History of Latin Music PDF
History of Latin Music PDF
Latin American music is the product of the mixture of three main cultures: Indigenous,
Spanish-European and African. The music of today reflects this tri-cultural heritage in its
instruments, rhythms and lyrics. Before the arrival of the Spaniards, native cultures used
percussion instruments such as maracas, güiro and turtle shells, and wind instruments
such as quena and zampoña. During the Conquest, the Spaniards and Portuguese settlers
introduced the ancestor of the guitar and other stringed instruments to native people
throughout Latin America, who adopted these instruments and eventually adapted them
to their environment. This regional adaptation gave birth to a wide variety of string
instruments that differ in shape, construction, material, number of strings and tuning.
When Africans were brought to the Americas to work as slaves, they brought with them
many of their traditions, further enriching the music and culture of Latin America. To this
African influence we owe many of our drums, and also the way many of us sing, such as
the call and response style, in which a leader sings a line followed by a response from the
group.
Eventually, European instruments, like the guitar, the piano and brass and wind
orchestras along with their respective musical forms took root in the new environment
and were woven into newly syncretized forms, the fruit of which we enjoy today.
Colonial European music is still intact in some regions and heavily acculturated in others.
The popularity of the march, polka, ballad and the many waltzes, bear witness to an
extensive European contribution to Latin American music culture. Adoption of European
scale systems, structures and harmonic vocabularies permeate Latin music. Some, like the
so-called "Andalusian cadence" (A minor, G, F, E), are even traceable to the Moors of
Spain.