,
the harp, the violin, the clarinet and all those European
instruments. Thus, this white music was "stained" with
new rhythms and the incorporation of percussion instruments -which
although not exactly the same- came from the African music
in Cuba. For example, the marímbula is
an African instrument that was incorporated, as a bass, to son groupings
at the beginning of the 20 th Century.
During the 19 th Century,
and especially during the second half of the century, all
necessary elements for the creation of the Cuban nationality
met. Its highest expression
was the patriotic feeling of the Creole population which
resulted in the Independence Wars. At that time, this
transformation and merging process of both types of music -though
not finished- started bearing fruits. A definitive
example is the Cuban contredanse that emerged as a result
of the French contredanse but with quite different and absolutely
Cuban musical characteristics. Manuel Saumell, considered
the Father of our contredanse, is also viewed as the beginner
of Cuban music nationalism.
Since the times of Saumell`s contredanses
and the emergence of "La Bayamesa" song by Céspedes, Fornaris and Castillo,
during the first half of the 19 th century up to now, deeply
rooted rhythms and musical genres had been welcomed internationally
throughout history. Examples include the cha cha
chá , the son , the mambo ,
the bolero , the danzón and the
beautiful pages written by the Cuban trova in our
history of songs.
The Cuban popular music is a rich combination
of rhythms, forms and sonorities that stemmed out throughout
many years and conforms the heritage of an extremely musical
people with a creative talent. Few countries can show such
a musical wealth to the world. So, we, Cubans, feel
proud.