Instrumental music existed from the very beginning                     of   the Cuban nationality,   not merely as the                     performance of European works by Cuban musicians, but of                     themes that had already typical elements of an autoctonous,                     national music. The Creole contredanses  and dances  --                     instrumental pieces  --  composed during                     the first half of the 19th century are the best example of                     it,   also evident in Manuel Samuell´s compositions.
Our danzón , a deep-rooted                     Cuban genre performed from the end of that same century until                     the first half of the XX century, is eminently instrumental,                     like the mambo , created in the 40´s and internationally                     famous in the following decades. Both were Cuban popular                     and dancing rhythms, conceived to be performed by a given                     orchestral format in a protagonistic role.  
The broad                     'instrumental music' concept embraces, firstly, the music                     composed and written for musical instruments without vocal                     sounds, and secondly, the large number of instrumental versions                     made from pieces originally conceived to be sung.   
Likewise, this concept includes the symphonic,                     camara, piano, etc works composed by many musicians. In this                     regard, it is worthwhile mentioning the names of 3 Cuban                     musicians and their invaluable work: Ignacio Cervantes (1847-1905),                     Alejandro García Caturla (1906-1940) and Amadeo Roldán                     (1900-1939). Among Cervantes´ many compositions, his                     famous ' dances  for piano' should be highlighted,                     since they are still played with a lot of success.   As                     for Caturla and Roldán, the Cuban popular music imprint                     is present in their work, combining national rhythmic and                     sound elements with the classic format of   universal                     music.   
When speaking about instrumental music                     in Cuba we must mention the most used instrumental formats,                     some of which were even created -- or recreated -- by our                     musicians to perform a variety of different popular genres.  
After                     the performance of contredanses,                       dances  and danzones by the so-called typical                       orchestras or wind-orchestras in the 19th century, other                       instrumental groups emerged. The French charangas ,                       which since the beginning of the 20th century coexisted                       and finally substituted the typical ones in the performance                       of the danzón , could be considered as                       the creators and best promoters of the cha cha chá .                       The sextets and the septets inaugurated the 20´s                       shaping and disseminating the urban son , while                       the bolero  and the son  reached their                       climax in the 40´s played by both ensembles and orchestras.                       Rural music groupings, with their predominant sonority                       of pressed strings, are still felt everywhere in Cuba´s                       country fields and the rumba groups, with the                       sound of drums and other percussion instruments, turn this                       and other manifestations into a colorful and rhytmic experience                       with an evident African origin. 
The jazz band orchestra                       that came to Cuba from the United States constitutes another                       important instrumental group that frequently interpreted                       the most diverse genres of Cuban popular music. This orchestra                       assumed a Cuban style by incorporating our rhythms and                       percussion instruments in their performances and was the                       one who 'launched' the mambo .  
There are countless instrumental combinations,                     some smaller, other pretty large such as the symphonic orchestra,                     mainly used to interpret pieces of   Cuban instrumental                     music.  
During the past century, musicians like Ernesto                     Lecuona, Harold Gramatges, José Ardévol, Argeliers                     León and others, composed a great number of Cuban                     instrumental music, either as symphonic or camera works,                     or even others, that constitute part of our musical heritage                     for its quality and relevance.Since the 60´s up to                     now, new generations of composers have been writing instrumental                     pieces, namely Leo Brouwer, Frank Fernández, "Chucho" Valdés,                     Lucía Huergo and Sergio and José Mª. Vitier                     brothers.