225 29 58MB
English Pages 432 [440] Year 2002
r
a^
y: ABAKUA TO
ZOUK .
HOW MOVEMENT
Y
SHAPES IDENTITY
SUSANNA SLOAT
CARIBBEAN DANCE FROM ABAKUA TO ZOUK is
an unprecedented overview of the dances
from each of this regions major islands and
and layered cultures
that
them. The authors in
this
the complex, fused,
have given birth
from distinguished
collection, to
to
cultural leaders
highly innovative choreographers, reveal
how dance shapes
personal,
communal, and
national identity. Their essays also
show how
Caribbean rhythms, dances, fragments of
movement, even
attitudes toward
movement
reach beyond the islands and through the ex-
West Indian diaspora communities
tensive
in
North America, Latin America, and Europe to be embraced by the world
at large.
A
range of
approaches, from the anthropological to the erary
and from the
lit-
practical to the creative, al-
lows for a thorough exploration of these dances in the distinct yet interrelated contexts of social history, tradition/ritual,
nections are
and performance. Con-
made among
dances, both familiar and culturally
mance
based dances
to
pieces. Particular
a fascinating array of little
newly created perfor-
emphasis
the African contribution in
dance
distinctive. Photos,
sive glossary
make
it
the
bean dance
known, from
is
placed on
making Caribbean
maps, and an exten-
of terms round out the book to
most complete resource on Caribto date.
Florida
A&M University, Tallahassee
Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton
Myers Miami
Florida Gulf Coast University, Ft.
Florida International University,
Florida State University, Tallahassee
University of Central Florida, Orlando
University of Florida, Gainesville University of North Florida, Jacksonville
University of South Florida,
Tampa
University of West Florida, Pensacola
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2013
http://archive.org/details/caribbeandancefrOOsloa
CARIBBEAN DANCE FROM ABAKUA TO ZOUK HOW MOVEMENT SHAPES IDENTITY
Edited by Susanna Sloat
University Press of Florida Gainesville
Pensacola
Tallahassee
Orlando
Miami
Ta?npa
Boca Raton
Jacksonville
Ft.
Myers
Copyright 2002 hy Susanna Sloat Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper All rights reserved
06
07
05
"4
02
0}
654321
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Caribbean dance from abakua to zouk
:
how movement
shapes identity /
edited by Susanna Sloat. p.
cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8130-2549-4 1.
Dance
(cloth: alk. paper)
—Anthropological aspects— Caribbean Area.
I.
Sloat, Susanna.
GV1631.C37 2002 792.8'o9729
The
—dc2i
2002020446
University Press of Florida
is
the scholarly publishing agency for the State
University System of Florida, comprising Florida University, Florida
A&M University,
Florida Atlantic-
Gulf Coast University, Florida International University, Florida
University, University of Central Florida, University of Florida, University of Florida, University of South Florida, and University of
University Press of Florida 15
Northwest 15th Street
Gainesville,
FL 32611-2079
http://wwvv.upf.com
West
Florida.
State
North
1
.
CONTENTS
Introduction
vii
AFRICAN BACKGROUND 1.
Crossroads, Continuities, and Contradictions:
Caribbean Triangle
The Afro-Euro-
3
Brenda Dixon Gottschild 2.
What Is Congolese
in
Caribbean Dance
1
Nathaniel Hamilton Crowell, Jr.
CUBA 3.
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
Creativity
23
Yvonne Daniel
The Dance World of Ramiro Guerra: Solemnity, Voluptuousness, Humor, and Chance 56
4.
Melinda Mousonris 5.
The Tecnica Cubana
73
Sukijohn
JAMAICA 6.
Jamaican Dance Theatre: Celebrating the Caribbean Heritage
Rex Nettleford 7. Rasta and Reggae
81
95
Thomas Osha Pinnock
HAITI 8.
Haitian
Vodou
Ritual
Dance and
Its
Secularization
109
Henry Frank 9. Spirit
Unbound:
Folklore
New Approaches
to the
Performance of Haitian
114
Lois E. Wilcken
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC 10. Dominican Folk Dance and the Shaping of National Identity Martha Ellen Davis 1 1 A Dominican York in Andhra 1 5 2
Ramon H.
Rivera-Servera
127
PUERTO RICO 12. Dance in Puerto Alma Conception 13.
Embodied Meanings
Gilda Navarra: Before
Alma 14.
Rico:
Taller
de
I
listriones
165
1
76
Conception
The Challenges of Puerto Rican Bomba
iH^
Halbert Barton
VIRGIN ISLANDS 15.
Winin' Yo' Wais': The Changing Tastes of Dance on the U.S. Virgin
Island of St. Croix
199
Cynthia Oliver
MARTINIQUE AND GUADELOUPE 16. Sa Ki Ta Nou (This belongs to us): Caribbean
221
Dominique
Cyrille
Creole Dances of the French
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO 17. In
Dance
Search of the Limbo:
An
Investigation into
Its
Folklore as a
Wake
247
Molly Abye 18.
The Moko Jumbie:
Elevating the Children
262
Patricia T. Alleyne-Dettmers
CURACAO 19.
Tambu: Afro-Curacao's Music and Dance of Resistance
291
Gabri Christa
UNITED STATES-CARIBBEAN CONNECTION 20.
Katherine Dunham's Tropical Revue
305
VeVeA. Clark 2 1.
in
Islands Refracted: Recent
New York
Dance on Caribbean Themes
320
Susanna Sloat 22.
Teaching the People to Triumph over Time: Notes from the World
ofMambo
336
Robert Farris Thompson
Glossary
345 Bibliography 371 About the Contributors
Index
393
387
INTRODUCTION
In the twenty-first century, as in the twentieth, the world dances to Carib-
bean call
beats.
From Sydney
to Helsinki,
Tokyo
to Abidjan, salsa and reggae
out to aficionados. Londoners merengue and develop
rhythms
like
English ska or
drum and
new dance
bass out of older Jamaican ones;
Rhythms derived from Africa return there and become newly Africanized rumbas and reggaes. Cruise-ship tourists on all the seas move to soca line dances. On Parisians and Angolans
borrow zouk from the
over, choreographers,
stages
all
bit of
Caribbean hip
even austere postmodern ones,
joy.
may add
a
Caribbean rhythms when they want to
fluidity to
suggest sensuality or
Antilles.
African-Caribbean religions with dancing
their ritual core flourish not only in
but also in diversely Caribbean
at
Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica, and Trinidad,
New
York
City.
Caribbean rhythms,
movement, even an attitude toward movement, reach beyond the islands, beyond the huge West Indian diaspora communities in North America, Latin America, and Europe, to be joyously embraced by the world at large. dances, and fragments of dance
Despite the wide-flung popularity and influence of Caribbean dance
and the prodigious lure of the West Indies for the tropical paradise vacation experience, the
complex cultures that formed these dances are
known. Each
ficiently
island has
its
own complexly
insuf-
—of
layered history
indigenous cultures vanquished by European takeover, enslavement, and disease; of, frequently, multiple conquests ers;
by different European coloniz-
many places brought over as enslaved people to work slaves escaping to form Maroon cultures; of slaves and
of Africans from
plantations; of
colonists
and
free
workers moving from island to island; of slavery being
succeeded by indentured laborers brought over from India, China, Indonesia, or Africa;
of Syrians and Lebanese, Latin and North Americans,
Europeans, West Indians from other
islands,
and others arriving
at vari-
ous times from a multitude of places.
Such
a layering of influences
over the past
five
hundred-plus years has
given these islands dance cultures of a fascinating complexity. Dances of
Introduction
viii
African descent coexist with those of mostly European origins; dances
born elsewhere with those mixed and creolized on the
Although
islands.
modern commercial trends seem as if they might vanquish old traditions and do, in fact, lead to abandonment of some, while others survive only in the repertoires of folkloric troupes, dance traditions once assumed to be
dying get revived
in
ways
that
might surprise their old exponents.
In the
European dances of the plantation owners were adopted and
past,
olized by slaves and free people of African descent and traditions as the elite in
each particular era.
towns took to
Now rural
social
dances such
cre-
became country
dances considered current
as the
at
European-based Creole
quadrilles and African-based Creole bele of Martinique
may
get taken up
by fashionable urbanites; for several decades now intellectuals throughout
means seeking
the Antilles have been embracing the folkloric, which often to
understand and celebrate rather than to downplay what
culture.
Markers of
scorned
is
and race can exchange places
class
is
African in the
what was once
embraced. At the same time inheritors of dances, and of danced
whether remaining
rites,
as
explicitly religious or
with
a spiritual
subsumed, may maintain them with devoted pride. In either
many other As
a
situations,
a variety
also
case,
and
in
primary mark of identity.
a
legacy of competing colonizers, the
by water, but
just
dance becomes
element
West
Indies
is
fragmented not
by language. Spanish, French, English, Dutch, and
of Creoles (mixtures of African and European languages) are
spoken. Certain historical inheritances such as Protestant
hymns
in the
English-speaking Caribbean or the Spanish decima verse form where
Spanish cial
is
spoken
—and
musics that are
also to considerable extent the
now popular and
the dances done to
whether Spanish, French, or English
European and African dances brought
is
island to island
different ways, but with a noticeable lary.
Moreover, there
is
if
not the same
and often carried with the move-
where they evolved
common
in
most African
Still,
styles
of
and complex ways of harmonizing,
between islands that may speak different languages and dance current rhythms.
somewhat
dance language or vocabu-
a great similarity in the
singing, the call and response chants
—
the national language. But the
to the islands were,
in every place, overall frequently shared
ment of peoples from
modern commerthem depend on
to different
language divisions remain strong markers of iden-
tity.
In setting
its
dances within the social contexts of each Caribbean
land, the authors of this
is-
book over and over return to matters of identity,
both personal and communal. Each island has dances that connote place
Introduction
ix
•
ISL'Atf'DS OTT'-yfE
C AfK l B B!EA (
*^
'Martin
~
Croix St.
% ?e[j>
®£z?S
r\
S £%.
'Dominica
Marrinuju«YJ §St. Lucia
St.Vincmt Q
(jrenada
Si
T'obaao^
T'rinidaS\ y
Fig.
1
.
Outline of Caribbean islands. Map:
Don
Burmeister.
and belonging, that have become "national." This can be particularly important in places that have not been until recently, and in
some
cases
still
are not, allowed the status of nations. Beginning mostly in the 1940s, pio-
neers on Caribbean islands began to codify folklore for onstage perfor-
mance. Such codifications become
a set
of national dances that can be
constantly revived, referred to, and added
whether of place or
affinity,
to.
Particular communities,
attach themselves to particular dances. In the
Caribbean, an arena of musical ferment where people love to dance, to achieve not only physical and aesthetic mastery, but also union with the divine with dance, individuals
become
passionately attached to the dances
they do, whether they are those of the majority or of a subculture, in that
way asserting their identity through movement. Hence the subtitle: How Movement Shapes Identity. The title, Caribbean Dance from Abakud to Zonk, suggests an arc from an old ritual tradition in parts of Cuba imported from the Calabar region of what is now Nigeria
£,
— Introduction
x
and adjacent Cameroon, down through the islands to Guadeloupe and Martinique, where zouk,
twentieth-century commercial musical
a late
phenomenon, takes its name from a type of dancing party'. The book moves farther south, to Trinidad and Curacao, hut it stops before reaching the continent of South America, or any continent. This
is
not because
West Indies are a dance culture unit in isolation, but phenomenon that most marks them the confluence of African ways of moving and African ways of making music with Eurothe islands of the
—
rather because the
pean ones and hence the creation of Creole dances and music too widespread to be dealt with
Wherever African
slaves
depth
in
in
were brought
—
in fact,
is,
one volume.
— along
all
the shores of the
Caribbean and the Gulf coast, up the Atlantic, and south along richly African parts of the Brazilian coast as far as
past
it
Buenos Aires and
Montevideo, on parts also of the Pacific coast from Mexico to Peru and Chile, and into continental interiors
rhythmic concepts places Native
in
—dance developed based on African
conjunction with European influences and in some
American ones. Such complexes of rhythms and dances
many similarities with those of the Caribbean islands. But we have no room for them here, unfortunately, no room even for many of the have
islands of the
Caribbean
itself,
each
small islands, like Carriacou with
a its
dance universe of its own, with very Big
Drum
dance of many
explicit
African sources, no less interesting than larger places.
Caribbean Dance from Abakud
book
that
hews to the
diaspora. Its authors
to
islands,
come from
Zouk:
How Movement Shapes Identity is a
with excursions into the Caribbean
a variety
ety of approaches to describing dance,
of backgrounds and take
a vari-
from the comprehensive ethno-
graphic overview to the personal narrative, and the chapters reverberate
with one another.
It is this
desired reverberation that has guided the var-
ied selection of authors, so that the islands' dances can be seen tifaceted points of view.
The
authors themselves wear
teach, dance, choreograph, administrate, lead communities,
from within the academy scholars, journalists,
and
in various disciplines,
storytellers.
from mul-
many
hats: they
and write
and from without
Their voices are
distinct
and
—
as
indi-
Most who write here about specific islands are from those islands, though many now live in the United States. Multiple points of view re-
vidual.
sound within the authors themselves and that has in this Its
led to particular riches
book.
scope ranges through every type of indigenous dance, from the folk-
loric, to
the folkloric theatricalized and transferred to the stage, to con-
Introduction
•
xi
temporary choreographic creations that bring novel Caribbean approaches into the theater. within
its
The book attempts to set this spectrum of dance
contexts: the often troubled settings of islands that have experi-
enced repeated conquest, genocide of indigenous populations, centuries of slavery, colonization, and occupation, dictatorship and shaky democracy, natural disasters
from volcanoes to hurricanes, the destruction of
natural habitat caused by everything from plantations to overpopulation
many tourists, and long-term economic
to too
These
ization.
oped cultures joys.
The
which dance expresses
in
on such dance
literature
is
exploitation and marginal-
much, but
are islands that have suffered
spiritual
depths
and can be confusing; Car-
scattered
Dance doesn't have an encyclopedic scope, but
ibbean
that have develas well as sensual
come
repository for information that can be hard to
it is
a centralized
by.
Although there are dances of European or largely European origin throughout the
islands,
whether
intact,
it is
the African element and the
genuine African retention,
in a
creation, or a mixture of the African
vary greatly (but that can give even
bounce and
tinctive
the
lilt)
a largely
remains
European dance form
to
a dis-
Caribbean rhythms. To frame the book
we begin with Brenda Dixon
bean Triangle." Here Dixon Gottschild,
as
content of Car-
Gottschild's illuminating
"Crossroads, Continuities, and Contradictions:
Africanist Presence in
it
and European in proportions that
a lens that reveals the Africanness of the African
ibbean dance,
way
neo-African-Caribbean
that sets the Caribbean apart, that, in fact, has set
whole world dancing
through
a
The Airo-Euro-Carib-
she did in her book Digging the
American Performance: Dance and Other
Contexts, sets
forth a series of principles that underlie Africanist aesthetics of perfor-
mance, building on the seminal work of another contributor, Robert Farris
Thompson.
She
finds rich
examples of these concepts in two visual recordings of
Maya Deren and Yvonne Daniel, but readers will many more, from their own experience and in the course of reading about island dance in the other chapters of the book. See Thomas Pinnock's "Rasta and Reggae," for example, to find out how Jamaican youngVodou ceremonies by
note
sters in
improvising "drop legs" competitions also exemplify the aesthetic
of the cool, even surreptitiously washing away sweat to enhance the sion.
Or look to Gabri
how, in
a
Christa's discussion of the
communal form
but maintains
"marathoning,"
its
as
that has lost
its
illu-
tambu of Curacao to see
specific religious connections
purifying spiritual power, people dance for hours,
Dixon Gottschild
calls
it,
in "spirit time."
With
this
Introduction
xii
lens in place,
forms
in
one can see what
is
Africanist even about creolized dance
which the European contribution
The world
is
of dance, perhaps, for those for
significant or predominates.
whom
this lens
is
new, will
never quite look the same. In order to continue this shift of perspective, the
tempting to look Africa or
at
Europe
(as
happens
in sections
of
many
from Africa looking into the Caribbean. This sure; others will
book
starts
by
have to continue
is
essays in the book), but
only
this investigation.
begin with expert eyes from Senegal and
move
a
beginning, to be
One would want
land,
among
is
now Ghana, Dahomey all
in-
(present-day Benin), and Yoruba-
others, to the Calabar region of Nigeria and
then south, covering
to
inland to the peoples of the
former Mali empire and down and around the entire bulge of Africa, cluding what
at-
Caribbean dance not from the inside looking out to
Cameroon, and
of the areas that sent enslaved people to the West
Indies.
We must look across centuries as well as span an ocean. Africa, like the West
Indies, has
undergone much
change since the
cultural
Africans were forced across the sea.
Its
first
waves of
dance cultures are complicated
ones, with confusion furthered by confluences and exchanges. But, as a
bare
moving
start,
to the
that sent very large
Congo/ Angola region of West Central
numbers of people
teenth to the nineteenth centuries,
"What
Is
Congolese
Congolese company
in in
New York,
He
Africa
Caribbean from the
six-
offer Nathaniel Crowell's essay
Caribbean Dance." Crowell,
who
was investigating topics
musicological dissertation in Angola tinued war.
we
to the
when
dances with
a
for an ethno-
forced to leave because of con-
uses his experiences there, as well as in other parts of the
Congo/ Angola region (spelled Kongo/ Angola in many parts of the book when referring to the cultural sphere of the Bakongo peoples), in the Caribbean, and in Caribbean New York, even in Peru, to look at some characteristics that distinguish the
led
Congolese contributions and the chain that
from them to Creole Caribbean dances.
some valuable long quotes from early observers Moreau de St. Mery and interesting correlations from Peru, Brazil, and Angola. The early naming of dances can be confusing the same name may be used not only on different islands, but also for what seems like different dances (in part because the name may refer to a drum group or type of dance gathering). These names, such as Here, too, you
will find
of Caribbean dance such as
—
calenda (or kalinda), bamboula, chica, fuba (or djouba), are often
on various
islands, describing various dances,
still
extant
and even names that appear
Introduction
to be different such as the
variants of the old juba
xiii
ynbd and ska of Puerto Rican bomba may be
and chka.
Cuba, the largest island dance culture with
•
in the Caribbean, has a particularly
full-scale
danced religions and many
from Africa, immensely popular and
influential creolized social
music forms, and notable performance traditions portant but outside our sphere), and
complex
ritual retentions
dance and
in folklore, ballet (im-
modern dance
that have been fos-
tered by a cultural structure and educational emphasis formed since the
Cuban ity,"
"Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean Creativ-
Revolution. In
dance anthropologist Yvonne Daniel suggests the influence that Cu-
ban dance and music has had throughout the Caribbean
(as well as
around
the world at large) and gives a very valuable and thorough overview of all aspects of
Cuban
folkloric
such a comprehensive
dance culture.
article,
We
are fortunate to start with
which provides another frame
for looking at
dance of the region. Daniel discusses the structure of dance
activity in
Cuba, early reports of indigenous dance, importations from Europe,
—including an illuminating and extensive section on the —and another equally interesting and extensive section on the many Cuban creations and evolutions — Haiti,
and Africa
danced religions and
rites
their
in particular,
the son, rumba, and danzon complexes.
Ramiro Guerra,
first
temporanea, formed
director of
just after the
and innovative choreographer, in
Cuba, where he created
forming.
he
fell
With
a
his career as a
is
Conjunto Nacional de Danza Con-
Revolution in i960, and
a
pioneering
considered the founder of modern dance
uniquely Cuban style of teaching and permodern dance choreographer aborted when
out of favor with the government after eleven years as head of his
known creative fountainheads. Melinda Mousouris's "The Dance World of Ramiro Guerra: Solemnity, Voluptuousness, Humor, and Chance," based on interviews Conjunto, he
is
one of the Caribbean's
and video viewing with Guerra career and discusses in depth
in
insufficiently
Havana, limns the fascinating arc of his
some of the dances he made.
Guerra and associates developed the
tecnica cubana, a
hybrid system of
technique and teaching that combines dance forms, including folkloric elements, to
make virtuosic and uniquely Cuban
dances.
Cuban It is
not
the only systematic technique developed to produce dance with distinctly
Caribbean elements
—the Jamaican national company has
a
technique,
Lavinia Williams developed one in Haiti and Jamaica, and, of course, there
is
the powerful
Dunham Technique
Dunham's company and
that evolved in Katherine
school. But the tecnica cubana
is
a
major devel-
Introduction
\i\
opment and nique
and Suki John,
tool,
Cuba, where she has
in
also
a
choreographer who learned the tech-
made
dances, brings
Cubana," pen
in
in
which she gives an extensive description
of
what might hap-
company class as taught by Danza Contemporanea's master Manolo \ asquez.
Rex Nettleford
also talks
about constructing
technique to make distinctly Caribbean dances
tic
"The Tecnica
in
a
teacher,
atre
story and that of
its
Cuba's modern dance up to the twenty-first century
in
a distinctly
Caribbean
"Jamaican Dance The-
— Celebrating the Caribbean Heritage." Professor Nettleford,
Company
artis-
Dance Theatre
director and chief choreographer of the National
of Jamaica, eloquently connects the dance of the company he
helped found in 1962 to signal Jamaica's cultural identity simultaneously with the foundation of an independent
state,
with the other African-de-
rived dance of the Caribbean, seeing this as establishing
of
own.
its
He
a classic
tradition
notes that there are no English words to describe basic
steps
from such Jamaican dance traditions
as
gests
new ones
just
as part
of a celebration not
dance and of the people involved
in
it,
kumina or dinkimini and sugof many facets of Jamaican
but also of the entire community of
Caribbean dancemakers from the 1940s to now.
A dance
life
begins in childhood and so does
Thomas Osha
Pinnock's
essay "Rasta and Reggae," which flavorfully links his youthful "drop legs"
competition days in the dance yards of West Kingston with the innovative
dance works he choreographed after formal training and beginning reer as a strata
modern
dancer. In the process he reveals
much about
a ca-
the social
of Jamaica, the roots of Rastafari, and the development of distinc-
tively Jamaican
Jamaican
forms of popular music, culminating
storyteller's flair,
he makes you
feel like
you
in reggae.
With
his
are there.
Smaller in area than Cuba, larger in the combined population of its two
Dominican Republic, Hispaniola has a complicated history, shared and apart, which Martha Ellen Davis discusses in her comprehensive overview of the dance of the Dominican Reconstituent nations of Haiti and the
public.
Henry Frank,
a
leader in the Haitian
community
in
New York and
an authority on Vodou, concentrates on the basics of that complexly syncretized danced religion with Ritual
many
Dance and
Its
its
diverse African roots. In "Haitian
Vodou
Secularization," Frank suggests that in Haiti even
secular dances have roots in the spiritual tradition.
Lois Wilcken enlarges this discussion in "Spirit Unbound:
proaches to the Performance of Haitian Folklore." Here she of tolkloric
performance
in Haiti
New
ties a
Ap-
history
and the diaspora from the 1040s and
xv
Introduction
1950s to
a
new concept of presenting
she has been working on with the
folklore in a
New
more
way
direct
that
York-based Haitian group, La
Troupe Makandal. An ethnomusicologist as well as executive director of Makandal, Wilcken discusses patterns of presentation, including the folklore
show and
the exploitative "voodoo" show, and shows
from Makandal's way of offering Vodou and Rara
(a
how they differ
Lenten celebration)
to the public.
Our thorough overviews, like Martha Ellen much that moves beyond the
Republic, offer
particular dance culture. In
Davis's
on the Dominican
detailed examination of a
"Dominican Folkdance and the Shaping of
National Identity," Davis traces a trajectory of shifting identity, from an
emphasis on the Hispanic heritage under the dictator Trujillo,
moted be, a ists,
of merengue until
a regional version
symbol of the country, to
it
a current revival of interest, led
by
and the dance that accompanies
in African-rooted music
who
to
amid
its
social settings,
from the Tainos and
forms descended from those brought by African
ceros,
and Europeans, to the creolized
social
identity as
embracing African
In the
how the
their areitos,
Haitian bra-
dances and their local varia-
tions, to the folkloric revivals, including the current
Dominican
slaves,
folklor-
it.
process, she delves into the traditional culture of the country and folklore operates
pro-
became, and continues to
one that
as well as
is
redefining
European-derived
heritage.
