When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Music of Haiti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Haiti

    Styles of music unique to the nation of Haiti include music derived from rara parading music, twoubadou ballads, mini-jazz rock bands, rasin movement, hip hop Creòle, the wildly popular compas, [1] and méringue as its basic rhythm. Haitian music is influenced mostly by European colonial ties and African migration (through slavery).

  3. Twoubadou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twoubadou

    Twoubadou (Haitian Creole pronunciation:; French: Troubadour) music is a popular genre of guitar-based music from Haiti that has a long and important place in Haitian culture. The word comes from troubadour, a medieval poet-musician who wrote and sang songs about courtly love. Like the troubadours of old, the Haitian twoubadou is a singer ...

  4. Compas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compas

    A good example is the talented Tito Paris dança ma mi Criola (1994), one of the most popular songs of all time in Cabo Verde; this CD contained music close to Haiti Tabou Combo, Caribbean Sextet, Tropicana and French Antilles Kassav', etc. Cape Verdean artists were exposed to zouk and compas in the US and France.

  5. The world’s listening to Afrobeats. Why is Haitian konpa ...

    www.aol.com/world-listening-afrobeats-why...

    In Nigeria alone, where the sound is popular, the population is over 200 million compared to Haiti where the population is about 12 million. ... 10 of them have videos on YouTube; 15 of them are ...

  6. Jou a Rive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jou_a_Rive

    Jou a Rive is the debut album by the Haitian band Boukan Ginen, released in 1995. [3] [4] It was originally released in Haiti in 1993. Most of the lyrics were sung in Creole. [5] "Pale Pale W" had been voted Best Carnival Song at Haitian Carnival. [6] The band supported the album with a North American tour. [7]

  7. Choucoune (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choucoune_(song)

    Choucoune was recorded by "Katherine Dunham and her Ensemble" for the Decca album Afro-Caribbean Songs and Rhythms released in 1946 (with the title spelled as Choucounne), and was first recorded in Haiti by Emerante (Emy) de Pradines for her Voodoo - Authentic Music of Haiti album (Remington R-199-151) released in the US in 1953.

  8. Bigga Haitian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bigga_Haitian

    Charles Andre Dorismond (born November 4, 1964), better known by his stage name Bigga Haitian, is a Haitian musician and singer who rose to fame in the 1990s. He is known as "the first Haitian singer to break into the Jamaican reggae scene", [1] tearing down national and cultural walls and paving the way for the next generation of Haitian artists.

  9. Val Jeanty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Val_Jeanty

    Val Jeanty, also known as Val-Inc, is a Haitian electronic music composer, turntablist, and professor at Berklee College of Music who evokes the musical esoteric realms of the creative subconscious self-defined as “Afro-Electronica.” She incorporates her African Haitian musical traditions into the present and beyond, combining acoustics ...

  1. Related searches music of haiti rhythms of love cd album youtube free full length cowboy a man alone

    music of haitihaitian folk music