When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Merengue music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merengue_music

    Merengues are fast arrangements with a 2. 4 beat. The traditional instrumentation for a conjunto típico (traditional band), the usual performing group of folk merengue, is a diatonic accordion, a two–sided drum, called a tambora, held on the lap, and a güira. A güira is a percussion instrument that sounds like a maraca.

  3. Music of Latin America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Latin_America

    The Latin (or romantic) ballad is a Latin musical genre which originated in the 1960s. This ballad is very popular in Hispanic America and Spain, and is characterized by a sensitive rhythm. A descendant of the bolero, it has several variants (such as salsa and cumbia).

  4. Cadence rampa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadence_rampa

    Cadence rampa (Haitian Creole: kadans ranpa, [kadãs ɣãpa]), or simply kadans, [1] is a dance music and modern méringue popularized in the Caribbean by the virtuoso Haitian sax player Webert Sicot in the early 1960s. Cadence rampa was one of the sources of cadence-lypso. [2][3] Cadence and compas are two names for the same Haitian modern ...

  5. Méringue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Méringue

    Méringue (French pronunciation: [meʁɛ̃ɡ]; Haitian Creole: mereng), also called méringue lente or méringue de salon (slow or salon méringue), [1][2] is a dance music and national symbol in Haiti. [3] It is a string-based style played on the guitar, horn section, piano, and other string instruments unlike the accordion -based merengue ...

  6. Music of Colombia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Colombia

    Colombia is known as "the land of a thousand rhythms" but actually holds over 1,025 folk rhythms. Some of the best known genres are cumbia and vallenato. The most recognized interpreters of traditional Caribbean and Afro-Colombian music are Totó la Momposina and Francisco Zumaqué.

  7. Afro-Caribbean music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Caribbean_music

    Afro-Caribbean music dates back as far as the 15th century, when the slave trade began. [7] Although afro-Caribbean music existed for centuries, local recording and distribution officially began in the 1920s. [6] Some of the earlier afro-Caribbean sub-genres to emerge included calypso, merengue, son, reggae and salsa. [6]

  8. Music of Venezuela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Venezuela

    Appearance. Cover of the first edition of Alma Llanera, unofficial second national anthem of Venezuela. Several styles of the traditional music of Venezuela, such as salsa and merengue, are common to its Caribbean neighbors. Perhaps the most typical Venezuelan music is joropo, a rural form which originated in the llanos, or plains.

  9. Merengue (dance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merengue_(dance)

    Merengue is the national dance of the Dominican Republic and is also important to national identity in the country. It is a type of danced walk and is accessible to a large variety of people with or without dance experience. [2] The music of merengue draws influence from European and Afro-Cuban styles and mainly uses instruments like guitars ...