Postmodern performance
Dominican Dominican
artist Josefina
identity, in particular, the artist living in
Baez
is
also
concerned with
complications inherent in hers as a
New York City,
but she chooses to explore
this
using an unexpected idiom: kuchipudi dance from the South Indian state of
Andhra Pradesh. In "A Dominican York in Andhra," an article excerpted from a longer essay, Ramon Rivera-Servera discusses Baez's work, "Dominicanish,"
and analyzes
how
she reveals the multiple meanings of her
Domincanness through her performances
in the
homes of fellow Domini-
can Yorks, action including unorthodox kuchipudi dance, and text Spanish-English mixture she
calls
Alma Conception's "Dance
in
in the
Dominicanish.
Puerto Rico: Embodied Meanings,"
while concentrating on the island, also takes us back and forth between the island and the diaspora, particularly in
enon of
means
salsa
New York, where the phenom-
was consolidated. This essay brings
to participants, as well as to those
to the fore
what
this
who dance or danced forms rang-
ing from the nineteenth-century danza and
sets
to
the current generation of hip-hoppers and others
bomba and
plena,
up
to
now creating new dance
wi
Introduction
forms, and conveys
wider I
social,
listriones,"
even
how
dance identity can embody both individual and
a
political, yearnings. In "( iilda
Conception,
Postdate, of the creation
Navarra to form Taller de
in
Puerto Rican bomba
among
the fastest rhythm, akin to the
its
tambu of Curacao),
Puerto Rico's dance traditions.
tion into
it
The
troduction of a
Focusing on
details his first
down
audience
in the
in-
it
from
the most African of
"The Challenges of Puerto Rican his initia-
musical and dance elements,
of participatory
smaller island,
as well as those
making
wondering view of bomba,
dance the challenge, and
new form a
its
dancer directs the drummer, as an-
as a dancer, its history, its
feels to actually
the
multiple rhythms (like the bolandes,
thropologist Halbert Barton explains in
which he
in
complex tradition that incorporates many
a
Africa and Spain, within an overall approach
in
Spanish
Puerto Rico.
is
fluences from other islands
Bomba,"
ex-
new way of making
known beyond
little
its
in
of
all
of the crucial piece that led
listriones to develop a
I
dance theater, important work 1970s and early 1980s
Navarra: Before Taller de
company during
of that
memoir, originally published
istence, offers an evocative
San Juan magazine
member
a
we can
its
it
current revival, with the in-
bomba
see
how
all
the
party, the bombazo.
components of a dance
whose students, like Cynthia Oliver, author of "Winin' Yo' Wais': The Changing Tastes of Dance on the U.S. Virgin Island of St. Croix," sometimes become professional dancers and choreographers. Opening with the exuberant "wining" and even more sexually explicit "wukkin' up" of St. Croix's Carnival, Oliver moves on to the diculture,
to the teachers
verse history of the multiply-colonized U.S. Virgin Islands, their continu-
ing pinch between
North American and Caribbean
identities, the revival
of the historical bainboula as a "nation dance" by folkloric groups despite persistent debate
on what
dance," the quadrille,
still
it
looked
like historically,
danced to the
and private Heritage Dancers
local quclbc
and another "nation
music
The French Caribbean (now two us):
public dances
departements of France) centers on
the islands of Martinique and Guadeloupe. In "Sa Ki
longs to
in
balls.
Ta
Nou
Creole Dances of the French Caribbean," Martinican ethno-
musicologist Dominique Cyrille offers a detailed overview of
dances
(This be-
as the
how
such
Furopean-derived quadrille and the African-based bele
dances, the dans lalinkle performed at wakes, and the fight dance ladfa (for-
merly spelled Vag'ya) of Martinique and the lewoz orgwoka of Guadeloupe developed and creolized within the historical circumstances of these cul-
Introduction
up
turally rich, plantation-based islands. Bringing us
•
xvii
to date with late
twentieth-century cultural revivals and reinventions, Cyrille ends with a discussion of zouk and Creole identity.
To anyone who spectacle,
Folklore as a
dad
thinks of limbo as a party entertainment or nightclub
Molly Ahye's "In Search of the Limbo: An Investigation into
Its
Wake Dance" will be a revelation. A spiritual leader in Trini-
as well as
an expert on the
island's dance,
dimensions of a dance that was formerly
Ahye explores the
a feature
spiritual
of wakes in parts of the
By interviewing exponents of Limbo 1980s about the Limbo that they saw in their
island with strongly African culture.
and older people
in the
childhood, Ahye was able to gather valuable information about that has faded as tions.
Her
its ritual
search both for descriptions of
possible underlying
a practice
connotations are occluded by nightclub connec-
Limbo
meanings of the dance leads
at
wakes and for the
to absorbing insights
into the folklore of Trinidad.
Trinidadian meanings beneath the surface, in this case those that
behind what can be seen
as
"The Moko Jumbie: Elevating
Alleyne-Dettmers's
lie
Carnival display, are the focus of Patricia the
Children."
Alleyne-Dettmers, linguistic anthropologist and carnival expert, delves
masquerade
figures,
danced
Moko Jwnbies
as part
of the
into the African origins of these stiltwalking
by children now
in Trinidad, discusses
Jonkonnu tradition on other at the
islands,
and then begins
a
concentrated look
meanings behind the costumes and dances of one particular band of
Moko Jumbies
in the
1999 Carnival,
a
band whose
leader's ideas for their
presentation encompassed the span of Trinidad's history and the facets of
its
identity.
Richards' head, as
it
Dettmers gives us her
many
Stepping inside the designer Francina Princesa were, in describing the
Moko
distinctive Afro-Trinidadian
Jumbies, Alleyne-
view of
how
the past
impacts the present. Slavery and colonization have produced a need for forms of subversive resistance,
met on many
islands
by song and dance forms that offer com-
When a form is also a suppressed Afritambu of Curacao, the irony and the possibility of prohibition or overregulation heightens. Choreographer and Guggenheim fellow Gabri Christa first fell in love with tambu and its forbidden aspects as a young teenager in her native Curasao. In "Tambu: AfroCuracao's Music and Dance of Resistance," she tells us about the fascinating and little-known culture of this Papiamentu-speaking Dutch island, mentary in the ironic form of play. can
ritual, as is
the
—
—
xviii
Introduction
•
including summaries of Curacao's other indigenous dance and music
much about
forms and
the rapid hips and rhythms and hidden traditions
of tambu.
The lost
on Caribbean themes have
best of the older choreographies based
none of their beauty or
their
importance
in history as
pioneering ex-
plorations of a mixed idiom for the stage, which has rightly been classic.
Among
the earliest pioneers of translating folkloric Caribbean
dance elements to the stage cal research
deemed
on four
is
Katherine
Dunham, who
did anthropologi-
mid- 1930s and returned home
islands in the
to the
United States to begin choreography based on her experience. Her work, her training technique, and her company have had an enduring influence
on African-American dance. VeVe Clark's "Katherine Dunham's Revue"
first
plores the history of
landmark
Dunham
first full ballet
where
tinique,
Tropical
published in 1982 in Black American Literature Forum, ex-
Dunham
and her company, focusing on UAgYa, her
from 1938. This Creole love tragedy set in Marhad done research, uses Martinican and other
Caribbean forms, mixing African and European elements into structured drama.
The dance and
its
a well-
implications are evoked in depth
here.
More
recent audiences had a chance to enjoy
the Alvin Ailey company's
ham," produced
in 1987.
verge in pan-Caribbean late
1990s
is
full
UAgYa
as a highlight of
"The Magic of Katherine Dun-
The islands and their performing traditions con-
New York City.
Choreography seen there
in the
described by Susanna Sloat in "Islands Refracted: Recent
Dance on Caribbean Themes explicitly
evening,
in
New
York."
While zeroing
in
on the
Caribbean, she ends with an evocation, in the work of master
choreographer Garth Fagan, of the sheer possibility for invention inher-
movement itself. of movement on the dance floor are brought to brilliantly vivid life by Robert Farris Thompson in "Teaching the People to Triumph over Time: Notes from the World of Mambo." No one will ent in Caribbean
Such
want
to miss this final essay of the book. Full of his characteristic insights
into the takes us to
possibilities
New
Kongo from
and movement elements underlying mambo,
spiritual
city to city,
from Havana to Lima to Mexico
York's Palladium in the 1950s,
relevant
and
it
finally
where dance innovators worked
inventive changes and complications into
The
City,
mambo.
extensive glossary, compiled of terms defined by the authors of
chapters
(with,
sometimes, variant spellings reflecting the
choices of the authors for places where orthography varies or has been
Introduction
•
xix
standardized in different ways at different times), and the combined bibli-
ography are highly useful extensions of the book. Words are but dance,
and stimulating reference, but
fixed in print,
Think of this book not only
like identity, evolves.
as a useful
book
also as part of the evolution, a source
from which many further studies and more intensive investigations into the dance forms and culture of the Caribbean can emerge. Let Caribbean
Dance from Abakud thought
to
—and allow
Zonk:
it
How Movement Shapes Identity
also to
encourage such
provoke the desire to put some music on and
up and dance.
get
Acknowledgments
My
thanks are incomplete here
than
I
can
cite. I
would
like to
—many more people have been helpful begin by thanking
my
editor,
Meredith
Morris-Babb, for getting Caribbean Dance started and for being enthusiastic
about
it
from the beginning. Grateful thanks
also to others
who were
helpful in getting things going, including Bernadine Jennings, John Gray,
Madeline Nichols, Alice Adamczyk, Jean Leon Destine, Kate Ramsey, Barbara Palfy, Ben Jones, Ernesto Rodriguez, Boni Raposo, Tony Vicioso,
Sandra Levinson, Kelvin Rotardier, Melle Randall, Suzanne Younger-
man,
et
al.
Thanks
to Paul
Mintus and
to
Margherita Davis of Country
Dance New York for giving me the chance to go to the Playford Ball and see what English country dancing is like now. And thanks to all the friends, family,
Very
and acquaintances
special thanks to
who were encouraging
my husband, Don
along the way.
Burmeister, for being
house computer consultant (with occasional
assists
my in-
from sons Abe and
Tobias Burmeister), and again most grateful thanks to
Don
for the
many
hours he spent computerizing and improving photographs and making the Caribbean map, musical notes, and the Full
body thanks,
too, to
all
my dance
Yowa and Limbo
charts.
teachers over the years of
ham Technique and various Afro-Caribbean and
Pearl Reynolds, Pat Hall, Richard Gonzalez, Ricardo Colon,
Rodriguez, Pierson,
Norman
Dun-
African styles, including
Xiomara
Saunders, Esther Grant, Dele Husbands, Harold
Lygia Barreto, Bernadine Jennings, M'Bayero Louvouezo,
Pedro Soto, and others.
And finally I would like to thank all of the authors, a group of extremely who have taken
busy, exceptionally talented, invariably fascinating people
the time and put in the energy to
make
this
book
a success.
Introduction
Alma Conception's "Gilda Navarra: Before nally
appeared
in
Spanish
Postdata. Portions of her
are also part ot grations, edited
in Postdate,
"Dance
May
Taller de rlistriones" origi-
Used by permission
1996.
of
Puerto Rico: Embodied Meanings"
in
"Dance and Diaspora," which
will
appear
in
by Frances Aparicio and Candida Jaquez, from
Musical MiSt.
Martin
s
Press.
VeVe
Clark's "Katherine
Dunham's
Tropical
Review" appeared
origi-
Winter 1982, and 1983. Used by permission of
nally in Black American Literature Forum, vol. 16, no. 4,
was reprinted
in Caribe, vol. 7, no.
1
and
2,
the author.
Most of Henry
ization" appeared originally as in Caribe, vol. 7, nos.
Most of
1
and
2,
Vodou
Dance and its Secular"A Survey of Haitian Vodun Ritual Dance"
Frank's "Haitian
1983.
Ritual
Used by permission of the
Recent Dance on Caribbean Themes
fracted:
nally published in reviews, copyright Attitude:
author.
the descriptions of dances in Susanna Sloat's "Islands Re-
Susanna
in
New
York" were origi-
Sloat, in various issues of
The Dancers' Magazine. Used by permission of the author.
Robert Farris Thompson's "Teaching the People to Triumph over
Time: Notes from the World of Mambo" has
Month,
vol. 3, no. 2, 2001,
Mambo."
under the
title
also appeared in First
of the
"Triumph over Time: Notes on
o o
AFRICAN BACKGROUND
1
o o o Crossroads, Continuities, and Contradictions The Afro-Euro-Caribbean Triangle
Brenda Dixon Gottschild
Here we
moment
in time when, performancewise, so
fingertips that
world
is
we might be
our oyster,
a global
Without questioning tural products as
ecstatic yet
community. But
origins or rights,
is
given back?
speaking of the exchange rate that is,
cultures
it is
also a
market economy.
we have appropriated world
consumer commodities
environment. But what
(that
new millennium, at a much world beauty is at our humbled by its sheer power. The
stand, having crossed the threshold of a
in a buy-and-sell, take-and-take
To whom? When? And how?
exists, generally,
specifically,
I
am
between Europeanist
European and European-American) cultures and
—and,
cul-
all
other world
between Europeanist and Africanist
(that
is
continental and diasporan African) cultures.
There
are
some
—
seekers, students, scholars
—whose work
in bridging
the divide between Europeanist and world cultures has acted as an anti-
dote to expropriation and exploitation.
A handful of them are represented
in this book. In order to understand their
address,
it
work and
the cultures they
behooves us to have an understanding of the philosophy and
premises that underlie these gorgeous aesthetic treasures. In
Digging the Africanist Presence
in
Contexts (Gottschild 1996, 1998), tural
my
book,
American Performance: Dance and Other I
discuss in detail
and with various
cul-
examples the signposts of Africanist (and Europeanist) aesthetic
standards.
What
follows
is
an extrapolation of and distillation from that
hypothesis, this time as an application of Africanist aesthetic concepts to
Caribbean performance,
in general,
and Caribbean dance,
in particular.
4
1
Brenda Dixon Gottschild
•
hese constructs arc interrelated, interdependent, and inseparable. In
practice, they
interactive
cannot possibly be construed
and processual.
Whether spoken. Sung,
sculpted, sketched, written, or danced, the
How a
Africanist aesthetic values process. getting"
it
as discrete entities: they are
done
— the journey
as
thing
important
is
done
is
as
important
as the destination.
as
Language,
sculpture, and visual arts are conceived as living, vital, motional con-
cepts
— moving movers, so to speak —which
Farris
and
Thompson
title it
African Art in Motion.
come
why
Robert
art historian
to
A
stellar
example of
this
premise
is
arts
the
of African and African diasporic practice are dancing
fact that the deities spirits that
is
could write his signature work on African visual
life
through the dancing bodies of the
faithful.
To
use
dance anthropologist Yvonne Daniel's wonderfully evocative term, these
danced religions exhibit the principle of "embodied wisdom." (Note: Using Daniel's initiative
I
have removed the terms "possession" and "pos-
sessed by the deities" from
who
my vocabulary.
Instead,
I
refer to practitioners
manifest the deity through dance as "embodying" the
term indicates that the process
and education. "Possession," biased toward a
a
is
Walker pointed
{D tin ring
is a
This
term imposed by outsider perspectives,
through the bodies of its believers fact that the universe
spirit.
form of cultural wisdom, knowledge,
model of inconsequence and
canist scholar Sheila
entity
a
is
As
lack of control.)
is
Afri-
out, the fact that the spirit dances in/
an affirmation and celebration of the
dynamic process-in-motion, rather than
a static
1993).
Borrowing from and building on the consummate work of Thompson
Kariamu Welsh-Asante (1985), and Susan Vogel (1986),
(1974),
I
hope to
designate a constellation of Africanist elements that are manifested in
many forms
of diasporan African dance, from South America to the Car-
ibbean and the United States. these characteristics
work
It is
important to reiterate the
symbiotically,
do not
fact that
exist as discrete entities,
and are separated and categorized, here and elsewhere, solely for the sake of discourse.
They
indicate processes, tendencies, and attitudes.
In searching for specifically Caribbean danced examples of these prinutilize
Haitian Vodou dance as demonstrated in the work of Maya
ciples,
I
Deren
(the video Divine Horsemen: The Living Cods
of
Haiti) and
Daniel (the video Public Vodun Ceremonies in Haiti) to make
These two
excellent films act as
companion
my
Yvonne points.
pieces and are essential view-
ing for anyone interested in this important form of sacred African diasporic performance.
Crossroads, Continuities, and Contradictions
5
•
Embracing the Conflict In the broadest sense the Africanist aesthetic can be construed as a principle of contradictions
paradox, that
is
cord, or irregularity that this
and an encounter of opposites.
is
conflict,
embraced, rather than erased or resolved.
a principle essential to the Africanist perspective is
is
by the importance of the crossroads
strated
The
or
innate to and insinuated by difference, disagreement, dis-
as a
symbol
The
fact
demon-
in African
and
African diasporic cultures. As Deren points out in her book Divine Horse-
men: The Living Gods ofHaiti (1991, loon.), the crossroads is the site of the "coincidence of opposites." Accordingly, Africanist art forms deal in para-
dox
as a
diction
matter of course, with irony following close on
is
expressed in African dilemma
to the untrained
ear,
may sound
tales, in
embedded results
and
they, in turn, are reflected in
that,
is
reflected in the premises
it.
Embracing the
conflict
is
in the final principle, the aesthetic of the cool, since coolness
from the juxtaposition of detachment with
ciples, as well as all the fest
Contra-
or ungraceful to eyes schooled
Europeanist aesthetic. This principle
cited, below,
heels.
discordant or grating, and in dance that
may seem unsophisticated, uncoordinated, in the
its
music or vocal work
intensity.
other aesthetic canons outlined herein,
Both prin-
may mani-
themselves as simultaneously comedic and tragic (and, occasionally,
even self-mockingly so) in an attitude and
style that
is
uncharacteristic of
Europeanist endeavor.
Vodou and
all
Africanist danced religions are examples of Daniel's con-
cept of embodied
wisdom and embrace
the contradictory, conflicting
ethos of spirit world and body/material world. These two worlds do not join easily.
We see the conflict in the struggle that occurs when the spirit
mounts the body of the novice dancing practitioner. The struggle is allowed to occur, without onlookers attempting to suppress or subsume the process.
"wrong";
The it
conflict
simply
is
is
not regarded
what
it is:
as
"good" or "bad," "right" or
the process.
Polycentrism/Polyrhythm
From
movement may originate from any body more areas of the body may simultaneously serve as centers of movement. Africanist-based movement is also polyrhythmic. The feet may maintain one rhythm while torso, legs, arms dance to the beat of different drums. This democracy of body parts is demonstrable in the Africanist perspective,
zone, and two or
6
Brenda Dixon Gottschild
•
Motherland and across the
dias-
principles are demonstrated in Vbdou's zepaules
— the
Africanist dance forms throughout the
pora.
These confluent
dance motif characterized by the beautifully subtle articulation of the shoulders that involves the rib cage in the feet
moving
to an independent
concurrent but separate flow, with
a
rhythm
tar
below.
High- Affect Juxtaposition Movement, mood, or with
attitude disruptions that ensue abruptly, rather than
phase, are the signature of this premise.
a transition
somber mood may overlap and cohabit
humorous
a light,
A
another example, imitative movements (reflecting particular animal behavior)
may
contrasts
may be
be comedy, irony,
ultimately, euphoria
The
juxtaposed with abstract ones. satire,
and exhilaration.
driving or
attitude; or, in
human
or
result of such
double meanings, innuendo, and, It is
true that
all
traditions utilize
contrast as an aesthetic valence. However, Africanist high-affect juxtaposition
good
is
accelerated
beyond the range of contrast
Europeanist
taste," in
that
is
acceptable, or "in
criteria.
Their high-affect juxtapositions preserve Caribbean performance genres such as Vodou as
a
—
mystery
if
not simply an example of bad taste
regard of the Europeanist-based outsider.
How
can
a
—
involve secular dances, sexualized performance, and a deity such as (the
Vodou
deity of birth, death, and fertility
who
in the
sacred ceremony
Guede
jokes, plays sexual
games, and generally wreaks havoc in his path), they ask themselves?
how can
a practitioner's face
and veers
in a
cal control?
remain calm and mask-like
dance that seems to come from
And how,
is it
beyond her physi-
human body? What are
possible to laugh and cry simultaneously?
press love and outrage in the
tears of joy,
How
can
a
Buddhism,
this
precept
hides, the contradictions in
rather than "either/or":
man and other.
supernatural
we
is
body
and ex-
same movement? The answer, once we
leave behind our baggage of prejudice, bias, and inhibition, like
Or
her body jerks
indeed, can a spiritual practice be centered upon
the very physicalized, sexualized
how
a force
as
is
simple:
part of a system that honors, rather than
human
experience.
are sexual
and
It is a
spiritual,
principle of "and,"
body and
soul,
hu-
— indeed, good and bad — rather than one or the
Crossroads, Continuities, and Contradictions
7
•
Ephebism This premise (ephebe was the ancient Greek word for person) includes attributes such as power,
a
youth or young
vitality, attack, drive,
and
flex-
You don't need to be young to demonstrate ephebism. In fact, the term is most frequently used when an elder dances and exhibits youthful ibility.
characteristics. attitude,
It's
really
and timing.
not about age, but about using the right energy,
Thompson
(1974, 7) describes
every note and step with consummate
it
as "the
phrasing of
Ephebism implies
vitality."
a
supple, flexible torso, bending knees, and the ability and willingness to go
down in order to be
lifted up, literally
and metaphorically:
a flexibility that
allows one to go with the flow and roll with the changes (of the dance, of life itself)-
Ephebism In each
we
ease, grace,
is
demonstrated in both Deren's and Daniel's
see examples of elders (particularly
and sensuality of youth,
essential phrasing
and timing
field footage.
women) dancing with
as well as countless
who
dance of ordinary people
in the
the
examples of quintare
capable of extraordinary kinetic moments.
The Aesthetic This principle lives in the
of the Cool is
the circumference that holds
all
other premises, and they also reside in
culminating step in an attitude that combines
others in it.
vitality
its thrall. It
"The Cool"
is
with composure
the
—or
hot/engaged with cool/detached. To exhibit the cool involves dancing and presenting the self with clarity and lucidity. In a the Africanist esthetic
been characterized spirit
and
flair"
is
as "soul force,"
which includes "energy,
(Gay and Baber 1987,
Vodou's Guede
is
des yeux, those practitioners
is its
.
fiber,
.
.
.
who
—accoutrements that
The
dances of the prise
are adepts, are almost always a striking
—their faces resembling ancient African masks
in still-
and self-possession, while their bodies dance beyond their
quotidian potential. Cool, however,
which
.
11).
inherently are associated with cooling processes.
ness, calm,
.
quintessentially cool: he generally appears wearing
dark glasses and either a derby or scarf on his head
example of cool
—and —the cool has
more spiritual sense
ineluctably spiritual and physical
is
manifested in contrast with hot,
indispensable complement: the two illuminate each other in a
symbiotic dance that thetic characteristics.
is
emblematic of the
full
spectrum of Africanist aes-
Brenda Dixon Gottschild
H
With in
these basic principles laid out (and, to he sure, those listed above are
no way
all-inelusive, but, simply,
whose manifestations,
treasure trove
stars in the sky, are
extend them
in
Vodou forms
a
my way like the
too numerous to contain
ways that
deem
I
of a rich
pantheons of deities or the in
any theory)
let
me, now,
relevant to Caribbean dance. Again,
basic comparative integer.
Communication/Continuity Between Although
making sense
of
this characteristic
stands apart and on
its
is
and
Spirit
Worlds
cited inside the discussion, above,
The
own.
Human
it
also
continuities between body/mind/spirit
are so palpable in Africanist performance practices as to be almost tan-
(For example,
gible, literally.
ist
when
a
practitioner says s/he "feels the
no mere metaphor.) What this means is that, even in a tourperformance of Vodou, practitioners are liable to truly embody the
spirit," this
is
deities. It also
rience
may
means
that,
even
in social
frequently occur. In
dance situations,
fact, social
expe-
a spiritual
dance "respites" are
common
Vodou ceremonies. Many of us may recall having entered a near-trancelike state in some social dance situation in our own Africanist-based realm of experience. And this is to be expected: the body occurrences in long
movements,
steps, postures,
forms of Africanist dance;
word
and motifs are the same
it is
only through
—that one type of experience
is
in social
Nommo
and secular
— the power of the
called ritual and another social.
music and dance are the same. As Daniel points out
in
The
her video, contem-
Boukman Eksperyans may make music at Vodou
porary music groups
like
ceremonies and
incorporate that same music in their pop recordings.
later
Marathoning Performances,
festivals, holidays, celebrations,
social, frequently involve
and
may go on
for twelve hours,
needs to be done takes time spirit
Thus,
work may as
two
ritual
occur
at events that,
days, or even longer.
— not clock time, but
just as easily
or
spirit time.
them-
To do what Again, this
in a social situation as in a ritual
one.
Bernice Reagon points out, sometimes the way that one "finds"
oneself after working
a
forty-hour or longer work week
night, to take off the uniform, put
the
whether
dancing beyond natural capabilities and "nor-
mal" physical limitations of duration and energy selves,
rites,
on the dancing
wee hours of the morning {Dinning
outfit,
is,
come Friday
and dance
until
1993). Although Reagon was
re-
Crossroads, Continuities, and Contradictions
comment
ferring to African-American social dance patterns, her
is
•
9
just as
relevant to Caribbean performance.
Multiple Foci In Africanist performance the circle reigns. Frequently
around
a semicircle
may
be a shifting
it is
manifested as
of percussionists. Even in line dances there
a battery
of onlookers surrounding the performers.
circle
circle stands in contrast to the fourth-wall,
The
proscenium stage of Euro-
emerged from the medieval Christian mass and
peanist performance that
continues today in the tradition of the concert stage. In proscenium form it is
very clear
who
is
audience and
who
performer, because the two are
is
separated by a linear arrangement: the performers are on stage; the spectators sit "in the
house" and view the performance
and focus are targeted tors,
frontally.
one direction: toward the
in
stage,
The energy
by the specta-
and to the house, by the performers.
Where
the circle rules, there
is
an abundance of energy,
ibility,
and potential. For one, there
person
who
is
an onlooker
is
vitality, flex-
always the possibility that the
may be drawn
into the action and
become
a
no proscenium stage separating audience from performers, spectators may choose where to focus their atperformer. In addition, since there
tention, and performers
may choose where
performing. Frequently there simultaneously.
going on
at
No
is
one person
any particular
for chaos (a cultural bias
is
to locate themselves while
more than one "performance" going on is
capable of knowing/seeing
moment in
time. But this
is
is
that
characteristic of Africanist-based
is
not to be mistaken
emanating from those who see linear structure
superior to other possible alternatives). Instead, this structure that
all
is
a
as
democracy of
performance modes.
Improvisation
This premise goes hand linearity
is
in
hand with the
circle,
discussed above.
disrupted and the performer-audience divide
is
When
blurred, the
What this means is that, in another. The steps may be the same
force of the unforeseen gains ascendance.
Vodou, no dancer
really dances like
for calling forth a particular deity, but each dancer performs
them
in
her
own unique way with her own special embellishments. Thus, improvisation is the name of the game, on the individual level, and it rules on the collective front as well.
No
one Vodou ceremony
is
like another,
even
K)
Brenda Dixon Gottschild
•
though chants, motifs, dance and structures may be is
steps,
common
drumming
in all.
patterns, and certain props
The improvisatory nature
of
Vodou
so deep that Deren claims to have never been to any two ceremonies
that
were
having attended some hundreds over
alike, in spite of
a
period of
years.
Collective/Communal Trust This premise serves as the check and balance for improvisation.
have
sequestered space in order to "let
a
temple,
a
communal
When
night.
it all
mount
—
be it the Vodou room on Saturday
hang out"
courtyard, or a friends living
the deities
One must
the bodies of the faithful there are arms
When
and bodies of the community to catch them
if
goes beyond the hot or the cool and performs
in an "uncool" way, there
they
fall.
a
dancer is
communal voice to remind her that she has traveled beyond the drummers may cease to play, or the dance space may be emptied, fringe with the person in question thus singled out by the collective. The comthe
—
munity thus establishes and maintains continuity and respect for tural traditions,
its
cul-
even while affirming and celebrating the power of impro-
visation.
Cultural Fusions/Inclusions In anthropological jargon this principle
means
is
that,
without losing
its
is
known
as syncretism.
What
it
root integrity in and adherence to an
Africanist perspective, African-based cultures in the
Motherland and
in
the diaspora have embraced the conflict of opposites that they have en-
countered in hostile, oppressive environments. So, for example, many Vodou ceremonies begin with the recitation of the Catholic litanies known as actions de grace by the koungan (Vodou priest). The Vodou deities, emanating from Fon and Kongo traditions of West and Central Africa, are identified
with particular Catholic
Africanist characteristics.
And
Africanist religious practice in the
sion/cleansing in water
—
is
form of water
essay,
So
they keep their
—so
deities
important
and
ritual
is
easily identifiable
this brings us full circle
readying us for the rich gems to follow
of
with the Afri-
from the beginning of in this
in
immer-
easily identified with the Christian practice
baptism. Even the Christian crucifix canist crossroads.
saints. Yet,
the valence of water
anthology.
this
—
—
2
o o o
What Is Congolese
Caribbean Dance
in
Nathaniel Hamilton Crowell, Jr.
Angola has been guese; then
war since 1961.
at
First
it
was Africans fighting Portu-
MPLA,
became the government, the
it
UNITA. Nonetheless,
it's
not because of the war that
against the rebels, if you're in
Luanda,
on any morning and you're a light sleeper, you might be in trouble. Throughout the city there are numerous clubs and there are the capital, at 4 a.m.
And
always parties.
the music as a rule
is
loud, very loud. Inside people
dance to soukous or kudiiru, or to the rage when I was
last
there in
1
997, the
kizomba.
Kizomba
is
puzzling.
The music
is
new
zouk,
from the Caribbean, sometimes from Angola
sometimes straight
—but the name (formerly
spelled quizomba) and the steps are relatively old, harkening back to a
dance cultivated
a
hundred years ago and probably long before. And
it
echoes in the traditional dances of Angola as well as in those of neighboring Congo-Brazzaville and Congo-Kinshasa. is
that the dance for
kizomba
Dominican Republic; you do the same instrumentation, with the same accents. the
I
think this
is
one reason
What makes it odd,
exactly like the dance
is
it is
hard,
steps, at the
when you
and watch Caribbean dance, not to think there ibbean and the
Congo
—that
is
to say the
peoples, Angola, the Republic of the
done
listen to is
a link
though,
to bachata
same point
from
in the
Caribbean music
between the Car-
homelands of the Bakongo
Congo
(Congo-Brazzaville), and
Congo, the former Zaire (CongoKinshasa) because so much of what is done in the Caribbean is done there too. After all, many of the rhythms of the Caribbean are straight for example, zouk and dancehall and compas: there is no syncopation to the the Democratic Republic of the
—
11
12
Nathaniel Hamilton Crowell, Jr.
•
main rhythms,
accent
unci the
in a
phrase always
falls at
the phrase or at the beginning and right in the middle. tion based
on straight rhythms
is
hallmark
a
the
sic styles; in
Congo congas
struments and musicians
music and dance
and calenda
drummer in
setting the rhythm.
the region use
in
the
used
in
just the hall of
The
mind
your foot or
dances of the Congo.
way
dancehall, the
them
Congo, the dancer
isolations of the hall
foot that figure in toe heel in Jamaica and meringue in
ground with
Caribbean
(
mu-
in a variety
Puerto Rican bomba and Martinican
common
is
in several
or their predecessors are the primary in-
in all parts of
styles. In
ticano, as
Congolese music. The
l
congas or similar long drums are the key drums
the beginning of
And instrumenta-
And
I
leads the chief
and heel of your touching the
laiti,
just the heel, are the
same
as those
winin' to Trinidad's soca and Jamaica's
that dancers mobilize their hips, quickly brings to
the hip rolling and hip swinging that distinguish Congolese dance.
The
style in
which people dance several Caribbean dances
also con-
up the Congo. In two of the main versions of Cuba's rumba,
jures
example,
men and women
the rumba, giiagiianco,
is
dance together
for the
man
avoid him.
He
tries to
between them, despite turn keeps it
in pairs.
Much
him
to and does
compromis-
all
catch her with her legs open and get all
her efforts to keep
him dancing and keeps him
on her own terms:
that
is
it
for
of the object of
to catch his partner in a
ing position, although she doesn't want
does
of
bele lino
she can to a leg, a
hip
from happening. She
in
attracted and interested. But, she
to say, without letting
him catch her when
she doesn't want to be caught, without letting him score. In effect, the partners challenge each other.
tion call
is
very
common
to
the
name of a
The become
this type
just as
Haiti's
Mayombe
Danse Congo only could come of Cuba's rite Palo
Mayombe
is
region in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
question then becomes
how and why
could Congolese traditions
part of Caribbean music and dance? In this article,
to address this, to explore the process
Congo would
of competi-
Congolese dance. Even the very names of dances
up the Congo. The Congo of
from the place Congo,
And
I
hope
to begin
by which music and dance from the
contribute to the development of the music and dance of
the Caribbean. Salsa provides a Salsa
is
good
illustration
of
how
this
could have happened.
perhaps the most widely recognized style of Puerto Rican music
and dance,
in part
because
its
popularity' has spread far
Rico and the various Puerto Rican communities
in
beyond Puerto
the United States.
You
3
What hear salsa everywhere
—Colombia,
Is
Congolese
in
Caribbean Dance
Peru, Senegal, Angola
•
1
—anywhere
people listen to Latin music.
The
rhythms that became Puerto Rican
distinctive
salsa
vated in the 1940s and 1950s. In essence, despite a base in
mambo, to
it is
combination of several music and dance
a
Dennis Clarke,
"salsa
is
were
culti-
Cuban son and According
styles.
mainly derived from Cuban music, which con-
tributed traditional Latin percussion (that
is,
timbales, congas, bongos),
types of ensemble {conjantos of trumpets and percussion, charangas with flute
and
violins, brass
mambo,
and sax-led big bands), clave (the basic rhythmic
numerous dance forms:
pattern) and
son, son montuno, rumba, guaguanco,
chachacba, bolero, gnajira, guaracha. Salsa also
national range of musics including Puerto Rican
lombian cumbia,
etc.;
embraces an
bomba and
inter-
Co-
plena,
also fusion experiments with rock, jazz,
soul"
(Clarke 1989, 1033). Salsa
rhythms are layered and complex. But simplified, the basic rhyth-
mic phrase
for salsa
is
(f^)J
The main
the following:
accents
fall
at notes
the sixteenth notes before basic salsa
you
(f3)J
(f3)J
start
your knees ever so
1
and
3.
The
time signature
is
4/4, with
and 4 serving as grace notes. To dance with your feet about a foot apart and with
1, 2, 3,
out erect,
slightly bent.
By
the time the musicians have played
each of the quarter notes of the rhythmic phrase, that will
(J^)J
is 1, 2, 3,
and
4,
you
have finished marking out the steps that correspond to part of the
phrase. In effect,
you end the movements on
pattern for the dance, you just the ball
move
of the foot for
your hips out
as
you do.
a
first
1, 2, 3,
or
4.
In the
to the right, then to the
moment before
most basic
left,
touching
taking the step and swinging
(Salsa footwork, however, can be complicated.
may be rhythmic, too. Dancers generally begin on beat one, but aficionados may start on two; many insert a hesitation, and the dancers may be dancing in syncopation to the rhythm.) Complications
Salsa connects with
dance
styles
some of the
earliest
Congolese-derived music and
popular in the Americas. Again, Puerto Ricans adopted son,
14
Nathaniel Hamilton Crowell, Jr.
•
rumba, and
a
number of closely salsa.
Rumba
name
ot a
product was
final
Rumba dance
the
is
related music and dance styles.
And
the
provides an easy-to-see link to Africa.
Cuban genre l African-derived music and a number of forms, principally gua-
The name embraces
styles.
guanco, yambu, and Columbia. Except tor the men's competition form,
much
Columbia, they are set
alike,
and
in essence,
they are variations of one
of instrumentation and one set of choreography.
model
as a
meshed. But
(J>)J a
iuaguanco can serve
of guaguanco
basic, the pattern
is:
JJy 2
1
The rhythm ture for
most
at its
(
Again the rhythms are multiple and complexly
for the style.
is
3
(4)
and the accents are
straight,
guaguanco
is
4/4, and
a,
at
l
the note before
and
3.
a
1, is
The
time signa-
grace note. You
begin the basic step of the dance with your feet facing forward
a
shoulder
width apart, your knees slightly bent and with your arms bent so that your
hands are roughly
at chest
height and at each note,
a,
1,2,3, ant^ 4'
>'
ou do
the corresponding step. As with salsa, the basic step involves an alternation,
stepping to one side, then the other.
Key
features of the choreography for
the feet as at a and
1,
men
are isolation of the ball of
and the isolations of the hips
part of the choreography
is
as at
1.
Another major
the duel between the partners as described
above.
When preserves
you compare
much
time signature and this
The
salsa
with guaguanco, you can see
of the rumba. Again, salsa
key phrase for
(f?) J
is
salsa
is
a straight
the case with guaguanco and
is
just a variation
...
from
U)J JJy
just
how
rhythm with
rumba
salsa a
4/4
in general.
of the phrase for rumba:
Effectively,
What
Is
Puerto Ricans used notes
a
Congolese
and
1
;
in
Caribbean Dance
15
they changed the grace
note from an eighth note to two sixteenths and then repeated what they
had made for the duration of the phrase. And the dance
is
similar: in
both
dances you basically step out to one side and then to the other. In addition, maintains the isolation of the foot that you find in men's rumba,
salsa
although in notes
1
form: hence planting the ball of your foot for
a simplified
and 3 of the rhythm. Also, salsa keeps the hip isolations of rumba;
you consciously swing your hips
would swing them out
in
to the left
and right
at
1
and
3, just as
In turn, guaguanco and the other styles of rumba derive from older
Cuban
you
rumba.
social dances,
dances popular
searchers of Cuban music associate
a
much
century or more ago. Re-
rumba with
social
dances such as yuka
and maknta that were performed by enslaved people from the Congo and their descendants,
dances.
and argue that rumba derives particularly from these
With its two lines of dancers who approach each other and retreat,
yuka incorporates the rolling hips and the belly bounce (pelvic thrust) of
Congo/Angola. In the 1800s and even before, African-Americans throughout the
Americas, from Brazil to Louisiana, danced similar dances. These dances
had
of names
a variety
—calenda,
common
variations of a
on into dances
like
batuque,
samba
West
—but they were
features of the dances
yuka, and from there to rumba.
calenda as danced in the French
century
chica,
Many
theme.
A
would carry
description of the
Indies at the end of the eighteenth
states:
One male and one
female dancer, or an equal number of dancers of
each sex push to the middle of the circle and begin to dance, remaining in pairs. This repetitious dance consists of a very simple step
where, as in the "Anglaise" one alternatively extends each foot and
withdraws is
the
it,
man
tapping several times with the heel and toe. All one sees
spinning himself or swirling around his partner, who,
herself, also spins
and moves about, unless one
is
to count the raising
and lowering of the arms of the dancers who hold to their sides with the
hands almost clenched.
their
both ends of a kerchief which she rocks from side to has not witnessed
mated
it is
such grace
it
himself,
it is
hard to believe
elbows close
The woman side.
holds
When one
how lively and
ani-
how the rigorous following of the meter gives it (Moreau de St. Mery, quoted in Emery 1988, 22-23).
as well as
Nathaniel Hamilton Crowell, Jr.
16
The tions
isolations of the toe
and heel
in the
dance prefigure the foot
of guaguanco.
A witness to a performance of the calenda an
isola-
de
article titled "Idea
las
in
Peru
in
1
763, reporting in
Congregaciones Publicas de
Negros
los
Bozales" in El Mercurio Peruano of 16 June 1791, noted the following: [I]t is
danced to the music of instruments and
place themselves in lines face
two
lines,
a
song.
The
dancers
one of men, the other of women; the
each other so that each male dancer has
a
female partner
The spectators make a circle around the dancers and One of the dancers leads the song, and the spectators pick
and vice versa. musicians.
up the
refrain
and they clap
about with their arms raised hips as they continually
come
then back away: they do
them
as they sing in the air,
All of the dancers
move
roll their
within two feet of their partners and
this until the
At
to get close to each other.
their bellies
it.
and they jump, spin,
instruments or song signals
this point, the partners
smack
two or three times, and then they separate with jumps,
and with lascivious gestures. [For the duration of the performance]
come together and smack bellies as often as song tell them to. While they smack their bellies,
they embrace, spin
around two or three times, and
without losing the
they
rhythm (my Here, in the
kiss
each other,
all
the instruments or
translation).
rolls
of the hips that the dancers perform and the belly
smacks that they give each other, are the hip isolations that would become part of rumba.
As Moreau de
St.
Mery saw
West
the chica in the French
Indies in the
late 1700s:
When one wants
to dance the Chica, a tune, especially reserved for
that type of dance,
is
played on crude instruments.
pronounced. For the woman,
who
sides of her skirt, the art of this
The
beat
is
very
holds the end of a kerchief or the
dance consists mainly
in
moving the
lower parts of her loins while maintaining the upper part of her body practically immobile.
approaches the
Should one want to enliven the Chica,
woman
while she
forward precipitously, he her,
falls in
is
a
man
dancing, and throwing himself
with the rhythm, almost touching
drawing back, lunging again, seeming to want to coax her to
surrender to the passion which engulfs them.
When
the Chica
a
What reaches
its
most expressive
Is
stage, there
Congolese
is
in
Caribbean Dance
in the gestures
and
17
•
in the
movements of the dancers a harmony which is more easily imagined than described (Moreau de St. Mery, quoted in Emery 1988, 25)
And guaguanco would social
dances
Dances formed
preserve this duel between the partners and later
complex and passionate harmony.
this
like the
calenda derived from social music and dance styles per-
Congo/Angola. Not much
in
is
dances, save that the musicians played
membraphone
known about
the rhythms of the
drums and the
that produces a deep groaning sound.
puita or cuica
—
As for the dance,
nineteenth-century descriptions of the batuque and the quizomba of
Angola give
a
general idea of
how
people danced throughout the region.
Batuque and quizomba were the names of two dances performed
Angola and quite tions of the
danced
likely, as
in
with the calenda and the chica, they were varia-
same dance. Here's
a description
of the batuque, which was
in Brazil as well as in Angola:
[I]n the
land where
it
originated, batuque, probably derived
Portuguese, (perhaps from bater
the
[to beat]) is
name of a
from
type of
dance, in which the Blacks, in a circle, dance zapateo, or tap dance, to
rhythms marked out with handclaps and percussion instruments. In
Luanda and other and
after
areas of Angola,
dancing several
[pelvic thrust],
call
in the middle,
he or she goes to give an embigada
steps,
which they
one dancer goes
semba, to the person
who he
or she
chooses to replace him or her: he or she then goes into the middle of the ring to dance
(Ramos 1954,
128,
my translation).
The tap dance of the batuque would yield the isolations of the toe and heel that
became
a feature
of
Cuban
dance.
The quizomba
is
[I]n the rural
communities of Angola, people always dance the
described in this way:
quizomba, and they dance
you travel in the interior,
it
after
monotonous groans, and
No matter when sundown you'll hear the cuica, with its
almost every night.
the singing of the dancers.
dance the quizomba, dancers form
a ring into
When
they
which a few couples go
and do licentious movements and make indecorous gestures, move-
ments and gestures lence for honors. for the
in
which voluptuousness competes with inso-
Those who don't enter to dance provide
music (Ramos 1940, 225,
my translation).
the chorus
18
Nathaniel Hamilton Crowell, Jr.
•
And
these "indecorous
movements and
gestures" are
rolling, hip swinging, hip shaking, that
isolations
is,
little
more than hip And of
the hips.
f
course, later these would figure into the chica and calenda and eventually the guaguanco, and
many
other Caribbean dances.
While nothing written describes challenges between partners, that mean that they didn't exist; rather, no one recorded them happen-
doesn't
ing. Pursuit
of a female dancer by her male partner, and her efforts to keep
him interested hut
ineffectual,
dance traditions, and
it
is
very
appears
in
much
some
part of
a
Congolese music and
of the traditional dances of the
region, such as Angola's rebita, as well as in contemporary dances, such as
Congolese soukous. In effect, features
Congo appeared
of the music and the dance of the
(and appear) on both sides of the Atlantic. Dances such as the quizomba
and batuque of Angola would give way to the calenda, to dances
and eventually to rumba and to
There
salsa.
are basically
like
yuka,
two reasons
for
this.
First, the
ing slaves,
Portuguese arrived
first
to Portugal and,
to the colonies of other
in
Congo
in
1483 and soon began export-
from the sixteenth century, to
European powers, the Caribbean
prominent among them.
If enslaved
Brazil
people from the Congo/Angola re-
gion were not always the slaves of choice, they did bring valuable
knew how
to
"work metal,
to
weave and make
more
animals, including cattle" and, available in inexhaustible
skills
and
and to domesticate
importantly, they "seemed to be
The
38).
slave trade
for nearly four centuries, with other na-
tions following the Portuguese in the trade. to
pottery,
numbers" (Bowser 1974,
from Congo/Angola continued
and
islands being
During
its
course, according
one recent historian (and others have higher estimates), three million
enslaved people from the
Congo/ Angola region were sent
to the
Americas
out of an estimated total of thirteen million enslaved people shipped from Africa tion
(Thomas
1997, 805).
on many Caribbean
and even
They were
islands,
still
an important part of the popula-
arriving in the nineteenth century
after the slave trade ended, as indentured
workers
in
Martinique.
Second, to the extent that they practiced their music and dance
Congo,
as
they attempted to create
lives in the
New World,
in
they per-
formed music and dance. And when they played, they played what they had played
in Africa,
and when they danced they danced the way they
hail
danced there. Effectively, much of what we have now derives from what these millions of slaves from the
Congo and
elsewhere
in Africa carried
What
Is
Congolese
in
Caribbean Dance
19
here with them, and what they and their descendants were able to maintain.
Some have argued
that this could not be the case, that the
Middle Pas-
sage and horrors of slavery stripped Africans of their cultures. So Africans
would have brought impossible to
little
with them to the Americas, and found
A
cultivate.
long
line
it
nearly
of scholars, however, including
Thompson, Hurston, Dubois, and many others, have made when Africans arrived here, they interpreted their experiences
Herskovits, clear that
through the framework provided by their cultures; they gave meaning to
many new things they saw and experienced by comparing them to knew from home. Also, they consciously added to what they had learned already, and did so unconsciously, too. In reality, much of the the
things they
African diaspora experience has been one of reinterpretation and reorien-
The Caribbean
tation.
slaves
from the Congo brought
dance with them and, to the best of their reality.
They added
to
ability,
they
their
made
it
them and took away, singing about
American experiences and modifying the
music and
part of their distinctively
steps of their dances.
From what
they had had back home, dances like the calenda and yuka would develop;
many years later, we had the material that would contribute to salsa. The steps involved in the development of salsa were the same as or similar to those taken in the creation and cultivation of much of the Caribbean's music and dance, and much of the Caribbean's culture, in general. Therefore, whereas Caribbeans may look to Europeans and at times to Native Americans for
must look
just as
much
some of
brought to Caribbean shores. For including the Congolese
the roots of their cultures, they
to Africans, including the
—
ligion, cuisine, etiquette,
is
much
at the heart
games, folktales
The Congo/Angola
numerous Congolese
of African culture
—decidedly
of the region's music, dance, re-
—
at the heart
of its culture.
Kongo/Angola, as many authors prefer in Bakongo peoples) contribution to Caribbean music and dance is discussed by many other authors in this book. The most extensive treatment of the Congolese influence on Caribbean dance can be found in Yvonne Daniel's comprehensive chapter, "Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean Creativity." Discussing the Kongo/Angola tradition in Cuba, she calls it "the Editor's note:
(or
referring to the region and culture of the
largest
and deepest penetration of African tradition
view
also the place to
in
is
Kongo
go to learn about
tradition such as
mambo
in
distinctively
and rumba.
Cuba." This extensive over-
Cuban
creations with a basis
20
•
Nathaniel Hamilton Crowell, Jr.
How
the late (second half of nineteenth century) entry of indentured workers
from Congo/Angola influenced dance
Dominique Cyrille in her chapter Oil from J. 1. Weeks on Bakongo dancing 1
lese-derived long
drums
are
in the
French Caribbean
is
discussed by
that area.
Here too
in the late
nineteenth century. The Congo-
mentioned prominently
in
are interesting quotes
Martha Ellen
Davis's
chapter on the Dominican Repuhlic. Congolese etymology of Curacaon terms discussed in Cahri Christa tion of the
s
is
chapter about that island. See other chapters for men-
Congolese component
in
Haitian Vodou, Puerto Rican bomba, and
Jamaican dance. Rohert Karris
Thompson
is
a
noted scholar of Kongo/ Angola traditions and
their influence in the Americas. His chapter on
connections, including the word mambo
her chapter, Molly Ahye cites sible
a
itself.
mamho makes
multiple
Congolese cosmogram and speculates on
resonances with Trinidadian limho.
Kongo
Drawing on Thompson's work its
in
pos-
CUBA
3
o o o Cuban Dance An
Orchard of Caribbean Creativity
Yvonne Daniel
The Caribbean encounter of indigenous Americans, Europeans, and Africans has produced, to
some degree,
at least
one similar dance/music form.
On every island, people are accustomed to periodic social gatherings with The comdancing, women
highly seasoned food, potent drinks, and music and dancing.
mon dance form that has been produced involves couple and men, with
lots
of hip or pelvic action, whether hip circling as in the
"wine" on Trinidad and Jamaica, or meringue in Haiti and merengue in the
Dominican Republic, or hip swinging
rumba music
in
in
Cuba.
All such dances are
as in
mazouk on Martinique, or
performed to highly polyrhythmic
which percussion drives the tone and the
It is in
Cuba, however, that
this rich, vibrant,
feeling.
and potent cultural mix-
one new dance/music form, but many forms many outstanding, creative dance/music artists who have affected popular music and dance formations internationally. Cuba is responsible for dance/music forms like son, rumba, mambo, danzon, and chachachd. Through such dances, its influence has been felt throughout the ture produced not simply
and, in addition,
Caribbean basin, It
its
neighboring continents, and beyond.
has been from within
Cuba
music/dance tree has developed.
that a (I
huge "American" dance/music or
use these terms, dance/music and
mu-
sic/dance, interchangeably and as equivalents, since they are so interde-
pendent that
I
in the
study.)
that the
Caribbean and among the expatriate Caribbean enclaves
Cuban creation
United States
is
is
American
in the global sense (as the notion
the only "America" fades); thus, the American 23
"
24
Yvonne Daniel
•
tree of
Not
dance and music traditions has heavy, weighty branches
Cuba have
only does
original
its
Cuban
creations, but
it
in
Cuba.
also houses
multiple branches of distinct African-derived music/dance, as do few of its
neighboring
islands.
Unlike
most other
in
groupings of cabildos (ethnic and
congregate and preserve their customs.
were maintained and displayed
among
The
were permitted to
distinctions
in differing
other practices. Thereby,
tant to the Caribbean, to Latin
islands, large African ethnic-
religious associations)
among
Africans
dances and unique music,
Cuban dance
distinctiveness
American dance, and
to the
is
impor-
dance of the
whole hemisphere.
Cuban dance/music music
is
Caribbean
to the
is
American dance/music, an
to U.S.
as
African-American dance/
indelible
and ever-present part
of the broad, Caribbean cultural fabric (see Gottschild 1996).
dance has affected Caribbean dance formation
Cuban
Cuban music has Cuban dance emerged
just as
influenced Caribbean musical production, since
new Cuban musical form. The most signifiCuban and non-Hispanic dance structure of the
almost in tandem with each cant difference between
Caribbean
is
an amplified or embroidered foot pattern, beyond the basic
alternation of walking steps.
The
amplified foot pattern dominates loco-
motion through the dance space. In many Cuban dance forms, pated rhythm
and
this
or "long
is
is
repeated, as
—
,
a
synco-
created as a foot pattern instead of an even foot pattern in:
"short (step), short, long
short, short, long
ing step instruction).
—
—
,
short, short, long
short, short" (in simplified
,
The dance
—
dance travel-
production of other islands
is
rooted in
the alternation of walking steps, for example, merengue, zouk, compas, calypso, etc., that have "one,
In
two" or "walk, walk" basic
steps.
most contemporary Caribbean and circum-Caribbean dance
ture, for
cul-
example, reggae, mazouk, zouk, pachanga, kaseko, plena, bomba,
bamba, cumbia,
salsa, etc., traces
of
Cuban dance
exist.
Ultimately, this
stems from the early "settlement" of Cuba, as opposed to the "exploration" of other islands in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries (Knight
1970, 1978; Perez 1988). Haiti
showed
bean culture
in the late eighteenth
genuine and
fully
teenth century. ever,
"Cuban"
From
Cuban dance
signs of the
first distinct
Carib-
and early nineteenth centuries, but
a
culture formed shortly afterward in the nine-
the late fifteenth to mid-nineteenth centuries,
how-
culture percolated with tremendously varied cultural
ingredients.
Because of the influence of Cuban music/dance since the nineteenth century, in the Caribbean and across the globe,
I
am amazed
at the
mar-
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
Cuban dance
ginalization of
Creativity
•
25
that permeates the new, formidable collec-
tions of world dance on video. Today, video collections give us needed and
easy access to dance around the world. Yet, generally, they marginalize, neglect, or
omit one of the most
for this
may
Caribbean nations
influential
velopment of American forms and
styles
of music and dance.
be that current political issues surrounding
in the de-
One
reason
Cuban and U.S.
interaction shape authentic dance documentation, competent and inclusive archiving
music
artistry.
of music, and the reality of Cuba's prolific output of dance/
Another reason may be that the editors of several of the
series are musicologists
and they do not balance the contribution of
dance.
In the video series JVC Anthology of World Music and Dance (1988), the
two tapes on the Americas present
from the Caribbean,
a contribution
including three examples from Cuba. This selection does not feature the
range of contributions that
Cuba
has
made
suggest Cuba's vast originality through
its
to
world dance, nor does
visual images.
it
Furthermore, in
Music and Dance of the Americas, produced by JVC/Smithsonian Institution in 1995, only three of the seven examples listed on the table of contents
and
and jacket
as
Cuban
are truly
Brazil, correctly identified
Dancing video series that was
Cuban. The other four are from Haiti
only in the video
first
itself.
And
presented on television by
the popular
PBS
in
1993
Cuban dance entirely. Too often, the rich and varied world of Cuban dance has been compromised. In the 1930s and 1940s, when Hollywood, the music recording omits
industry,
and the general public confused
a
conga with
a tango, a
samba
with a rumba, North African culture with sub-Saharan culture, Caribbean
American societies, they did so out of laziness, ignoThere is no excuse today, what with better knowledge of
societies with Latin
rance, or bias.
the world, instant technology to correct our errors swiftly, and the will to respect cultural distinctiveness. Credit
that
Cuba
In an effort to reverse past omissions,
of
Cuban
is
overdue for the
many dances
has produced.
dance.
I first
I
am eager to present an overview
point out the important dance traditions or huge
families of dances that are tightly related in terms of structure, instrumentation, song-style,
were created
in
and basic movements. There are several of these that
Cuba and
several "foreign" traditions that have survived
Cuba for centuries. I explain how dance/music traditions combined to make Cuban dance culture, or what I have previously called the Cuban
in
dance matrix (Daniel 1995, 26-44). ^ n th e process,
I
inform an interested
26
Yvonne Daniel
•
public, balance the (
dance perspective on world music, and pay tribute to
luba's contributions. I
am
influenced thoroughly in this undertaking by having lived
during
my
annual
Cuban
original anthropological fieldwork,
received from to
me.
Cuban
scholars and the
I
luba
is
Cuban
people, as they reported
I
it
change the assumptions (and deductions) about
to
site of distinct
and dense traditions from
reality.
attempt to reconcile these with the Cuban "regionalist" perspec-
tive that
New
est
(
almost
that are distorted by encyclopedic references to world
dance, which erase the
Then
in
my
research trips since 1985, and by the dance/music history
My first intent
Cuban dance
19H6-87, by
Cuban dance/music traditions
are the
World, the twenty-first century
most important
in the
new-
(smiles).
Dancing Cubans Today, despite
must absorb ing often.
of the economic and political pressures that Cubans
all
they hold on to
life,
including danc-
The sound of music playing is constant day and
night, through-
in daily life,
out large and small
cities
in
sane social
and across expanses of rural
son would have to go high
music
a
in the
areas.
I
think
mountains or beyond the shore
Cuba, and then the quiet would
last
only for
a while.
a
per-
to escape
Live perfor-
mances, rehearsal patios, radios and televisions blast out expressions of joy,
happiness, and relaxation from early in the
morning
to late, late
evening. Occasionally, melodic laments are also heard, but often these are
accompanied by sounds of stirring, romantic orchestration that cause teners to focus
The
lis-
away from work or conversation.
stimulation of music in the air accumulates until
it
spills
over into
Whether a Cuban woman is in the middle of mopping her floors, or whether a Cuban man is
the need, the desire to dance.
one of her daily
rituals,
finishing a ten-hour
hour bus dancing.
ride, It is
meeting and must return home on
they respond deeply to music
not unusual for
raise his/her arms,
a
Cuban
in their
a hot, sticky four-
environment
to interrupt whatever
is
—
by going on to
perhaps close her/his eyes, and step rhythmically with
accentuating hip motion to the surrounding magical sounds. S/he might
even grab
Cubans
A big rest
a
partner in order to execute the dance
more
appropriately.
love dance just as other Caribbean people do.
Cuban love of the dance and that of the Cuban government organizes support for
difference between the
of the world
dance and other
is
that the
artistic
forms so that the
arts flourish
and nourish
its
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
Cuba
people.
is
divided into large provinces,
Creativity
•
27
towns, and, at the
cities,
smallest level, districts, and each division has a vehicle for artistic expression,
development, and enjoyment.
(and other
arts) for free as
munity culture houses
mances free
on
in provincial
occasion).
tographers,
The general
public experiences dance
audience members in their
{casas de caltura).
The
own
public also enjoys perfor-
Major
directors, choreographers, conductors,
etc., are paid to give regular performances
on
cinema-
television, so
informed public experiences and also appreciates Cuba's
sult, in
com-
and national theaters, for minimal cost (and even for
The public benefits immeasurably. Of course, art as "tension-reliever benefit, but
district
artistic
output.
of the masses" might be the
in actuality, lively public criticism
an
first
and educated analyses
the media as well as on street corners and in beauty parlors.
re-
Cuban
dance, as an art form on stage or as a popular expression by amateurs in
community culture houses, receives a range of commentary; dance performance practice technique, execution, expression is fully discussed and
—
the performance content analyzed.
Cuban dance
—
—
social, political,
has a forum in which to grow;
state for all to experience
and
Government support of the sequences.
Not
arts,
and dance
a
amateur
dance
styles
(los aficionados),
Dancers are trained
is
finances a rigorous
philosophy, a concept, an assump-
for specialists, but accessible
loric, balletic,
intelligently
in particular, has other con-
The Cuban government
tion that everyone should/can/does dance.
profesionales).
is
financed by the
enjoy.
dance training program that contains
pueblo), the
—
it is
only does the public or audience benefit, but performers
themselves develop as well.
program
or artistic
There
is
not simply
a training
dance training for the public
and professional dance
first in local
{el
artists (los
courses and schools in folk-
modern concert, and popular styles. The hierarchy among muted by the serious study of all dance forms and styles. If
dancers show promise and audition for the provincial dance program,
they are eligible for
a place in either the provincial
school. Further auditioning
or the national arts
may result in placement in the
limited slots of
the national dance training division.
Upon
graduation from the national arts (or
vincial dance) programs,
dance
Danza Con-
— traditional
temporanea
—modern —
ballet
audition for the
concert dance, Folklorico Nacional
dance companies.
de Camaguey
artists are eligible to
The
from pro-
national companies are:
six national
folkloric forms, Ballet
less frequently,
Nacional
—
ballet
company of Alicia Alonso,
company of Fernando Alonso,
Ballet
Folklorico de Ori-
Yvonne Daniel
28
ente
—
traditional
folkloric
Cutumba
tonus, and
forms. Another recourse after graduation
Cuban dancers
extravaganza dance. sionals
in
— traditional
folkloric
to enter the large division of
is
nightclubs and hotels are profes-
and generally have more training than extravaganza dancers do
elsewhere.
Cuban dance
training requires
competency
in
many
types and styles of
dance (Cashion 1989). Therefore, Cuban dancers are equipped early to begin
a
company Cuban concert form derived
professional career in dance. If they succeed in national
selection, they tend to specialize in
danza
mainly from twentieth-century United ent forms that were brought to rived concert
(a
States), folkloric
Cuba by
forms (anteced-
differing cultures), ballet (a de-
form from nineteenth-century Europe) or extravaganza
dancing (theatrical presentations of mainly popular forms). Training
is
rigorous and thorough; competitive training yields exquisite technique
and incredibly expressive performances. Young dance to look
up
to
sibilities to
artists
and mature professionals have challenges to
face
have models
and respon-
maintain.
Cuban professionals, including dancers, must do a kind of internship upon graduation. They give lessons throughout the provinces and teach the art form they know so well to budding professional and amateur dancers in community settings. In this way, amateurs get inAll trained
formed teaching, but
also the casas
de cultura organization provides re-
hearsal space and performance opportunities for amateurs.
dance organization does not limit
itself to individuals
The amateur
with love of or
tal-
ent for dance, but extends to hospital workers, hotel workers, garbage collectors, school children, teachers, engineers
of people
who dance
together regularly and
—
who
all
sorts of associations
prepare community per-
formances. In this way, the native love of dancing has a means to express itself in
many ways.
In addition to professional and amateur dance, Cuba's nightclub and
hotel industries provide space and time for public social dance. Neighbor-
hood
Cuba and They enjoy a jukebox with and timba presentations. The
bars and small tropical taverns are sprinkled throughout
provide ordinary Cubans with
a
Cuban
Cuban
youth
boleros or the latest
tell
me
that there
Cubans congregate
at
is
place to dance.
rap
a trend like "rave dancing" in the States, where
changing addresses
in
houses, clubs, or dance halls
and dance the night away. Most often, however, Cubans dance tiny
homes with
their relatives or they
dance
in
community
in their
centers
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
among
their neighbors
and
friends.
On
Creativity
•
29
birthdays, anniversaries, and
other special occasions, they go to hotels and, into the dawn, dance
all
kinds of Latin dances (samba, rancheros, etc.) and U.S. fads or crazes (hip-
hop, the butt,
but mostly their
etc.),
chachacha, rumba,
own Cuban
creations (casino, conga,
etc.).
Today's Cubans are well acquainted, both as performers and as audi-
ence members, with the varied roots of their dance culture. In the clear
knowledge of
all
Cuban dance/music
Cubans now have opportunities
perform either
to
past,
heritages was limited. Since as professionals or as
Cuban
amateurs, they can (and are quick to) critique what goes on in
dance performance. Since they adore dancing for social activity and fun, they incorporate dancing into their
They draw upon
difficult, daily life as
their rich dance culture legacies,
often as possible.
which are both broad
and deep.
Indigenous Dance of Cuba
From time to time, Cubans acknowledge the indigenous dances of native peoples who first lived on Cuban soil. In contemporary choreographies, both professional and amateur dance companies
images
as creative
legacy.
Cubans
utilize
indigenous dance
content in honor of ancient history and
give
homage
in a conscious
manner to
Cuban
of their dance/music and so indigenous dance performance forgotten, despite
its
From October
to
1494,
(Perez
cultural
the eradicated roots is
not entirely
disappearance.
December 1492 and from November 1493 to June Christopher Columbus explored Cuban waterways and lands 1995, 21-25). Like other, later conquistadores, he was more inter-
ested in the marketable resources he noticed and imagined than the that
Cuban indigenous culture
disrupted native
sites;
first
awe
summoned in his mind. He eventually
the Ciboney and
later,
the
Arawak
(or Taino)
com-
munities were attacked, captured, and destroyed or dispersed by exploring exploiters. Native villages
and food resources were overrun by herds of
imported animals and native peoples died of malnutrition and suicide
in
massive numbers (Perez 1995, 14-30; Knight 1978, 3-49). It is
exist
almost incredible, therefore, that descriptions of indigenous dance
from the contact period (Direction
Polftica de las
Fernandez de Oviedo 1851; Hernandez 1980). Despite the dances do not presently exist in Cuba,
we have
FAR
1972;
fact that native
ideas about
how
they
30
Yvonne Daniel
•
might have looked and perhaps why they were performed due
The
early unsuspecting dance chroniclers.
massive group dances that were performed
in their
The chroniclers describe indigenous dances
manded
easy steps for hundreds,
if
as
presence.
group forms
not thousands, to perform
The unison movements, however, were performed configurations
in
to these
conquistadores wrote about
in
that de-
unison.
in
intricate spatial
order to secure good relations between the
native-
peoples and their spiritual world. Line, circle, and zigzag patterns for both
women
men or for men only or women only were examples of some of the many designs that the dancing produced. Often the performers danced in procession, holding hands or with locked elbows. The early chroniclers called these indigenous forms of Cuba areitos, meaning indigand
enous dance and song.
We see similar dance performances today in
that the native peoples of
Cuba
either
came from or
fled to at the
areas
time of
conquest, and similar descriptions from related archaeological and cultural sites. In
such
sites (as in
Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, Central
and South America), the dances are called areitos or batocos.
taquis, ?nitotes,
or
Descriptions of these dance forms approximate the descriptions
the conquistadores gave of indigenous dance in Cuba.
Cubans include
this
eradicated part of their dance/music as part of the mixture that results as
Cuban dance/music
culture.
Spanish and Haitian Dances in Cuba
Cuban soil by Spaniards from southern Spain, mainly (Linares 1979, 18-31; Leon 1984, 95-1 18; Hernandez 1980, 12-20; Chao Carbonero and Lameran 1982, 23-27; Alen European dance forms were "planted"
in
1994, 5-27; Daniel 1995, 30-33, 37-38). Another significant selection
was planted by French colonists, some of
on the neighboring
whom
had previously settled
island called Hispaniola (Espanola,
Santo Domingo), which
is
now
Saint-Domingue,
divided into Haiti and the Dominican
Republic. Other French colonists fled Louisiana Territory for
Napoleon two
sold
it
to the
distinct styles of
surably to
United
States.
These European
European dance culture
Cuban dance/music
Cuba when
colonists brought
that contributed
immea-
formation: Spanish zapateo and French
contredanse.
The
Spanish contribution came
guage and Spanish (
)uba
literary
first in
the form of the Spanish lan-
forms that have influenced music/dance
from the time of contact up to the present. The
lyrics
in
of songs that
1
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
accompanied dancing were in a
manner
began
that
in
Creativity
•
3
Spanish and often the songs were organized
in
Spain and has forever influenced the literary
production of the Caribbean and the European and South American continents.
The
structure of the Spanish song was based
within a ten-line stanza, called the decima. etry,
was ing,
a ten-syllable line
songs, as sung po-
accompanied rhythmic foot stamping, zapateo or zapateado, which a signature of
Spanish dance, particularly southern Andalucian danc-
where flamenco was forming
This structure evolved into
a
also as a significant dance tradition.
very descriptive (romantic) stanza that re-
peated a two-line or couplet refrain. tar,
on
The decima
the bandnrria,
el tiple,
and
The
Spaniards also brought the gui-
las bandolas, string
the sound background for early music/dance
made up The emphasis
instruments that
on the
island.
on the Spanish language, the decima-like stanza with answering couplet verse,
and zapateo continued on the island of Cuba
matrix for what was to Additionally,
become Cuban, not Spanish,
as part
of a growing
culture.
from within Spanish culture (through Andalucians, Cana-
rios, Castellanos,
Asturianos, Gallegos, Catalanes,
etc.,
an amalgam of re-
gions and classes), a particular body orientation or stance while dancing
was brought
to the island. Spanish
dancing characteristically utilized an
elongated, uplifted upper body above the stamping or
jumping)
feet.
circular patterns
accompanied the
and the characteristic interest with some hip
moving (running or
Extended arm movements that encircled the upper body
in
lifted chest.
in
This upper body stance
rhythmic foot patterns were combined
movement emphasis, which came from the Moors'
invasion
of Spain and the presence of North African culture within Spanish culture of the colonial period. As Spaniards
a result
of the African infiltration of Spain, some
who came to Cuba were
free,
Spanish-speaking Africans. Later,
an even stronger emphasis on the hips came to Cuba from sub-Saharan it is important to remember this first African influence that came with the Spaniards within European culture itself. French colonials (who had left Haiti either in anticipation or at the time of the Haitian Revolution, or who fled the U.S. dominion over former French Louisiana) brought the next European dance tradition (Alen 1987, 9-15; Knight 1970, 12, 33, 68-72). With the independence of
Africa, but
enslaved Africans in one major island of the colonies, colonists escaped to
Cuba, southern United
States, or
many
frightened
back to France.
Those who came to Cuba brought a group of European dances that had also come with the Spaniards, derivations of European court dances. These colonists were French, however, and heavily influenced by the opu-
Yvonne Daniel
32
lence of the historic French court. Instead of the Spanish emphasis on zapateo, their dance preferences approximated the look of the court
forms, including dancing often
and
of the foot) in los ijiiudrillfs
oil half
las
toe (with
body weight 00 the and minuets).
ininuctvs (quadrilles
hard, however, to replicate the dances exactly in a crude
Of the French
New
It
ball
was
World.
court imitations, the dance that prevailed more in
Cuba
had evolved from Fnglish country dance, which traveled to the French court and then to
laiti as
I
salon dances that relied
contredanse. This form was
on
a
group of parlor or
who exchanged places and Couples of women and men,
of couples
lines
other partners in intricate floor patterns.
often in four pairs, touched hands and fingers only occasionally as they
paraded, promenaded, and crossed the dance space in rhythmic time to
ensemble wind and string instruments. Contradanza francesa,
its
name
in
Spanish, relied on binary or two-part musical form (AA, BB), where each
of two contrasting sections was repeated.
and popularity to the dance. tranquil and the second
The
first
The
two were rather
To summarize
Even
lively.
tions forced modification of the dance, the
was pivotal to Cuban
contrasts added dynamics
repeating sections were considered if
New World condi-
French Haitian contredanse
creativity.
European seeds within Cuban dance
the
culture,
I
can
say that Europeans from both Spain and Haiti were responsible for major
elements of a
new Cuban dance
culture: straight back posture, touching of
male and female partners, stanza with verse song-style, and interest
rhythm (seen
stamped foot patterns and some hip movement). With
in
the demise of native dance/music
on the
island,
might have become the only sources of Cuban the
economic and
political
Cuban dance/music or
American dance
as
European dance forms
creativity. If
it
were not
demands of sugar production, African
might not have entered the Cuban ents of
as
cultural
mix
as
such indelible ingredi-
they are today.
The
African contribution would have
sources, and both of these within strong
influence, replicating
what happened to
islands. Until the
— Cuba
nineteenth century
was primarily
Spaniards in search of gold
a
dominated the
terrain
on
as
on other Caribbean nowhere else in the Carib-
Euro-American way
who needed new
Crown; white Spanish cattle
European
a great extent
— and
Atlantic Ocean. For a significant time,
the Spanish
for
cultures
such important branches on the tree of
come from only two
bean
in
station for traveling
supplies after crossing the
Cuba was isolated and neglected by
settlers
with families and
a
few slaves
ranches and coffee farms, dancing
sonal or intermittent gatherings and eking out
a living.
in sea-
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
Creativity
33
•
Multiple African Dances
With
the need for an increased labor force in the production and refining
of sugar, Africans from the coasts of West and Central Africa were forced into slavery in staggering
numbers and taken
to
Cuba, among other Car-
ibbean ports. There was, however, a distinct source of African dance cul-
came
ture that
1995, 37-38).
to
Cuba from
A group of "African"
accompanied white colonists nists
Leon 1984, 21-23; Daniel dances came with black Haitians who
Haiti (Alen 1987;
as enslaved servants.
Sometimes these colo-
brought whole plantation populations.
Enslaved Africans and African Americans had been constructing an
emerging "Haitian" culture from the sixteenth to ries in Haiti.
late
eighteenth centu-
Their dances were different from the dances of enslaved
Africans and African Americans of
Cuba
at the time. First, the
dances
were different because they were accompanied by the emerging Creole French language and not by Spanish. Second, these dances were different
from other African forms that came to Cuba because they looked something like European courtly forms. But in contrast to the European contredanse, they were performed by African-derived people, and to
drum accompaniment instead of the string and woodwind accompaniment of other court-like forms. These dances were performed by Haitian Africans in Cuba regularly and perceived as "their dances." In reality, their dance/music was a distinct mixture of colonists' European court imitations (of contredanse, quadrilles, minuets,
tations of these colonial forms.
and
cotillions)
and African imi-
This music/dance tradition continues
Cuba today as Tumba francesa or French Drum
—intact from the
late
1
in
700s
to the present!
Other African influences far,
in
Cuba outnumbered tumba
francesa by
however. Four branches of huge and distinct African dance cultures
emerged
in the
amalgam of perhaps hundreds of other African ethnic
groups (Ortiz 1951; Chao Carbonero 1980; Leon 1984, 7-32; Alen 1994, 5-24; Daniel 1989, 60-97; 1995, 33-37)- In Cuba, the four dance/music traditions or families are
most often
called (1) Kongo (or Kongo-Angolan,
Bantu, or Palo), (2) Arard, (3) Carabali (Abakud or Ndnigo), and the best
known,
(4)
Yoruba (or Lucumi, Oricha, or Santeria). These
names
for
dance/music traditions of African descent are mixed geographical, ethnic, religious,
and
names have survived and identified (along with rumba
linguistic terms, but the alternate
are used interchangeably in Cuba.
francesa) as the
main
They
stylistic traditions
are
of African-derived dance/music
— 34
in
Yvonne Daniel
•
Cuba. While they have surely changed from
their sources over the five
centuries of African presence in Cuba, these tour are considered African,
and only secondarily Cuban by Cubans, since they are
Cubans and others commonly
African creativity.
Cuban
traditions, for the
their arrival
from
Cuban
a result
influence that has shaped
as
Afro-
them
since
Africa.
The differences
among
these tour and between these and the French
Haitian creolized form described above are great. Each special types
of original
them
refer to
of instrumentation and
a
general style
is
marked with
among many
differing
dances within each tradition. (The descriptions of African-derived dance/
music traditions that keep
mind
in
I
summarize here are general.
that each tradition has a
very important to
It is
wide range of differing dances.
What I present is a broad, sweeping comparison in terms of dance style. What emphasize are the differences between them that are most obvious I
as first visual impressions,
and those distinctions that constitute the most
important characteristics within
a
given dance tradition.)
The largest and deepest penetration of African tradition in Cuba is the Kongo tradition. While it is often considered the subtlest culture among the African cultures in Cuba,
it
has been one of the most pervasive in
Cuba. Kongo-Angolan peoples have given Cuba and the Caribbean hemisphere)
fact the
many
marimbula, catd or guagua, but most importantly, conga drums dores
—
the barrel-shaped drums
dance/music. AJso,
(in
types of percussion instruments, including the
Kongo music
we
are
most accustomed
tumba-
to in "Latin"
patterns form the base for long-lasting,
indoor or outdoor, community social dance.
Kongo rhythms permeate
a
great portion of Caribbean music/dance culture.
Kongo-Angolan dance was the means for and product of the basic sogathering not only in Cuba, but in most Caribbean and early Latin American nations. Its name, conga or coviparsa, was used for colonial procial
cession dances that displayed cabildo (ethnic or fraternal association) orga-
among Africans and followed Spanish Catholic practice among Europeans. The idea of processional dance was exceedingly important:
nization
each performer performed individualistically and yet, in effect
creating
tedness, an ethnic a
spectacular
Kings.
On
a
unified whole, a dancing line,
all
performers were
chain of interconnec-
community. The comparsas of Cuba were performed
manner on January 6th of each
this
a
occasion
year, the
Day
in colonial times, all Africans
of the (Three)
were grouped ac-
cording to origins and each cabildo or ethnic group paraded for the entertainment of the season.
Through
in
in
procession
cabildo organization and
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
conga dance processions, Africans
in
Cuba maintained
Creativity
•
35
their distinct cul-
and many African customs. I can only speculate as to why a Kongo name has been used for this celebration and for the familiar enthusiasm and vitality of international dancers when performing in a "conga tural identities
line" elsewhere.
Another important contribution of Kongo-Angolan (Bantu) culture was
dance structure. Very often in
a specific
Kongo
dance,
a
dancing
couple encircles each other and suddenly executes significant gestures.
The
timing of the dancers' gesture coincides with rhythmic accents from
the accompanying drums. In Cuba's
Kongo
dance, yuka for example, male
and female partners almost never touch, but they alternately advance to-
ward one another and
retreat,
pushing both abdomens forward and then
spinning away at spontaneous moments.
A pelvic thrust, a navel bumping,
abdomen initiates the many Kongo social dances throughout the Caribbean includes this Kongo dance pattern of couples at play. Other Kongo dance structures eliminate the pelvic thrust and focus more on or a throwing gesture toward the dancing partner's retreat pattern.
The
rhythm, but they
structure of
still
characterizes parts of
and Latin America:
in
concentrate on playful
many Kongo-Angolan Cuba, makuta;
flirtation. Playful flirtation
Caribbean
traditions in the
in Haiti, congo; in Jamaica,
kumina;
in Brazil, samba; etc.
Kongo
Cuba a martial art/dance form, juegp de mam\ game (probably alluding to movements that were as slippery and smooth as peanut butter). This danced form is documented in the Cuban literature as late as the 1930s and 1940s, at least in terms of culture also gave
the peanut butter
discussion and acknowledgment; however, the
continued
as
Kongo-Angolan
form died out
in
Cuba.
It
culture in Martinique, Trinidad, and north-
eastern Brazil as ladja or damie, kalinda, and capoeira respectively.
In general, Kongo-Angolan dance contains highly percussive, often sensuous, but generally nonlyrical
movement
material.
The
dancers'
backs are usually bent forward, often exceedingly low, despite the fact of
jumping and powerful, constant, all-body-parts movement. In though Kongo-Angolan culture its
dance
have
a
is
is
fact,
even
considered subtle in terms of visibility,
rather dynamic, even explosive and powerful.
The movements
huge range of complexity, from the complicated independence of
torso and limbs in simultaneous activity to the almost stationary
ments during
social events, initiated solely
or swings from side to side. religious systems
by the hips
Kongo dance/music
is
from Central Africa that are known
move-
in gyrating circles
also associated with as Palo or Palo
Monte
Yvonne Daniel
36
in
Kongo dances
ot sacred
Cuba; the entire division
assists spiritual
com-
munication of believers.
The rica,
Cuba
next African music/dance tradition of
including the
Ewe and
Fon,
among others.
other religious dance/music traditions
is
Arara and originates
Dahomey kingdom
with the peoples within and near the old
Arara has
a
West Af-
ol
relationship to
Caribbean and Brazil called
in the
Arada, Rada, Ardra, Djedje, and/or Jeje. Like the
Cuba
Kongo
tradition in
amalgam of differing cultures but, unlike Central African Kongo, the amalgam came mainly from those that bordered the Bight of Benin in West Africa. The Cuba, the Arara dance/music tradition
in
is
also an
differing cultures coalesced into an identifiable Arara stylistic tradition in
Cuba (Vinueza
1986). For example, the
drums of Arara
tradition are not
barrel-shaped, but cylindrical or tubular and are accompanied by a metal bell
or ogan.
drummers
The drums
are played with sticks instead of the hands, and
often stand as they play, with the
drums leaning on
a
bench.
Arara dances are distinctive because they emphasize shoulder move-
ments more than other elements. The shoulders are constantly lowering or pushing backwards above ments, no matter
how
that
is,
tradition contains a dense and particularized
origins
The most
The music
of
this
group of rhythms. Arara
is
system that conforms to some extent with
West African belief systems since many West became known as Arara in Cuba.
several
The
the dancer can be bent over or
upright, but the shoulders keep pulsing visually.
also associated with a religious
and
other complex body-part move-
or where the floor pattern directs the dancer.
body orientation can be low or high,
more
all
rising
distinctive African
Africans of different
music/dance tradition
region of origin in Africa.
in
came with
Cuba
Carabalf, after
its
members from
ethnic and cultural groups (for example, Rfik and
It
groups) along the Calabar River in parts of what are
is
called
secret society
Ejagham
now Cameroon and
Nigeria. Secret society organizations throughout the Calabar River area
contain
Cuba,
many masked dance
is
the only surviving
is known in Cuba (Cabrera
forms, but Abakua, as the society
masked dance
tradition in
1958). Enslaved Africans
from
and drumming patterns,
as well as songs and chants in the vestigia] lan-
this area replicated
and maintained dance
guages from the Calabar region.
The
movements
characteristic
are
smooth or sustained lunging stances
that alternate with standing positions, requiring the performer to be high
on the
toes, pulled
up
dancers, called hemes,
tight,
diablitos,
and contained. Intriguing, masked
spirit
orNdnigos, perform the dance movements.
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
The Iremes have only eyes
Creativity
•
37
—no noses or mouths. Both the pointed, cone-
shaped head of the mask and the tiny drum (enkrikamo) that invokes the dancers further identify Abakua distinctiveness. While the
spirit
spirit
dancers lunge to one side, they make gestures with short, handheld dance sticks or batons.
Often and most characteristically, they kneel on one knee
and make long sweeping gestures along the entire body or body part arm, or chest of the dancer), as
a
vibratory hand gesture.
hips, the
(leg,
movements
cleansing the body. These
by vibrations of the
are preceded or followed
sometimes, simply
if
whole body,
or,
The dance movements, in a nonhuman
sum, create an aura of "the strange," "the out-of-this-world," presence.
dances
There
when
is little
a
performance or even
Abakua
is
more
effect than these awe-inspiring
in theatrical representation; the
dance/music of
incredibly beautiful and mysterious.
In addition to
members
that has
group of Iremes performs, either in genuine ceremonial
Cuba
in
its
distinctive
are
known
dance/music tradition, Abakua society
They have
to maintain a strong moral code.
strict
precepts of mutual aid, which secure swift and radical social action
when
necessary. Ideally, the male-only organizations expect
members
to
be honorable family protectors and responsible community members.
Membership
not given quickly or
is
their eligibility
justice occurs in the larger
ety
members
community,
that resolves situations.
and establish some sense of social even brutal, and society
from
Although
easily.
Men
must display and earn
through service to the larger community.
all
is
it is
When social in-
often the wrath of secret soci-
Abakua members punish offenders
justice.
Their behavior
is
often severe,
accomplished by means of assured allegiance to the
members.
it is
not generally discussed,
women and
families can
portions of the secret society music/dance tradition in Cuba. vidual
dance
A few indi-
women hold important ceremonial roles within the male organiza-
tion. In separate formations,
but without the masked
spirit
dancing of
women
dance and sing their complementary Carabalf patterns,
called brikamo,
lunging intermittently within the traveling rhythmic
Iremes,
dance pattern and brushing their bodies with sweeping, cleansing gestures.
The
latest Africans to arrive in
Yorubas. In
massive numbers were called the
Cuba Lucumi became another
identifying term for the
many
Yoruba groups and their language (Brandon 1993: 55-59)- They came to Cuba in the nineteenth century, until the slave trade ended, from what is
now
southwestern Nigeria.
The
wars in Africa determined that the
38
Yvonne Daniel
•
Ybrubas were the main enslaved groups
subgroups had entered the Americas
well.
Their danee/music tradition
culture and
is
this period,
f
their
of
many
familiar to
observers oi
Cuban
often thought to he the only remaining African culture of
is
Cuba because of its ornate
visihility.
We now understand
Yoruha danee/music its
is
is
it
one
ol lour
Cuba.
distinct African-derived traditions that continue in
symbols and
although some
smaller numbers earlier as
in
recognizable because oi
impressive visual
its
diverse array of divinities. Divinities, called oricbas, enter
Many
the bodies oi worshippers and dance fiercely.
cused on Yoruba culture and published on
and shrines, but have also commented on
specialists
have fo-
elaborate altars, necklaces,
its
ornate ceremonial practice
its
1974, 1983; Omari 1984; Murphy 1988; Daniel Drewal, Pemberton, and Abiodun 1989; Bolivar 1990; Mason 1992;
(Ortiz 1951;
1989;
Thompson
Brandon 1993; Carnizares of varied, codified
^ nc dance/music comprises
1993).
movement sequences and
resent differing divine personalities.
characters of behavior that guard the
a
continuum
identifying gestures that rep-
The divinities dance as chartering many domains of human social lite.
In very general terms and in comparison with the other four branches of
African music/dance traditions of Cuba, Yoruba
and often make the dancer seem to undulate
up through the
The
chest, shoulders, neck,
following information
manuscript, "Articulate terfa,
I
make
and head.
condensed and taken from
is
in
I
a
summarize
huge repertoire of dance.
a
group of specific dances that personify
the orichas, or divinities, in
movement. Dance and music
as offerings to the divinities.
The movement sequences
the lives of the divinities and visually clarify for
created or to
whom
it is
my book
Vodun, San-
caution the reader regarding the broad
I
here, as
Yoruba dance/music tradition
are lyrical
from the pelvic area
Movement: Sacred Performance
and Candomble." Again,
generalizations
is
movements
vertically
offered.
When
whom
are
performed
depict portions of
the performance
orichas appear as
a
is
result of the
invocations and dances of worshippers, they also dance the codified gestures and signature
The with
a
branch of
patterns.
He
is
change quickly.
a
that worshippers dance.
small tree; his
perceived as
elder and so his
ings.
movements
oricha Elegba, for example, dances in red and black clothing and
body
He
is
a
movements
are small-scaled, irregular
divine mischievous child or
low to the ground and
a
wise secretive
his gestures shift
and
governs opportunities, chances, beginnings, and end-
His floor pattern often traces the tour cardinal directions or the
crossroad.
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
Another
oricha,
Ochun, dances
like the divine river,
39
Creativity
sweet water flow-
embedded Her movements are sensuous, flowing, female-body-centered, like womankind in her most beautiful and alluring state, ready for social exciing happily, bubbly yet carefully, over waterfalls and around rocks.
and point of view,
tation and procreation. Crystal clear in direction
Ochun dances in golden yellow and giggles over the sounds of the drums. The oricha Ogun dances in a striking pattern of diagonal slices, made with his machete. Ogun is a divine warrior, a protector whose force is equal to that within iron. His foot pattern clears a given space thrusting to
both sides and constantly moving through and around. His arm gestures alternately slice, cut, or
chop the forested area of his habitat or
a perceived
opponent. His movements are so strong that he shakes fiercely and vibrates forcefully with each accumulating gesture.
The
oricha
Yemaya dances and converts duple
to triple
rhythm so
that
the viewer senses the repetitious and soothing quality of the sea, divine creative source of
life.
whirlpools, and of oars.
and the turing,
is
power
the omnipotent mother, maternal
—
caring, nur-
and incredibly protective.
Chango and
She
sea.
Her dance traces the movements of waves and Her force is as powerful as the ocean, salt water,
fierce,
is
another oricha, another divine warrior. He, too,
but his domain
is
communication, music, and dance involves
is
powerful
not the forested area of Ogun. His sphere
intellect,
and he dresses
a characteristic kick that
bolizing his extraordinary potency.
in red
is
and white. His
accompanies an arm gesture, sym-
With
this gesture
and
kick,
he brings
the energy of lightning and thunder from the sky above into his body, his genitals, for ultimate protection of the nation or
As he
fights for survival of the group,
jumps
(in
Cuba).
he
is
worshipping community.
the only dancing oricha
who
Many divinities use forceful runs and powerful turns, but
Chango dance that has jumps, tumbling, and kicks. Oya is the female divine warrior, the oricha whose energy is that of air. She can dance with gentle charm like a breeze or with fire and force like a
it is
's
tornado or hurricane. She
comparably at
beautiful.
is
woman
all-powerful, totally shrewd and in-
She wears every color simultaneously, and appears
times and in places of extreme change
—
in the marketplace, at the
of the year, in Carnival. She fears nothing, not even death, so gallops everywhere. She guards the cemetery and "living dead" or spirits of the ancestors. dictable,
it is
she
end
who
communicates with the
Her dance
is
provocative, unpre-
and wild. She dashes and gallops across the space with the horse
step, caballo, carrying a dark-colored horse's
tail,
often while screaming.
40
Yvonne Daniel
•
Ochosi
is
whose dance depicts
yet another oricha
warrior hunts with
a
bow and
arrow, however, and
animals, and also for the distant future.
I
lis
decisions. In his dance, he takes his arrow
shot.
a
divine warrior. This
responsible for forest
dance demonstrates the hunt,
His presence focuses long-range
his search for a particular destination.
fully in the
is
from the quiver, places
care-
it
bow, and calculates important dimensions of the impending
His body reacts
in a jerking
undulation from the force at the release
of the arrow, the achievement of the chase, the accomplishment of
all
tedious and time-consuming preparation. Obatala's dance symbolizes his position as the most powerful oricha, divine father of cool,
and
over, in the
he dances
all
the orichas and judge of humankind.
He
He
elegant,
is
move swiftly, but walks and dances bent determined and mindful manner of the eldest of elders. When
stately.
as a
white horses
does not
younger oricha,
tail.
in his
younger form, he gallops carrying
His dance symbolizes
a
a
kind of peace, balance, and un-
derstanding, as do his white clothes. Babaluaye's dance
is
also
performed
in a
stooped, and he takes on the trembling and
of someone diseases.
who
is
sick.
He takes on
Babaluaye
is
low position, but
somewhat
erratic
his
is
movements
the divinity of smallpox and other
the sickness and disease of the
community
as a leper
or a smallpox victim and reaches for health as his dance cleanses the body, the mind, and ultimately the community.
The Yoruba dances tions,
are
numerous and each has
several contrasting sec-
but those just described are the most characteristic.
The Yoruba
tradition has had influence on other African-derived traditions, for ex-
ample on Arara and Kongo traditions
in the
nineteenth century.
The
Yoruba dance/music tradition gave ample movements and gestures
as
seeds not only for intra-African mixtures but also to European and Afri-
can cultural blends.
As
group, the African traditions have commonalities
a
among
distinct
movements and particular musical elements that they gave to the formation of Cuban dance/music culture. Percussion instruments (drums, shakers, all
and
bells),
traditions
and complex rhythmic interest (polyrhythms) are strong
and can be heard also
in
most Cuban dance/music.
in
A singer
consistently sings with an answering chorus in "call and response" pattern, with this
fragments or whole chants of archaic African languages. Again,
occurs
Cuban
among
creations
all
four African branches and reappears within most
on the
tree of
Cuban
dance.
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
The
dancing, while distinctive
low-level position: that
is,
among
Creativity
41
•
the four families, accentuates a
gently bent knees, feet firmly planted, back
leaning slightly forward, in a "ready-for-anything" posture. Robert Farris
Thompson position,
(1974) has vividly described African stance as a "get-down"
and Brenda Dixon Gottschild (1996)
important
restates all of the
African dance elements, which dance teachers have passed on orally for
Dunham,
decades since Katherine position, the
as "the blues aesthetic." In this
upper and lower torso can divide
percussively. In
all
fully
and move
of the African traditions, the hips are
six
ready
fluidly or
not constrained
or obstructed and can circle in either direction, flex forward and back, or
swing side to
side, imitating the
movements of life and symbolically repre-
senting the source of life and survival of the nation or ethnic group. Both the distinctions and the commonalities of African dance traditions have
served as multiple seeds, available elements, for creation of Cuban
Cuban
—dance forms.
—Afro-
Cuban Creations Genuine Cuban dance/music evolved from the
differing branches of the
music/dance traditions previously discussed into
five
new
families of
Cu-
ban creation. By the mid-nineteenth century, 1830S-1860S, the blendings of Spanish, French, French Haitian, Kongo, Arara, Abakua, and Yoruba feelings,
movements, instruments, and rhythms
solidified,
producing
dances and musical forms that were neither European nor African
solely,
but Cuban (Alen 1994, 25-28; Daniel 1995, 38-44). In Cuba, the original creations have been organized into broad categories, called
complexes, of differing types, variations or branches on the
tree of Cuban son, la
dance/music (Leon 1984; Alen 1987, 1994; Daniel 1995). El campesino are the four dance/ el punto guajiro
rumba, eldanzon, and
music complexes. There not danced,
la cancion
is
one other complex, reserved for music that
cubana or
creations did not completely erase the
As
I
have stated
earlier,
many
is
Cuban song complex. The new blended European or African antecedents.
of these continue alongside the new. Both
newer and older dance/music
traditions have incorporated
change
as
it
has occurred over time, but they have also retained distinctions that organize
all
dance/music traditions
in
Cuba. In turn, the Cuban dance/music
complexes have become seeds themselves for even
bean dance/music complexes.
larger, related
Carib-
Yvonne Daniel
42
Son Son
is a
become
major branch on the Cuban tree a
dance, and also one
l
pervasive seed for Caribbean dance/music.
It
iliat lias
has infiltrated
types of musical production, from folk, to popular, to symphonic music.
began, however, in the mountain farms and large, isolated stretches cattle range,
with
particular rhythm.
rhythm on the ing dancer.
but
its
It
of
guajiro or campesino, a country farm worker, and his
a
The Spanish farm worker sang
guitar.
all
decima-derived retrains
his
Perhaps he accented
his
in a
song by beating out the
face of his guitar, imitating the zapateo of an absent stamp-
No one
rhythm took
knows a
exactly
how
music/dance tradition began,
this
defined shape that became son
pated rhythm that was organized to
clave.
This
and their improvisations within
clave, that kept all instruments
a
is
synco-
an ongoing series of counts, the
fit
a
repeated
pattern of "one, two/ one, two, three//" or the reverse: "one, two, three/
one, two//."
This basic rhythm or son clave
is
American basic song rhythm. In the
"Hambone" and bits."
in the old
Rhythms,"
States,
a
can be heard within the song a haircut,
rhythm within
named "Toussaint
family he
a
after the Haitian revolutionary, for their liberating
Son
clave, as
it is
known
and crein
found throughout the main African-derived traditions of Cuba.
tions as the
main musical structure or
Researchers have traced
American continent
it
two
respected musicologist in the United
ative proliferation across the Americas. is
it
rhythmic expression "shave and
Dr. Samuel Floyd (1998),
States, has placed this
intimately related to U.S. African-
Cuba,
It
func-
basic organizing rhythmic pattern.
throughout the Caribbean and the North
in diverse musical contributions
from African de-
scendants.
Over panded
time, the Spanish guitar to include
woodwind
accompaniment of the
pointed to
a
drum
skins.
sones ex-
instruments, piano, and importantly, Afri-
can drums, conga drums or tumbadores. bare hands on
first
The congas were
Their barrel shapes with
played with
this style of playing
Central African or Kongo-Angolan legacy. As the family of
varying sones developed and spread with the exploring/exploiting Spaniards
and enslaved Africans to mainland Mexico and Peru and back to
Spain as well, the complex, elcomplejo del son, was identified
of
its
own
original creations.
Son continues
parts of Latin America, taking
on
a
in
Cuba
as
one
separate evolution in other
local distinctions,
emerging wherever
the cultural mixture of Europeans and Africans took place. In Mexico,
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
Creativity
43
•
Venezuela, and Colombia, and even in Puerto Rico, for example, Europe-
some of the same
ans and Africans from
Cuba mixed
among the
other
For one thing, there was more Native American
influ-
and lived together places are great.
origins as those in
also.
Differences in son development
ence and more unobstructed European cultural dominance in other places in comparison to Cuba.
In the dance portion of Cuban son a viewer can see remnants of Euro-
pean and African cultures and their almost
The dance shows their hands, the
infinite,
blended variations.
European legacy with couples touching, not only
its
woman's
waist, the man's shoulders, but as time goes on,
both their chests and, sometimes, even their upper and lower abdomens.
This
is
a definite
European
trait
from the contredanse and the
later
contmdanza cubana, where dancing partners were apart and facing one another or side by side with hands touching. African customs in general
would
dictate that the
not touching.
The
women and men
dance separately and,
other European element
is
if
together,
the straight back, from the
court and folk dance heritages, which opposes the African preference for
bent and low back postures while dancing.
What
is
African in the dance
is
the heavy accent
and an isolation of complementary rhythms emphasis on the hips, and their articulation foot pattern, ations.
ment
is
on the moving hips
in various
body
parts.
An
they follow the rhythmic
as
constant in son and consistent throughout
Cuban
cre-
The emphasis on moving hips permits the torso to divide its move-
potential,
and to create separate visual rhythms, polyrhythms be-
tween the upper and lower
torso.
The
"divided" torso of son
is
African as
opposed to European dance of the period, which generally used the entire torso as a stabilizer for
arm and
leg
movement.
The nineteenth century's son was a
fashionable, sensuous couple dance
that satisfied the colonial desire for entertainment and provided opportunities for courtship.
Because of
male and female dance position, but
it
hip
movement and
it is
The
closed, touching
caused scandals in written accounts, in popularity over time. It
in each of Cuba's geographical regions.
type in western Pinos del Rio province
changiii, is
what
it
was danced persistently and gained
spawned many variants or types
The
its
is
called sucu-sucu. Another,
popular in the easternmost Oriente province, and guateque
is
often called in the central region and in parts of the east.
son complex featured
a
growing
list
of instruments during the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Adding to the sixteenth- to eighteenth-century sounds of guitars, clay
jars that
were blown, the twelve-
Yvonne Daniel
44
thumb piano
string tres (smaller guitar), and a modified
or
nuirunbttlti,
it
gradually accumulated string bass, maraeas (hand shakers), piano, violins, flutes, and, later, its characteristic brass trumpet Eventually, the bongo drums were highlighted, above the congas or tumbadores, because of
soprano pitch and capacity for virtuoso rhythmic
their piercing
Thick musical textures resulted, with
display.
instruments ornamenting and
all
supporting the melodic line of the singer and the answering refrain of the coro
or chorus.
The best-known
variants of the son (particularly outside of
Cuba) are
more recent descendants from the 1940s and 1950s up to the present: mambo and salsa. Mambo is a Cuban creation that emerged fully in the the
1950s with
Cuba
is
worldwide craze for many Cuban/Latin dances.
a
very specific in particular gestures and sequences.
—
tern switches son expectations (of short, short, long repetition that alternates
from the right
right foot touches the floor
takes a step; this pattern
is
)
Mambo
The
in
foot pat-
to a "touch, step"
to the left foot.
The
toe of the
momentarily and then the whole right foot
repeated on the
left
and continues to
alternate.
move forward and back with each touch, step of the feet. The hands and arms move alternately forward and back, each arm in opposition to the feet. The feeling and vision of Cuban mambo is bouncy, involving an up and down motion of the entire body
Above, the hips
(really pelvis)
and occasional shimmering shoulders. quick small turns, and even
oped among these
Cuban musicians
strict,
little
All sorts of catchy kicking patterns,
jumps are added.
playful
Mambo in Cuba develmambo traveled with
movements. As
internationally (especially with
Cuban-born Perez
Prado to Mexico and with Puerto Rican musicians to the United
—
retained the generic son foot pattern: short, short, long
—
long
;
States),
it
short, short,
Cuban original. Instead of a bouncy quality as in Cuban mambo, mambo outside of Cuba retained the suave and
in contrast to its
original
seductive sense of
its
earlier
son heritage.
Both versions of mambo, inside and outside of Cuba, acquired partnering turns, which differentiated them from the original sones in
each zone of Cuba, and demonstrates son's evolution. Instead of couples
dancing
dance
in closed,
floor, in
upheld arm with
touching position continuously around and across the
mambo
in a series
a closed
the
woman was
usually guided under the
mans
of smooth, intricate turns. The turns alternated
dancing position that moved gracefully, rhythmically, and
sensuously through the dance space.
It
was
common
in the international
version to break the closed couple stance and for the couple to dance sepa-
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean rated, but together
both the
—approximating an African
Creativity
stylization.
At
•
45
this time,
man and woman could improvise with gestures of the arms,
head,
or chest, as well as rhythmically over the basic (son) foot pattern. Later in the dance, the couple rejoined and danced the basic son step to elaborate
and percussion instrumentation, which
brass
mambo. The dancing
public was fascinated by
also helped to classify
Cuban mambo.
It
was
a hit
only in Cuba, but everywhere in the 1950s. In Central Africa, where
danced to Cuban recordings, African bands imitated its
Kongo traces,
its
and Central Africans,
ries
it
it
was
and identified with
African rhythmic origins (Malonga Casquelourd: per-
Among
sonal communications 1987, 1994).
in the States,
it
not
it
was included
West
partying francophone
in la musique typique. In
Europe and
re-ignited ballroom dancing and joined the dance catego-
of ballroom dance competitions that continue internationally today.
In terms of music, the son complex reached another type of creative level
with the incorporation of jazz instrumentation and the swing band
sound of U.S. musicians
in the 1940s
and 1950s, and again
(Roberts 1979; Figueroa 1994). Son added ity
and contagious song
American
tradition of
Basie,
sionist
Chano Pozo
orchestra leader Grillo),
style to classic jazz
in
in the
1970s
Cuban percussion complexband display
in the African-
Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Duke Ellington,
and others, and made history
Count
its
Dizzy
as "Latin Jazz."
Cuban
percus-
and
Gillespie's band, along with Gillespie
Mario Bauza and
his
music
director,
Machito (Frank
both from Cuba, and Cuban-born arranger Chico O'Farrill were
some of the most instrumental Eventually, a
new variant,
figures in the
development of Latin Jazz.
the joyous and engaging salsa, was added to
the development of son; this variant catapulted in the 1970s, into the international,
Cuban dance/music again,
commercial music industry. Salsa
is
a
contemporary variant of Cuban son, but one that was developed outside
among African-Americans and most particularly among Puerto Rican musicians and dancers. The Cuban of Cuba, particularly in the United States
contemporary tions. Salsa
virtuosity,
couple.
salsa
dance
is
called casino
and has almost endless varia-
and casino are identified by their exciting
fast pace,
extreme
and the almost continuous turning sequences of the dancing
They
are both danced in son's basic foot pattern (and in the inter-
national style of
group form,
mambo), but casino
in
Cuba
has also developed into a
casino de la rueda (circle casino).
Usually, four couples dance in unison patterns within a circle.
couples alternate dancing with their
own
The
partners, with their facing part-
46
Yvonne Daniel
•
ners, with
corner partners, and circling until they have danced with each
member ol the opposite sex. A taller shouts out or signals dance patterns that mav cause the partners to go into low level, that is, to bend their knees anil
lower their hacks forward
teats
or,
sometimes, to perform almost acrobatic
while continuing the rhythmic foot pattern to the organizing clave.
Planned sequences unfold, hut also spontaneous
"new
calls create a series
of
steps."
The
innovation that occurs constantly
steps and, later,
new
in
Cuban dance
types or categories of dances.
stimulates
It solidities
new
the types of
dances by means of repeated dance sequences and repetition of distinct rhythms.
More
types amplify the family or tradition of dance.
The
multi-
plying of dances, in addition to the openness of Cuban culture to incorporation of musical innovations, have initiated variety within, and thereby
continuity
of,
the son complex.
In 1998-99, there was
most noticeably Club.
These
in the
a
resurgence of older soneros, singers of son
recording and film
elders, superabiielitos of
titled
The Buena
style,
Vista Social
son and the sung tradition, cancion
cubana, have had sold-out performances, as well as successful recordings
and movie videos, and are traveling worldwide. In Cuba today, there influx of professional Japanese, U.S.
international musicians
who come
to
Cuba
and traditional dance/music and do so output of both the
Africando
"making noise"
is
Cubanized Spanish Thus, son Africans in a listener as
it
in
Japan
in Senegal;
is
for lessons in
Cuban popular
is
increasing.
Orquesta de
la luz;
One
of
the group
and songs are being performed
in Martinique, Spain,
in
and France.
illustrates the vibrant cultural
new and
an
at the professional level. Also, the
Cuban and Cuban-influenced music
most popular bands now
is
American, Scandinavian, and other
interchange of Europeans and
constantly changing environment.
combines European song form with African
It
intrigues the
call
and response
singing, the Spanish language with multiple fragments of African lan-
guages.
It
places
European horns,
strings,
and
percussive complexity and also African string est. It
flutes alongside African
melody and rhythmic
inter-
alternates and combines upright, stable postures with independent,
complex body-part in musical
isolation,
and encourages profound feelings that result
and movement improvisation.
Its
popularity and continuity
over centuries demonstrate the profound satisfaction son gives to per-
forming
artists
and dancing and listening audience members.
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
Creativity
•
47
Rumba The
next important complex that Cubans would cite
posed to son, rumba emerged
in
is
rumba. As op-
mainly African communities or where
dark-skinned Africans and African-Americans lived, particularly near the
Havana during the early nineteenth century. Both Africans and Europeans came together, however, in urban streets, plazas, ports in Matanzas and
large verandas, and outdoor patios to relax after
weeks of hard work, to
avoid the heat and humidity of the crowded living quarters (called
solares)
of the urban poor in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Cuba, to
Community members used
share news and gossip, and to sing and dance.
both Spanish and African languages, the decima-derived song stanzas in African
call
and response patterns, and the rhythmic interest
polyrhythms and polyrhythmic movement:
were used
to create son.
The
results
all
the
in musical
same ingredients
that
were not the same, however; rumba
took on an equally vital, but different organization. In general, rumba had
more pronounced emphasis on rhythm and
the expectation of prolonged
improvisation, in both the music and the dance patterns.
The dance
has
become more complex and requires cultural immersion to really understand what is going on. The structure of rumba was more constrained and yet more open than that of son. Its constraint lay in the number of instruments and dancing bodies that were involved; rumba uses only percussion instruments and
human
voices and generally
couple.
Its
ment of finish
danced by only one performer or one
is
openness was in the duration of performance and the develop-
improvisation;
rumba
lasts as
long
as
improvising their stanzas and as long as
it it
takes for
all
singers to
takes for dancers to ad-
equately display their expertise in the challenge of the form.
The shakers,
musical timbre of rumba was limited to claves or
and human
voices.
The
claves
were two
sticks,
sticks that
drums,
sounded out
the appropriate rhythmic pattern, also called clave. In rumba, the basic clave suspends, clave. Instead
and thereby syncopates, the third sounded pulse of son
of one, two, three/ one, two// one, two, three/ one, two// of
son clave, the rumba clave
two
shifts to:
one, two
three/ one, two// one,
more within
three/ one, two// with an elongation of half a beat
the total time of a pattern. Musicians would say that
rumba
clave have a difference of only half a beat. Performers this ideal,
clave and son
do not always keep
but Cuban rumberos (true rumba performers) usually
start
with
Yvonne Daniel
48
and
this precisely,
cite
it
as a differentiating
music/dance complexes and the two
clement between the two
claves.
Three tumbadores or congas are the main instruments that form the foundation of rumba sound. Instead of the drums being played in an \ln can performance
however, they are played
style,
in
European manner
the
of high-voice dominance. Previously, the preference of African seed traditions
was bass voice predominance, but
new Cuban
in
creations,
Euro-
pean concepts were blended into African-derived drumming practice. In
rumba, the high voiced
(jitinto
or soprano
drum
The tumbador
ing and rhythmic commentary.
takes
on most of the sing-
or bass and the segundo or
mid-voiced drum anchor the rumba with repetition, even though they
ornamentation within their own
also improvise thick
patterns.
clave in a
The drums
call
and response
support the lengthening or stretching of the rumba
complex display of improvisation.
Other percussion instruments formance. There
are considered standard in
a shaker, called la
is
madruga, which
rumba
per-
used to mark the
is
main beat of the musical measure. The shaker functions during the song section to intensify the pace, to initiate the dancing portion of rumba, and to structurally divide
rumba
into
its
danced and nondanced sections. (The
dancing doesn't begin until the instrumental and vocal sections are com-
The other instrument is called elcatd or la bamboo or wooden tube on a small platform that
pleted or reach a certain peak.)
guagua. is
cylindrical
It is a
played with sticks in very quick, repeated patterns. These patterns cre-
ate a light but
busy context and deepen the rich texture of total percussion.
Generally, the songs are sung in the same style and structural organization as in son.
The
difference
is
that there are
many more
fragments of African languages that punctuate the the coro or answering sections. as balladic,
nor
as
The
romantic perhaps,
include old vendors'
calls,
lyrics
content of the songs as
son music.
laments, and
homages
phrases and
and particularly is
generally not
Rumba
lyrics often
to martyrs,
famous
rumberos, and cultural heroes, but consist mainly of sophisticated double entendres, joking and piercing
commentary of a
political
or social nature.
Just like related Caribbean music/dance (Trinidadian calypso, for ex-
ample, or Curaq:aon
and
they form examples of sung social resistance
resilience.
The dance
has developed from
models. Basic rumba ing pattern
two
tavibii),
I
pattern.
is
a basic step to several
simple, but complex.
It
types of classified
does not take on the walk-
talked about at the beginning, but consistently repeats a one,
The rumba
pattern in
its
simplest form
is a
step to the side
— Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
Creativity
with the right foot and then a return of the foot with feet together.
same pattern happens on the to describe all that goes on in the body left
that
is
and
rumba's complexity. Suffice
to augment, decorate, and
it
it
keeps alternating. There
is
49
•
The
no way
as this foot pattern continues,
but
to say, the objective of rumba dance
ornament the rhythmic pattern or
is
clave, in ab-
solute time but with the utmost of syncopation, and with the use of any
and every body part that can move, especially the
With
yambu, guaguanco, and Columbia. slow,
hips.
understanding of the main step, rumba has three types:
this basic
medium, and
The
respectively
fast,
three have contrasting tempos
— and they use varied and
identifiable
The first two are performed by a couple only, one woman and one man, who are charged with executing total creativity above a reclave rhythms.
lentless
understanding of clave. (The clave
not always heard but
is
is al-
ways implied.) The dancers are scrutinized by the entire community of spectators and, in that sense, take
women circle,
or
all
men
in the
on the
responsibility of representing
community. They dance with each other
all
in the
but separated and with the lowest knee bends and the most forward
back position possible. Both yambu and guaguanco involve
woman by
a
chase of the
man makes from Kongo tradition,
the man. In guaguanco only, however, the
pected pelvic thrusts or random gestures
now el vacunao
(a pelvic thrust),
unexcalled
toward his partner. She, in turn, hides or
protects herself from being possessed or "vaccinated" by the man.
The
chase involves highly sensitive performers and skilled rhythmic display,
descending from roots in yuka and other Kongo/Angolan forms such
as
samba.
The
third
rumba
is
called Columbia,
and
men. Unlike the two other forms, Columbia
historically
is
was reserved
for
believed to have emerged in
the rural areas of Matanzas Province, in Cardenas. There, in colonial times, the ratio of enslaved
As
a result, the
men
to
women was
distinctive style of fast,
the lunging and vibrating found in
feet.
The style
Abakua or
also has
remnants of
secret society traditions
has fragments of Abakua secret society chants, fact, it is
a
rhythmic play in foot patterns, most often ex-
ecuted high on the toes and ball of the
guages. In
exceedingly unbalanced.
more numerous men danced together and developed
among
and
other African lan-
within Abakua repertoire that rumberos have identi-
fied the exact display
of rumba clave, the sounded, sophisticated stretch of
the identifiable half beat (Michael Spiro, from his interview in 2000 with
Gollo Diaz and Jesus Alfonso).
The Columbia adopted
a
competitive objective. First, each
man who
so
Yvonne Daniel
•
danced challenged another dancing male
in a series ot
highly virtuosic
performances. Additionally, each dancer was competing against the
rhythmic
the soprano drum,
skills of
Rhythmic conversations, movement dialogues, unfold
Men
performance.
bia
on
of water
rum
and with walking canes
augment and dramatize
In the recent past, only
men boundary ers.
Now,
this
a
few older
of Columbia and is
dramatic Colum-
in
teeny spaces
among
their competitive advantage.
women
have bolted across the
all-
danced competitively among male danc-
changing; more young (Cuban)
women perform
the in-
Columbia specialized footwork. And, since they have expressed
tricate
keen interest (and since Cuba takes advantage of tain
in
dance with knives while blindfolded, with glasses
their heads,
bottles, to
the quinto player.
in effect against
all
opportunities to ob-
needed foreign currency), female international students who study
Cuba have been
rumba Columbia. rumba complex has been in the combination of rumba instrumentation and batd drumming that comes from the Yoruba tradition. In this version of rumba, drummers combine two huge families of differing drums and distinct, but complementary, rhythms to form batarumba. Dancers have the opportunity to combine two dance traditions of multiple identifiable gestures and movement sedance
in
The most
given
some
instruction in
recent development of
quences with yet
a third
dance complex. In batarumba, dancers can per-
form any type of rumba, or any of the Yoruba oricha dances, and can
in-
clude casino as well.
Rumba complex
has developed over centuries and was considered
"museum" form by many Cubans, who thought anymore.
It
that
no one danced
could not be erased from history, however, since
its
a it
creators,
mainly dark-skinned or Afro-Cubans, have never stopped dancing, drumming, and singing or commenting on their situation. Since the nineteenth century
particularly light-skinned
lives
and their sociopolitical
and despite the
fact that
Cubans,
Cubans, stopped dancing or did not dance
rumba, many dark-skinned Cubans have continued to dance rumba. Additionally,
many Cuban composers and
skinned, have injected
dance/music
rumba form and passages into son-based popular symphonic music. Still, it is not as pervasive a
as well as into
dance/music form
The
conductors, both light- and dark-
as son.
Revolutionary government took advantage of rumba
to African roots
Cuba s "new"
and used rumba
s
connection
as a political vehicle for
promoting
identity as an Afro-Latin nation. In contrast to
but inaccurate, identity as
a
Euro-American
its
lingering.
island culture (which
it
was
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean
more
only before the nineteenth century), this new,
offered to the
Cuban population and
Creativity
realistic identity
an international image.
as
51
•
was
The em-
barrassment over African cultures that existed in Cuba for centuries and
shame over African customs, including dances in lowered back positions with hips in motion to complicated drumming, were minimized as outmoded perspectives with the popularization of rumba performances the
and the knowledge of rumba International dancers
who
history.
Cuban dance have however, the "get down" love
routinely confused
signature dance of rumba and son. Rumba is, Cuba from an international perspective. It displays Cuba's roots, its AfroCubanismo, more so than son does. Cubans and knowledgeable international dancers and musicians respect the differences and enjoy them
both immensely.
Danzon The
next distinct
danzon.
Cuban dance/music complex
in
terms of importance
is
encompasses several variants that were very popular during the
It
nineteenth century: contradanza, danza, danzon, danzonete, and danzonchd,
and some authorities place chachacha
trace their heritage
in this family.
These dances
from the French contredanse and the Haitian Tumba
Francesa, since they both stem from rows of women dancers facing their
male dancing partners violin,
and
flute
acquired
tradanza cubana, as
produced
a
in very upright posture.
it
Cuban percussion
was quickly named
The French
of piano,
and, starting with the con-
after its
contredanse antecedent,
very light color of elegant, rhythmic sound. Interestingly, the
rhythm of contradanza cubana was
first
ritmo de habanera (Alen 1994, 82, 84). five pulses {cinquillo)
It
called ritmo de tango and, later,
was based on
a
rhythmic figure of
within a three-beat frame and has a relationship to
the development of Cuban clave and to Toussaint
Americas. (The rhythm of cinquillo
The
trio
is
the
first
Rhythm throughout the
part of son clave.)
sweet sound of doubled and quadrupled strings, doubled wood-
winds, and light percussion (maracas and
giiiros)
incorporated the influ-
ence of the European waltz, and the dance placed the dancing couple shockingly close (for the period) in the romantic dance formations that developed.
With
the emergence of danza, couples were laced/locked to-
gether (enlazadas), rather than simply facing one another.
surrounded the dance, however. For example, tips
A strict protocol
women placed their finger-
only on the palm of the man's hand in danza. In the next development.
52
Yvonne
•
)aniel
I
the dan/on, dancing couples alternated between dancing and walking, for eight measures each.
They danced
enlazadas for eight measures and then
the couple promenaded, talked with other couples, fanned, or generally rested for eight measures, before resuming the romantie, close contact.
The dance pascu, hut
structure
came from
Spain, walking elegantly to the music or
perhaps the walking pattern evolved also because
of the "heat of
the dance" or the heat of the tropics. .Additionally, the dan/on was characterized bv
a
wonderful syncopation between the music and the dancers.
permitting the dancers to accentuate the syncopation
both the rumba and the son before accounts, but
The
it
distinguishing features of the entire danzon complex are that
identified with slight
changes
the time and that the dances were
all
in the musical structure
mentation within the orchestra. At
tipica
in the clave. Like-
the danzon was vilified in written
was also danced with great pleasure.
couples dance facing each other
ttpica,
it,
and
in the instru-
the orchestra was called orquesta
first,
orquesta tipica francesa, or charanga francesa. Later the
term orquesta
returned. Mulato (of both European and African ancestry) musicians
were usually contracted
to play for parades, balls,
ings in the nineteenth century.
The same
and small salon gather-
musicians were aware of
many
African rhythms apart from the elite repertoire of their training and "infected" salon music with a rich rhythmic interest that to
Cuban
creation.
They
early contradanza structure, but
due to their inventive compositions, an-
other form surfaced. Miguel Failde composed the
one that had
a
became important
played the binary form that characterized the
first
danzon
in
1879,
returning theme for the reoccurring walking section, with
contrasting sections in terms of melody and lead solo instrument (musically speaking, a
rondo form or
ABACAD
etc.).
The danzon
constantly
repeated the hip-provoking ritmo de tango or habanera. (Some Cubans teach danzon without any hip accentuation; they say the character of the
dance comes from doblar knees as
if
la rodilla [to
on the space of one
The next radical change was
different, but
its
in
floor
bend the knee], dancing with bent
tile.)
dance formation was chachacha. This dance
musical structure and instrumentation were very
similar to the danzon, the danzonete, and the danzoncha,
its
related evo-
With the chachacha, dancers marked the onomatopoeic phrase with three quick steps, followed by two slow ones. Partners danced the repeated rhythmic step in closed or open position, either holding on to lutions.
one another or separated. Facing one another
complex do, dancing partners alternate
as
parallel
all
the dancers in danzon
dance patterns (going
in
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean the
Creativity
53
•
same direction) or contrasting dance patterns (going toward and away
from each
other).
While the dance began
earlier in the century,
popularized by Enrique Jorrin's compositions in 1951. Since then,
been danced
until
was
it it
has
today throughout the Caribbean and Central and
South America, and also in Caribbean niches across North America, Europe, and Africa.
Punto Guajiro or Campesino
The
last
Cuban music/dance complex
is
punto guajiro or campesino. High
and low doubled and tripled guitar sounds, stanza singing with
Cuban country
"ay" and "eh," and zapateo dancing characterize
cries of
or folk
music/dance. Campesino has permeated the countryside of the western-
most part of Cuba and music,
its
parts of the central zone.
While
it is
rural
Cuban
forms have penetrated the Cuban professional theatrical world
as well. It originated at local festivals
and celebrations, where families and
neighbors congregated to socialize,
as
punto
libre
or free, independent,
very elaborated song and dance in the west, and punto fijo or song set to fixed, repetitive
accompaniment
The
in parts of Cuba's central zone.
melodies have modal qualities that reference antiquity in Europe (and possibly
North
based in the Spanish decima tradition
Africa). Texts are
and often describe the landscape of the country, love, and comedic tions.
The
situa-
organization of instruments shifts from area to area, but in-
cludes the guitar, tres, claves, maracas, tumbadores, and giiiro. In the
North African/Spanish
west, they add a unique sounding,
ment, the
and
laud,
in the central provinces, they
string instru-
omit the laud and add
bongos.
The forms
are danced with polyrhythmic, often contrapuntal, foot
stamping or zapateo.
The
National Folkloric Ensemble replicates the
dance form with dancers costumed
from
a
previous era, stamping out
as peasant farmers or military soldiers
call
and response rhythms with wooden
sandals or chancletas.
Today,
many
of the elements of punto guajiro have been folded into
son complex or compressed into cancion complex, the sung tradition without dancing. At
enough time ditions, ity
least, that is
my
in these regions to see
punto guajiro
is still
alive
if,
I
have not spent
other small or less-known tra-
and kicking. In comparison to the
of the other four complexes of
smaller and the least formidable.
impression, but like
vital-
Cuban dance/music, however,
it
is
54
Yvonne Daniel
•
Conclusion As
map
I
Cuban dance/music and continue my studies in the that each island nation has its own diverse continuum or
the tree of
Caribbean,
I
find
complement of dances, with minute and
tions
has
relationship to affranchis in
a
Carriacou, Grenada, and to allel
Haitian
dances, like
classifications, but
dance/music of Cuba.
parallels to the
Iaiti,
I
to Big
Yodou and THnidadian Shango ceremonial dances. Kongo Kongo-Angolan yuka, Cuban rumba, Jamaican kumina, and
Puerto Rican bomba have
a
relationship to each other. as
is
Cuban gagd
kaseko, rumba, bomba, and soca's wining
ibbean tree of dance kaseko, or "the
—
—
all
activate specialized
body breaks" (from
to Haitian
"Caribbean
its
distinct branches
casser corps,
extraordinary articulation
style," all the
Cuban Arara is mm. And son,
meaning
a
Car-
— when
cobwebs are cleaned
body breaks into
the
out,
"to break the
breaks out of its
its inertia,
most
stresses disap-
and both the body and the person are
pear, if only temporarily,
on
dance movement such that
Men the body breaks — breaks out of
ordinary to
connec-
also find
Martinique. Yoruba oricha dances par-
bele in
connected to Haitian Rada,
body").
I
Tumba trancesa in Cuba Drum Nation Dance in
feeling
left
good.
That
is
exactly
how
it
feels to
dance Cuban dance traditions, from
Kongo, Arara, Carabali, Yoruba, Tumba Francesa, son, rumba, danzon punto gnajiro
why
— any one
tradition, or all nine of
them. Perhaps that
to is
when Cuban dance/music is marginalized. Cuban dance/music occupies a large tree of its own with roots that have I
react so strongly
spread throughout the Caribbean. Haitian, Kongo-Angolan,
within
its
It
has potent cultures (Spanish, French,
Ewe/Fon, Efik/Ejagham, Yoruba, and Cuban)
contemporary borders, and
its
music/dance traditions
African-derived, one French Haitian, and five original
(including the singing-only complex cancidn cubana)
Cuban
— have
sources of creative reference in the Caribbean and beyond,
— four
creations
been rich orchard
a true
of creativity.
Any definitive
or general work
—
in print, video,
dance/music should include reference to the
or film
— on Caribbean
historical relevance
and aes-
thetic distinctiveness of Cuba. If not out of respect for Cuba's prolific creativity,
the inclusion should count for historical accuracy.
happy, creative music in
There
is
vital,
Cuba and there is a whole lot or spirit-giving, Cuban dances are powerful and conta-
spirit-restoring dance there also.
gious, and affect natives and foreigners alike.
Cuban Dance: An Orchard of Caribbean I
am
particularly grateful for the
support that
I
warm
collegial
Creativity
•
environment and administrative
received as a scholar-in-residence, 1999-2000, from the
Women's
Leadership Institute of Mills College, under the direction of Dr. Edna Mitchell, I
wrote
this chapter. In addition, I
am
Simmons was
as
forever indebted to Smith College for sab-
batical time to contribute to scholarship
President Ruth
55
on Caribbean
responsible for
thereby, in part, for this reassessment of
my
cultures; in particular,
latest trip to the
Cuban dance
history.
region and
4
o o o The Dance World Solemnity,
I
of Ramiro Guerra
oluptuousness,
Humor, and Chance
Melinda Mousouris
Ramiro Guerra made
a long,
uncharted journey to self-discovery
as
an
In the mid- 1940s he broke with family tradition and began serious
artist.
dance studies during law school. While continuing
made an
his ballet training,
he
modern dance movements of the United States and Europe. Although the concepts of Graham, Limon, and Laban opened new terrain, he still felt estranged from his natural way of moving. He pressed further to create a uniquely Cuban technique and aesthetic of aesthetic leap into the
contemporary dance. In searching for a
other dancers and
is
Cuban
way, Ramiro Guerra unlocked the path for
recognized in
Cuba
as the
founder of Cuban modern
dance. Alberto Mendez, one of the original dancers under Guerra tion,
voiced what
reographer,
it
many
feel:
"Although
I
ultimately
was Ramiro Guerra who showed
became
s
direc-
a ballet
cho-
me the potentialities of my
Composer Juan Blanco summarized Guerra influence in this way: Cuban modern dance has developed in such a short time, we owe it to Ramiro Guerra. All that we see today is the development of what he implanted. He was an authentic creator who developed new technique, new expression, original movement, and new dance stars. Thanks to him, too, Cuban music, traditional and commissioned new work, has entered hilly body."
's
"If
into dance performance" (Pajares Santiesteban 1993, 25, 28,
my
transla-
tion).
As
a result
of the U.S. governments effective isolation of Cuba, Cuban
modern dance
is
not well known
in the
56
United
States.
It
has had
a
short
The Dance World
of Ramiro Guerra
•
57
Cuban
but nevertheless tumultuous and impressive history. Prior to the
Revolution in 1959, modern dance barely existed in Cuba, while European ballet traditions were heavily supported. A handful of pioneers led by
Guerra were working
of modern dance.
in the area
a repertory incorporating Cuba's
traditions. Cuba's ety,
Afro-Cuban
traditions existed
where they were not accorded the
its
to build
Afro-Cuban
on the margins of soci-
official status
of "culture."
Initially,
government were wary of Afro-Cuban
factions of the revolutionary ture,
They wanted
Spanish heritage and
cul-
which, because of its roots in Afro-Cuban religion, was perceived as
competition to the political system for people's
loyalty.
Contemporary
who
labeled
it
dance, too, had capitalist art
passionate
its
Soviet-modeled
and feared
its
critics,
a
bourgeois,
how
influence in Cuba. But by i960, seeing
Cuban people were about their traditions,
government rec-
the
ognized the value of connecting these traditions with the state and
founded two national dance companies, one folkloric and one devoted to
contemporary dance.
Ramiro Guerra was appointed to create the contemporary dance company, Conjunto Nacional de Danza Contemporanea, and its repertory. Guerra continued the work he'd begun, exploring the complexity of Cuban expressions within the contemporary context that was modern dance. Because modern dance training was virtually nonexistent vited dancers Elfriede
who were
living in
Cuba, he
in
Mahler and Lorna Burdsall of the United
States,
Havana, and Elena Noriega of Mexico to teach and
dance with the Conjunto. Given
a
budget for twenty-four dancers, from
open auditions he selected twelve black and twelve white dancers the
in-
new company. He recognized
to
form
the different cultural heritages of his
dancers and sought opportunities to use the possibilities of each one. This
group began to study how the Cuban body moved, what made
from bodies result fluent,
in other cultures,
and what
its
movement could
was La Tecnica Cubana, which continues powerful dancers
who
are
open
to
different
The
produce marvelously
to improvisation.
direction, a cross-fertilization of the dancers' different capabilities occurred
it
express.
Under Guerra
's
backgrounds and
and the company realized an arresting
common
aes-
thetic in their productions.
However, the suspicion of contemporary dance continued In 1970, the artistic freedom of the 1960s was challenged try of culture placed control of political officials,
who knew
performance companies
little
when
to surface.
the minis-
in the
hands of
about art and perceived sedition
they did not understand. Ramiro Guerra was one
artist
who was
in all
stripped
Melinda Mousouris
58
of his directorship and not allowed to work.
when Armando Mart was appointed
lasted until 1977,
As
a
result ol
I
1
hut's tenure
loday he
and shifted away from policing
ol art
Ramiro
lives in
cultural minister.
advocacy, the ministry oi culture incorporated
[art's
broader understanding ing
This period of repression
(
ruerra's reputation
artists.
was rehabilitated.
an ambivalent embrace with
his
homeland
from the purge. The intersection of La Rampa and L Street I
lavana
life.
On
the southeast corner stands the
former Conrad Hilton
ment and used
as
hotel of record. In futurist
Iotel,
Iavana Libre
that dates a
is
hub of the
Jotel,
I
expropriated by Castro's victorious govern-
park diagonally across
modular Coppelia
ice
is
the
still
a favorite
cream shops. National
institute, the foreign press office,
blocks north,
I
temporary headquarters, and
its
a
I
a
Dur-
meeting
place, the
all
nearby.
Ramiro Guerra
wall,
business
television, the
and the university are
approaching the ocean
city's
him
Two
lives
in
semiseclusion in the tower of a once-elegant art deco apartment house built in the 1920s.
Some Cubans
still
remember
the building as the resi-
dence of Eduardo Chivas, opposition party leader to the Batista regime. forerunner of the revolutionary exaggerated sense of honor.
He
movement
A
that followed, Chivas had an
shot himself on radio after a speech in
which he apologized for not being able
to deliver the evidence of the
regime's corruption he had promised to the people.
The a
elevator in the apartment house shoots up to the twelfth floor like
sputnik and lurches to a stop.
A winding metal staircase leads two flights
further to the tower penthouse that
is
the sanctuary of
His two-room living quarters exude both the enclosure of exile.
He
lives
amid
a
Ramiro Guerra.
strong sense of kingdom and
artifacts
of modernism from the
1930s through the 1950s intermingled with Afro-Cuban arts and
crafts.
Steep shelf-lined walls holding books, photo albums, and mementos are
broken by
model
PC
a practice
barre installed beneath a
window and by
a
current-
on which he writes and publishes an international dance
jour-
The apartment has two slim balconies that open onto the Havana One looks out on the rocky coast and steely sea across which so many of his fellow artists have scattered, leaving behind the austerity nal.
skyline.
wrought by the Cuban governments
restrictiveness
and U.S. govern-
ment's punitive trade embargo. But Ramiro Guerra chose not to
become
an expatriate. Instead, after his ostracism, he retreated from Havana's daily
life
me.
— and
and cafe society
phone. "Those people
who want
never quite returned. to find
me know where
He to
has no tele-
come," he told
The Dance World
of Ramiro Guerra
•
59
In his mid-seventies and about five feet five inches, with a shock of
may who thrives on social contact. His
white hair and an expressive, compassionate face, Ramiro Guerra prize his solitude, but he
warm,
intelligent conversation kindles the
likes to relax at
a taut said,
also a person
is
home
atmosphere around him.
and Bermuda shorts. They reveal
in a tropical shirt
muscular physique and particularly strong
was developed through
ballet,
He
legs.
and he retained
The
strength, he
ballet training as part
of his dancers' regimen because "Cuban dancers tend to be
a little lazy
with their legs."
His equipoise and outward focus may have been grafted onto an essentially introspective,
cerebral personality
7
Cyrano de Bergerac manner the self stayed inside
.
He recalled as a
pastimes. "I adored marbles. I
pieces of furniture.
through
I
I
in
two of
in
dance partner. His
childhood
arrangements around various
was fascinated by the designs
a stained glass parlor
his
would watch them bounce into random
would group them
light
made
passing
window."
While portraying himself as social
him-
occupied with solitary games. His attraction both to
choreography and to the theater he recognizes patterns and then
child plotting in
exploits of an older cousin, while he
shy,
first idols
he acknowledged his popularity
were
a
neighbor, Carmela,
as a
who danced
an Afro-tango in amateur shows; a Cuban dance team, Ortiz and Richard,
who danced rumba and he accompanied his
guaracha; and Astaire and Rogers on film.
girlfriend, a reluctant ballet pupil, to class,
When
he instead
summoned the courage to enroll. member of the famous ballet family who later proved to be the most interested in bringing Cuban identity into the form. Alonso now lives in the United States. The Pro-Arte Musical Society, the theater and academy where Guerra recognized the potential for himself and
His
first
teacher was Alberto Alonso, the
began his studies in 1940, was the cosmopolitan cultural center of its time. Ted Shawn and Martha Graham performed there when they came to Cuba, and Guerra acknowledged that it was when he saw Ted Shawn that he began to shape an idea of a future for himself.
He tive
was caught between
productions,
among
his desire to
be in the theater and an impera-
1943 he began performing in Pro-Arte them Fokine choreographies of Stravinsky's Pe-
not to dishonor his
father. In
trushka and Polish Dances.
He embarked upon
a
double
life,
finishing his
law degree, but taking part in dance productions under the name of Edgar Suarez. "It so happened that
two
sisters
I
studied after law school with a friend
followed the activities of Pro-Arte.
One
day, as
we
all
whose
sat in the
60
Melinda Mousouris
•
another male they had seen taking dance
parlor, they ridiculed
class
and
men who danced on the stage. When saw what lay in store tor me, decided to change my name and disguise myself. always feared that
excoriated
I
I
I
one day
I
would
ami they would
arrive
say,
saw you on the stage,' hut
'I
it
never happened."
Guerra graduated law school a
touring company
longer
a secret.
in
of Ballet Russe.
"My
father
1946, but soon
When
made peace with my
never surrendered his original ambition for
me
as Dr.
Ramiro Guerra
Guerra related that Russian ballerina
had settled
in
who
Cuba
it
until
left
Cuba
to
work with
he returned his vocation was no
me
career," he said, "but he
and continued to address
he died."
was through the
classes of
Nina Verchinina,
traveled the world with her British
in the early 1940s, that
understanding of movement and develop
he began to acquire
as a dancer.
a
companion and a true
Verchinina, he ex-
plained, belonged to a generation of "baby ballerinas" trained by Nijinska.
She performed with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo beginning and
later
with
chinina as an
its
successor the Original Ballet Russe.
unknown but avant-garde and
He
in
1933
evoked Ver-
far-sighted master. "She had
an intense power of communication with her students. She demanded total
concentration and
we
finished class exhausted.
She didn't waste time
on arm embellishments or contemplating stereotypic poses; she developed our muscles, aligned our postures, cleaned our movements. She had studied Laban's system and gave
many
exercises
on the
floor, training the
torso and pelvis. She balanced a classical syllabus with the technique,
equally demanding, for developing expressive freedom."
He
also said that
teach his
own
it
was from Verchininas example that he learned
to
dancers. "You can give a class to everyone, but you have to
know each one of your dancers and take care of their physical and mental problems. Graham was more indirect. You had to learn from her." When Verchinina joined as soloist a vassal company of the Ballet Russe from Brazil, she also brought Guerra into the company with her. The company traveled from Rio to Paris to New York, where the tour broke down. Guerra remained in New York. There he studied with Graham on scholarship, with
Limon, and began
to improvise with Franceses Boas,
the daughter of anthropologist Franz Boas.
choreographers
like
Graham, de
ican folkloric or urban material.
Mille, and
saw productions
Robbins
utilized
in
which
North Amer-
Having arranged board by working
brownstone building superintendent, he
mian existence that drew
He
to a close
when
lived a frugal but his visa expired.
as a
happy bohe-
The Dance World
of Ramiro Guerra
61
•
to Cuba in 1948 and his appointment in 1959 dance division of the new national theater, he pursued a
Between Guerra 's return as director of the
course of investigation and experimentation. Throughout his youth he
had been accumulating knowledge of Afro-Cuban secular dances descended from the Yoruba and
Cuban
Congo
peoples of Africa and from Afro-
religious societies. In 1949 he traveled to
Colombia
to investigate
Latin American folklore. At the same time he was examining techniques
of developing character and narrative through dance, music, and stagecraft. "I
now had
a specific goal to
acquired in the United States,
wanted to themes and
my
translate
stories that
I
my
which
to apply the technique
and
studies,
feeling of
my
I
had
research," he said. "I
Cubanness into dance and develop
connected with Cuban roots."
Freelancing, he choreographed and performed in diverse theatrical
Department of Education commissioned him
contexts. In 1950 the
to
present folkloric dance programs. He mounted choreographies of Colombian, Panamanian, Venezuelan, and Mexican dances, as well as of Cuban contradanzas and Abakud ceremonies. During these same years he worked closely with a theater group, Las Mascaras, whose founder Andre Castro, like Guerra, was influenced by Stanislavski.
dances and
movement
He
choreographed
for the actors for productions of Garcia Lorca's
Yerma and Boda de Sangre. In 1953 he worked with the Gran Teatro in Spain on further productions of Lorca and of Greek legend.
Greek mythology later as director of the Conjunto. By 1952 and 1953 Guerra began to create original Cuban
He
would
return to
ballets.
In
1955 he created Toque and Habana, 1930 for an experimental dance group formed by Alicia Alonso. "These ballet dancers knew nothing about the existence of modern dance," Guerra explained. aesthetic and the music
of Spring' was
when
was
as difficult for
"They were startled by the them as Stravinsky's 'The Rite
Nijinsky premiered his ballet." Toque, which por-
trayed a Santeria service, ignited a scandal
The
fertilization rite.
when Guerra incorporated
mothers protested to the
ballerinas'
Guerra called upon Fernando Ortiz, Cuba's authority on Afro-Cuban ligion, to lecture
on the significance of the material. Parents
was able to proceed and continued developing
a
a
directors.
satisfied,
re-
he
modern dance group un-
der Alonso's direction.
By
the late 1950s
Cuba was
the Batista regime escalated as fell
in
came
December
to power,
it
1959.
in the grip it
of civil war.
teetered on collapse.
Not long
The repression of The government
government Ramiro Guerra was ap-
after the revolutionary
established a national theater.
Mclirula Mousouris
62
pointed director of build and direct
a
dance division, lie now had the opportunit)
its
permanent troupe
of dancers. In
t
i960 the dance divi-
became two separate national companies, the ConjuntO Folklorico Nacional ami the Conjunto tie Danza Contemporanea.
sion
The
celebration of liberation prompted patriotic
Mambi,
narrative dance celebrating the
a
independence against Spain
1H98,
in
work
a
Two
rebel army's struggle against Batista.
Cuban
who
fought lor
inviting comparison with the
other
initial
Company
reographed tor the Contemporary Dance
Guerra created
art.
soldiers
works Guerra cho-
of the newly created
National Theater were The Pilgrim ofAnaquille and
I.a
Rebambaramba,
both from novels of Amadeo Roldan, with librettos by Alejo Carpentier.
Guerra
premiere these works, but he sought
said he felt an obligation to
on which the
liberty to revise several situations
whose
stories turned
ro-
manticizing he found outdated. Carpentier agreed. "In these two works,"
Guerra
related, "the
acter and conflict.
I
primary tasks think
I
I
set for
succeeded
myself were developing char-
in establishing a clear exposition
and strong communication with the audience. However,
I
too strictly both to narrative and to music. In Suite Yoruba
was
still
tied
achieved a
I
balance between narrative and dance texture." Suite Yoruba
was
a sensation
continues to stand as
The work, ties) in
when
it
premiered
landmark dance.
a
very simply,
is
a quartet
the Yoruba pantheon:
It
in
Havana
was adapted
in
I960 and
for film in I962.
of dances to orishas (prichas or divini-
Ochun, Chango, Yemaya, and Ogun.
Yoruba was performed to the authentic bata
Suite
drum music and chant belong-
ing to these orishas ceremonies. However, Guerra was able to maintain the intensity of traditional dance at the
dance movement and incorporated Elfriede Mahler,
who danced
a
same time
as
he expanded the
mythological habitat.
The
late
company at this time, interpreted Ramiro was the only one to synthesize
with the
the work's impact: "It wasn't that
modern and Afro-Cuban religious traditions, but that everyone felt that he did it right. You couldn't feel where the traditional left off and the contemporary began."
The dance opens
with an arresting Afro-Cuban syncretism.
giously transfixed face of a dancer appears in the oval cutout of
decorated painting of
through a curtain
it
as
Yemaya
a
The a
reli-
haloed,
Caribbean-represented Virgin Mary. She steps
to dance with her attendants. In the original version,
separated the dances. But in his filmed revision, Guerra elimi-
nated the curtain and created thematic interludes linking the orishas.
The
movements of a mimetic rumba between Yemaya and Chango work
nar-
The Dance World
Yemaya
ratively to recall that
emerges with
is
Chango's mother.
his warrior's personality.
ence recognized dancers on
all
From
Ochun
the duet
group recedes toward the background
The dance ing his ax and
Chango
Ogun his machete that seems to shake utilizes
as his dogs,
forests.
Chango
the forest to
film version he closes in
Chango
wield-
its
foun-
musical stops and rhythm changes, ever tightening
engagements, forceful ruptures, and leaping reentry into the
rates tumbling.
Each
as the focus shifts.
builds to a climactic confrontation between
Guerra
Chango
appears dancing over swirling
Ogun, with dancers bearing the branches of his
river gods,
63
•
performed, the audi-
first
fours appearing with
never before depicted on stage.
dation.
When
of Ramiro Guerra
on the
ferocity in the warriors' faces.
The warriors somersault over each other,
flying like the feathers of two cocks
fray.
In the
He incorpo-
the raffia skirt of
devouring each other. Finally
Ogun, the recognition of crushing defeat projected through
his eyes, flees
into the darkness.
Guerra prepared
method
personalities.
added
his dancers for their roles
through the exercises of
acting, requiring that they integrate the technique with their
Some
spirituality to their dance.
Rivero incomparable roles in this
and
own
of his dancers practiced Santerfa and brought this
as
Guerra stated that he found Eduardo
Ogun, but
his other ballets.
that he generally rotated the other
He did so, he said, to capitalize on varied
personal qualities as suited to stage, television, or film, but also to keep the
dancers fresh and always working.
Guerra had been developing
movement of
his
in his
company evident
technique classes the seamless
in Suite Yoruba.
His appointment
as
come with Cuban technique of contemporary dance as well as
director of the dance department of the National Theater had a
mandate
a
company and
of the
to develop a
German
repertory.
The raw
ingredients were: the theoretical base
school that grounds dance in the
and establishes the dancer
as
movements of daily
choreographer of his/her
own
body;
its
life
di-
embedded quality of dance, song, and instrumental music in Afro-Cuban life; the modern dance techniques of North America; and the discovery of isolations that perfected Afro-Cuban movements. Teachers of folkloric and modern dance worked in concert and rect expression in the
from these ingredients an organic technique emerged. Guerra dated
movement
his attainment of a
possibilities
language of dance through which
perpetuated themselves to
a
period of close col-
laboration with Mexican choreographer Elena Noriega. Noriega had de-
veloped modern dance in Mexico and was embarked upon
a
search paral-
Mclinila Mousouris
64
to his
lei
own. "Before Elena," Guerra
But with Elena,
ers.
able to focus
on
I
now
could
said, "I
multiplicity of possibilities
a
was
horse with blind-
like a
analyze at the same time as create.
I
was
and not surrender to the
first
solution."
Noriega taught technique
classes to the
Conjunto de Danza Contem-
poranea that brought Guerra closer to the core of Cuban movement:
When then
We
I
worked with Graham,
I
are not angular and set.
tional, improvisational
discover physical
changes.
ground
The
is
I
thought
I
was deficient
Cubans have something
realized that
—
The Cuban
as in life.
possibilities
We
feeling
is
anarchic,
emo-
Perhaps we are also more open to
and more adaptable to dynamic-
torso undulates and
different too.
But
at first.
different in our bodies.
is
let go;
in tension
with the pelvis.
the emphasis
is
The
down, down,
down.
Working with
my own
Elena's experiments spurred
to
work guided by
personal experience. In creating technique
treatment to oppositions that
way of dancing of Cuban
The
me
I
I
gave special
consider to be the spiritual base and
people.
technique sequences he developed became the building material of
one of
his
most eloquent dances, Chacona. Chacona
also
announced
his
entry into a period of purely abstract dance.
The movement
of the preclassical sarabanda and Chacona and the his-
tory of their migrations had long fascinated Guerra. explained, were Seville,
tion.
first
These dances, he
brought from the Americas by Spanish
where they were assimilated
in the style of
During the Inquisition they were outlawed
sailors to
other dances of seducfor their eroticism
and
dancing them could be punishable by imprisonment. These dances resurfaced, however, in the Spanish court, formal
crossed the ocean once
more
and de-eroticized. They
to the Spanish colonies,
where the Afro-
Caribbean slaves assimilated them by adding hip and torso movement and rhythmic complexity. Chacona crystallizes
this
union of formalized European dance with the
African body: undulating torso and rotating hips, restrained within grave, disciplined
body frame. Conjunto designer Eduardo Arrocha
ated Baroque-inspired black and white costumes with
and puffed the
stiff
a
cre-
high collars
sleeves, contrasting with flowing capes or trains that enter into
movement. The dance,
for three
women
and two men,
shifts
duet, trio, and ensemble sections. Chacona has been performed
between
most
effec-
— The Dance World
Fig.
5.
From
of Ramiro Guerra
65
•
Choreography by Ramiro Guerra. Used by permission of
Chacona.
Ramiro Guerra, Havana.
tively in the Plaza de la Catedral in old
of shadow and
light,
tions, sections
of
it
Havana, where
arcades and archways.
are
danced
in 4/4, but
Working
modern, African, Iberian
—into
the freedom to open his narratives
with
it
and to move against
it.
Negreros and Oifeo Antillano. character of
Greek heroes
has
made
full
use
accompanied by Bach's "Cha-
conne" in 3/4 time. Guerra stated that the fusion of styles from archaic,
it
further with opposi-
a multiplicity of sources
own movement brought him and greater freedom in music, to move his
He created two tragic love sagas, Medea y los He had worked with the tragic fates and
in his early days in theater
and now wanted to
narrate the dramas in experimental forms. In Medea, he divided the role of
the heroine into parts to be played by three dancers, as mother, lover, and avenger.
In Orfeo he transposed the story to the Caribbean. Orfeo, a drummer, sets
out in search of Euridice
(a
temptress in Guerra 's version, not an in-
nocent) through Santeria, enlisting the aid of his orishas, the
kingdom of Oja
now an skull
evil spirit.
of death,
(death).
When he
But the Euridice with lifts
whom
who he
is
lead
him
reunited
to is
the red fishnet cloaking her, he finds the
who tries to kill him. The
final act
returns Orfeo to a carni-
66
Melinda Mousouris
appears to be the same as
val thai
theater of his
own mind.
its
the opening section, but
is
body
is
smother him.
Spirits
Guerra
to his spurned bride.
sever
in
set the
unfolding from everyday
lis lifeless
I
hour-long work on
reality. Its
score
the
mad
returned
black stage to
a
combined
live carnival
music with electronic music, recorded natural sounds and voices, narra-
and distorted speed changes.
tion,
The Conjunto under choreographers such
Guerra's direction performed works by other
company
as
soloists
Geraldo Lastro and Eduardo
Rivero; Elena Noriega, whose contemporary dance was based folklore; Elfriede
who
Mahler,
Lorna Burdsall, who during
in
Mexican
created works around political events; and
period mounted works of American cho-
this
reographers and created new work with contemporary social content. Initially,
Danza Contemporanea had no previous
the Conjunto de
ence working together,
modern dance had
little
experi-
repertory, and faced the further obstacle that
neither the prestige of ballet nor the following of
popular entertainment. Within two years their performances acquired
a
chemistry that communicated very immediately with their Cuban audi-
They contained themes and movement and visual art.
characteristics people could recognize,
ence. rich
The Conjunto
also introduced
Cuban modern dance
to enthusiastic
audiences in Western Europe, the Eastern bloc, and China. Their tours,
however, were fraught with problems that ranged from travel sickness and unreliable Soviet transports to political tensions and defections.
The
1970s ushered in
and what Guerra describes
a third,
stage of development. "In this stage," he explained, "I
ways of moving.
I
wanted
to exploit the outdoors.
to
combined the theater and life.
They combined
talk. I
make use of every space and
When
I first
circus,
all
I
an ultimate
surface.
saw Peking opera
the ideas
as
was looking I
for
new
wanted
in i960,
which
had germinating came to
song, dance, narrative, acrobatics, and sometimes
loved the music and the costumes."
His attention shifted to the spectrum of humor. developing metaphor, irony,
His kinship with
artists
the United States and for openness. "I
satire,
working
Europe
is
wanted to open
burlesque.
in the
I
"I
became
became more
atmosphere of
apparent
in this
and
my work to chance,
social
interested in aggressive."
upheaval
in the further
in
quest
freedom, and creativ-
ity."
Guerra developed
his ability to satirize within the context of his experi-
mental aims, which included leaving space for dancers to improvise and for alternative endings. In
Impromptu Galante he
satirizes
machismo and
The Dance World the feminine mystique, inflected with peculiarly
of Ramiro Guerra
Cuban
67
•
cultural habits.
his last Whereas work for the Conjunto de Danza Contemporanea, El Decalogo del Apocalipsis (The Ten Commandments of the Apocalypse), as "evoking a tragi-
the tone of Impromptu Galante
is light,
Guerra described
comic nightmare." Decalogo was
Ramiro Guerra
's
magnum
opus, in which he endeavored
to push the capacities of the dancers and the audience to their limits.
two-hour work with no intermission was National Theater,
a
The
set in the exterior facades of the
modern complex housing two auditoriums, with mul-
tiple focal points, sculpture
gardens, catwalks, and exposed stairways.
theater faces the sacrosanct Plaza de
la
The
Revolution, used by the govern-
ment to address mass assemblies and behind which Cuba's most important government buildings are ally
located.
The
National Theater was tradition-
home to contemporary dance and Guerra acknowledged
in hindsight
that he did not take into account other possible implications
when he
The performance
required
chose the location for his iconoclastic work. the audience to struction
move
work and
to twelve different sites in the vicinity, through con-
the streets of a reputedly rough neighborhood
other side of the theater
known
as
on the
La Timba.
With respect to movement, Guerra's aim was to create dance movement inspired by the architecture, close to the forms of the building, or suggested by contact with it. He wanted the dancers to explore moving on all the building surfaces, using varied body parts and centers of gravity, capitalizing
on the elements of danger, disequilibrium, and recovery to
create unusual images and rarely observed
body
action.
The
score
is
a
multilayered collage that includes electronic sounds and an eclectic range
of acoustic music.
Some sequences
incorporate live music, sounds and
rhythms enunciated by the dancers, and
text
sung by them. Guerra de-
scribed the production as partaking of the psychedelic aesthetic of the 1960s, into which archaic, Christian, and
porated.
While the reference
ent, in his theatrical design spirit
Afro-Cuban elements
are incor-
to the psychedelic art of the times
and
in the
is
appar-
costuming by Eduardo Arrocha the
of Cuban carnivalesque pageantry
is
also unmistakable.
The subject matter evoked in Decalogo is the convulsive social change of the 1960s: the collision and confrontation of classes, interest groups, nations; the redistribution
of power; the celebration of moral experimenta-
tion and the lifting of taboos in pursuit of
hedonism or of new
values.
"A
world howling, moving, changing, and exploding, eradicating identities to create
new
directions,"
Guerra wrote (Guerra 1999,
150).
Guerra created
3H
^ W* *^
;
^
1 1
Bftk^V ^HmjQ ^^y ^Ii^B
m^ftrf i
jlilitl Um£ [••till.
*
\4^B
A-
^Lv lUH
B^BP
/
*
Bhb^AHHBII^I Fig. 6.
From
ElDecalogq delApocalipsis. Choreograph}' by Ramiro Guerra. Used hy
permission of Ramiro Guerra, Havana.
The Dance World
of Ramiro Guerra
69
•
the furious activity of a world gone mad, with his dancers climbing up walls like spiders, falling, leaping, or tumbling
down from
balconies and
ledges like fallen angels, running through the streets, tangling in con-
dropping to the asphalt to stare
struction, bathing in fountains,
at the
stars.
Within
each an inversion or commentary on
this texture, ten vignettes,
one of the Ten Commandments, are performed
in various enclaves of the
theater and vicinity. Four dancers identified as sibyls lead the spectators
from one
site to
penwolf's
Magic Theater.
the next as through Dante's Circles of Hell or the Step-
The Ten Commandments prologue, "Kyrie,"
is
are framed
blur the transition from ordinary ers
move up
formity
is
prologue and epilogue.
to theater.
life
a stairway intoning a
The
like a
The
happening to
Ten dimly lit seated danc-
Gregorian chant.
movements open
dancers'
some dancers
The
ceremonial uni-
from
"Reign of the Sky," the epilogue, point of the building
by
lit
to
become
increasingly anar-
curling themselves around banisters as the group rises
to the top of the stairway to recede
appears
a
broken when jazz instruments using the same theme overtake
the chants. chic,
by
conceived to work minimally
—ten
is
stories high.
artificial fire.
By
a
sight.
set
on the ledge
A dancer dressed
that as a
is
the high
cosmonaut
rope ladder leading up the side of the
building, the celebrants of violence climb to join the cosmonaut.
The such in
Ten Commandments. Some, commandment against murder as a crucifixion
vignettes portray inversions of the
as the inversion
which
a
of the
lynched Negro
troversial in
is
carried
on
a cross to
Golgotha, were noncon-
Cuba. Others, involving sexual behavior, triggered establish-
ment indignation. In "The Foolish Virgins," Guerra depicted prostitution for luxuries. In "The Song of Songs" he suggested heterosexual orgy, homosexual abduction, and quasi-tribal phallic worship.
performed
as
The
an ironic counterpoint to biblical poems or
each ends with
a refrain
from
a
poem
sequences are
as parodies,
but
of isolation by Jorge Zalamea that
speaks of wandering and seeking what one doesn't find. In
summing up his
Guerra stated that he wished to conjure up
a pre-reflective
intentions,
make moral judgments, but that he felt that burlesque and irony were embedded in the human activity shown, which the audience could reflect upon in retrospect.
world, not to
Guerra and the Conjunto worked on Decalogo
on
site
before
its
Timba, Guerra
for a year
and rehearsed
anticipated performance in April 1971. Residents of
related,
were among
his
La
most attentive observers, offering
Melinda Mousouris
70
The
advice on viewing and staging vantage points.
National Cultural
Council posted billboards inviting the public to attend the premiere. But
two weeks before basis of reports
was scheduled, the production was canceled on the
it
from
its critics,
would have been received
demands on
Guerra was never
to
know how
work
his
While he had tested the work's questions about its demands on the audience
in its entirety.
his dancers, his
would remain unanswered. After the premiere ofDecalogo was canceled, Guerra was the
Conjunto de Danza Contemporanea
The company continued under other directorship,
but the dances he cho-
reographed were dropped. By the time he was permitted the dancers he had trained had retired or
removed from
for unspecified political reasons.
to
work
again,
other countries. Guerra
left for
declined to implicate high government officials in the decision and held responsible the ministry of culture of that era, which, he explained, had
been put that
in the
hands of the
military.
"These men mistrusted everything
was new. They were weekend directors. They managed the perform-
ing arts companies for
moved on
a
while, sometimes
removing valuables, and then
to other positions in the bureaucracy.
for seven years, but
was kept from working
I
my salary was not suspended,
as
Guerra seems not to have foreseen the response
happened
his
to others."
w ork drew. Follow-
ing his dismissal, his avant-garde output abruptly ceased. "I studied, wrote, and did what
I
had no time to do before." Apart from short
Colombia where he continued
to research Latin
American
trips to
folklore,
most
of his physical and mental activity took place in his apartment. While he
himself was prevented from working, he continued to follow the work of
such choreographers
as
Meredith Monk, Trisha Brown, and Pina Bausch
through videos sent to him and wrote about their work
in essays
on post-
modernism. In 1977 Armando Hart was appointed cultural minister and made it his mission to improve relations between the government and the arts.
Eventually the government came around to
a
recognition of what
Guerra had contributed. In 1988 an apology to Ramiro Guerra appeared in Graimifl, the official state
newspaper. In speaking of the dismissal of
"the acclaimed and then later maligned Maestro
Ramiro Guerra," the au-
thor said, "In this arbitrary fashion, the intelligent, serious development
of modern dance in
Cuba was
mature harmoniously
cut
in far less
Granma, 8/16/88, quoted
off.
As
a result
the opportunity for
it
to
time was wasted" (Rosa Elvira Pelaez,
in Pajares
Santiesteban 1993).
1
The Dance World
of Ramiro Guerra
•
7
Guerra, while he accepted the apology, did not attempt to resume his
former
want
life.
"The company we had
built
had been destroyed and
I
did not
to start over," he explained. Instead he applied himself to folkloric
research and presentation, concentrating province.
He mounted
first
Triptico Oriental, a
on the
folklore of Oriente
panorama of
traditions of the
Haitian-influenced, eastern region of Cuba, including gaga, carabali,
tumba francesa, and carnival
grams devoted
chancleta (clog dance).
He created smaller pro-
to a specific focus, such as a religious purpose, instrumen-
music, or an urban secular tradition. In the city of Trinidad he
tal
similarly
comprehensive investigation of the folklore of Las
made
a
Villas prov-
ince and staged Trinitarias, a spectacular that lasted through the night.
In 1989 he published for preserving
La
and presenting folklore. In
cannot be resurrected with
and
Teatralizacion del Folklore, his theoretical base
full
it
he asserts that while traditions
knowledge because time erases meanings
origins, the goal of preserving folklore
must be
authenticity.
Unlike
the integration of folklore with contemporary dance in which creative liberty can be utilized, perpetuating and presenting authentic folklore re-
quires the greatest possible precision, not blurring the boundaries of each tradition.
He maintains that liberty can be taken with the staging, to avoid
monotony, and with costume design, to enhance
traditional dress for the
theater.
Guerra returned to celebrate the
his old milieu in
This work, Memoria Fragmentada, collective experience
was as
his it
my intention,"
memory
1990 to create
Conjunto de Danza Contemporanea's
itself is
is
is
a
biography
in
a television
which the company's
reduced to fragments shown on stage and
Guerra
said, "to
work to
thirtieth anniversary.
film. "It
rework, superimpose, and rearrange,
prone to forgetting and reordering the past." Part of
audience remembered the repertory, and his challenge was to resurrect
in a
new
perspective with an element of surprise.
He
returned to his
techniques of open theater.
Dancers from Suite Yoruba, Medea, and Oifeo appear in the theater lobby and disperse. They appear next on stage and, through an atmosphere of smoke and indistinct speech, visit
the past in a
mood
a
voice invites the audience to re-
of humor and burlesque.
The
dancers step in and
out of character, moving by association between excerpts from their roles to autobiographical
life
situations. In a
sequence near the end evoking the
company's struggle against outside control, he evokes bureaucrats lids
encircling the
company in wheelchairs and
as inva-
as opportunists striding in
72
•
Melinda Mousouris
their midst
on
stilts,
carrying their suitcases, ready to leave the country.
To
recreate the period or tension of Decalogp, he had the dancers run in flight as
though responding to an offstage
sound, dislodging the audience for
or accident, and had an alarm
fire
long
a
moment from
its
comfortable
role as spectator.
When
asked whether he had feared the consequences of pushing the
government too with."
More
wrong and
far,
Guerra
replied,
"They have
to have
seriously he added, "I speak out against
the
to a close, the
government has shown me government took
a
more
respect."
Ramiro
what
I
to fight
believe
is
As the century drew
visible step to
honor Ramiro
Guerra. In December 1999,
it reissued his book of essays, Coordenadas him the National Dance Prize. While he says he has no need to work further, mentally he persists in entertaining choreographic ideas. It would appear that Ramiro Guerra years as an artist are not over. While there was no escaping the conse-
Danzarias, and awarded
's
quences of the purge, the gratification he exudes when speaking of years with the Conjunto de
have had
my own
problems," he
junto were the best in
work, with
my
Danza Contemporanea said,
"but
my life. I was able my country."
people, in
my
is
stronger. "I
early years with the
to realize
my
his
may
Con-
personality in
my
5
o
The Tecnica Cubana Suki John
The tecnica cubana,
or the
Cuban modern dance
technique,
is
a
unique mix
a powerful hybrid that is more than the sum of its Cuban Revolution of 1959, Ramiro Guerra was appointed director of the Department of Modern Dance within the Teatro Nacional in Havana, with the goal of creating an indigenous Cuban modern dance
of dance traditions, parts. After the
form. Guerra had the foresight to bring together an eclectic group of
amateur and professional
They
modern,
ballet,
folkloric,
and nightclub dancers.
culled their resources and training, and began to synthesize previ-
ously diverse dance forms into a truly
technique that
Cuban asiaco
or stew.
tremendously athletic and expressive,
is
The
result
a reflection
is
a
of the
African, Spanish, and Caribbean roots of Cuban culture within the theatrical tradition
The writer,
of modern dance.
tecnica cubana has played a major role in the
who
is
also a dancer
the mid-1970s,
I
development of this
and choreographer. At the age of fourteen,
went to Cuba with the intention of studying at the
in
Ballet
my older brother in a Cuban brigade, building a school in the countryside. Apparently my father, a sci-
Nacional de Cuba, but instead ended up with
entist
who
details. I
taught
collaborates with a
Cuban
laboratory, had not sorted out the
was taken under the wings of several young Cuban
me
a little
play drums,
Spanish and a few
giiiros,
salsa steps.
women who men would
At night, the
and spoons, pounding out the rich syncopations of the
orisha songs of Santerfa.
In 1988
I
ranea de
returned to
Cuba
for a
two-week
stay.
A modern
dancer by
much of my time in the studios of Danza ContempoCuba. The company that Guerra had founded decades earlier
this point, I
spent
73
74
Sukijolin
•
had become
major
a
artistic force in
Cuba and
combined the strength of the Cuban
ham and ( lunningham complexity
tecnica cubana
elements of the Gra-
techniques, and the sensuous fluidity and rhythmic
\fro-Cuban
ol
The
abroad.
ballet tradition,
folklore.
I
was amazed by the absolute physical
master)- enjoyed by dancers trained in the tecnica cubana.
A
typical
com-
bination would involve multiple turns (with and without contractions), dives to the floor, leaps to the rafters, and syncopated isolations of the ribs,
and head. Flexed sickled
hips,
feet, raised hips,
twisting torsos, and rolling
heads identified the tecnica cubana as distinct, even as
extended lines and sailing turns of
Guerra and
Most
—
professional dancers in
ENA—the
La
—
Cuban technique unlike any dance form that
truly
incorporated the
it
and traditional modern.
among them Klfriede Mahler, Lorna Manuel Hiran had successfully created a
collaborators
his
Burdsall, Elena Noriega, and
classical ballet
Cuba
I
have seen elsewhere.
pass through a ten-year
program
in
Escuela Nacional de Arte (National School of Art). La
tecnica cubana
Dancers study
is
all
taught alongside classical ballet and
Cuban
folklore.
three dance forms, along with academics, acting, and
music. Ballet dancers focus on ballet, just as
modern and
folkloric dancers
begin to specialize as they mature. As in the Soviet system, some dancers are channeled into teaching while others are encouraged to perform.
Upon
graduation, dancers are chosen for the Ballet Nacional, Danza, the
Conjunto Folklorico, or
one of the provincial companies or schools.
for
Companies outside Havana include Danza Libre, founded by Elfriede Mahler in Guantanamo, and Teatro de la Danza del Caribe in Santiago de Cuba, directed by Eduardo Rivero, choreographer of Siilkari, a signature Danza Contemporanea. I attended the Kuopio dance
piece of
In 1991,
me
draw
for
and
a
small
led
by
had been the
had
cubana with a
a
ricochet ity
Gestos Transitorios,
the Prix de Lausanne in 1986. This particular piece, for
festival,
combined the raw athleticism
the particular attributes of the
— the Yoruba
moves
—stood out
The major
of the tecnica
sophisticated understanding of tanztheater. In the context
European
and aesthetic
as
Finland.
Conjunto Folklorico
from Danza, Narciso Medina. Medina's arresting Meta-
won
three virtuosic male dancers,
of
festival in
inclusion of the
Cuban modern company then known
a soloist
morfosis
festival's
to
Cuban technique
influence, the sinuousness of the spine, the
and from the
floor,
and the pervasively
in relief. After a vibrant
cubana to wide choreographic use,
I
and was welcomed into their midst.
virile physical-
performance that put the tecnica
accosted the dancers
at
the stage door
The Tecnica Cubana
•
75
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Fig.
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i«
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''".
Wr.-
Choreography by Narciso Medina. Photograph: David
Garten. Used by permission of David Garten, Waitsfield, Vermont.
Throughout the 1990s I was lucky enough to choreograph for Narciso Medina's company on several occasions, and for Danza and the Ballet Nacional as well. A brilliant choreographer, Medina is also a pied piper of sorts. Dancers from all over the world study not only at Danza Contemporanea's semiannual workshops, Cubadanza, but also in the small acad-
emy Medina has built,
the
first
independent dance school formed
in
Cuba
since the revolution.
While in Cuba, I studied the tecnica cubana, taking private or company class on a daily basis with the master teacher of Danza, Manolo Vasquez. Company class at Danza often begins with a freestanding center barre.
The
dancers start in parallel with the feet touching, knees pulled tightly
together, hands clasped behind the back, and the head exercises
open from contraction
without an arch upwards. parallel
second position,
string stretches sitting into
may
From
at
down. The
first
in parallel into first position, with or first
position, the heels pull back into a
which point upper body movement or ham-
be added. Often there
is
a variation that includes
one hip and extending the torso and arms
in the opposite di-
76
Sulci John
rection.
The arms
have
a soft,
mold required
lifted-elhow
tendues and ripples of the spine can
From
may
here the exercise
other side. After working
second position. besques, hip loric twists
Many
A
rolls,
is
all
to the rigid
Relcvcs, head rolls, parallel
he inserted
second.
in parallel
return to the beginning and repeat on the
in parallel
second, the legs are turned out to
long sequence early
in the
warm-up might
changes of weight, percussive drops to
include ara-
plie,
and folk-
of the head and neck.
exercises are repeated in different rhythms, emphasizing con-
trasting dynamics.
cubana
opposed
bird-like quality, as
in ballet class.
One
of the identifying factors of
the use of a musical ensemble. Several
Bute or guitar player always accompany
a class in the tecnica
drummers,
company
The music ranges from country melodies
temporanea.
a singer,
classes at
and
to the orisha songs
of Santerfa. This attention to musical detail marries the dancing to
Cuban called
"Merce," after Merce Cunningham. Beginning
high contraction in their sockets.
first
direction, a
low turn or
in plie a
is
unfurled into
a
flatback in plie.
can lead to an extension of the leg
change of direction. The Merce
is
From in
any
used as an
introduction to other exercises, including at times the rapid degages a
second from
first
A
spine and head inwards, turning the arms over
the spine
deep contraction
a
a series
in parallel, the legs
position and the head and palms open upward.
rolls the
Then
its
rhythmically and kines-
Take, for example, one staple in the center warm-up,
turn out suddenly to
here
movement both
roots. It transforms the
thetically.
a
Danza Con-
position associated with the
Graham
la
technique. WTien
practiced to the rich syncopations of Cuban music, as opposed to a single
piano or drumbeat, the exercises of both
on
a
Graham and Cunningham
take
sensuous richness that invites embellishment in the head, pelvis and
torso.
While the work
is
clean and specific, the variations in dynamic and
speed afforded by the rhythmic complexity of the music affect the feeling
movement profoundly. The warm-up follows a logical sequence
of the
incorporating
plies,
tendues,
degages, rond de jambes, and battements, but the exercises themselves are often long and
hip and head hip
lifted,
filled
rolls;
with previously unmatched elements. These include:
drops of the elbow; ganchos (an extended turned-in
with the foot flexed and sickled, usually with the torso in
ralled contraction); ripples
through the spine from base to head;
the knee and back to standing;
falls
in the
warm-up, often
in the
a spi-
shifts to
to the knee or floor; turns in spiral,
contraction, on the bottom, or on the knee.
cluded
leg,
A
floor
sequence
may
be in-
midst of an exercise that begins and
The Tecnica Cubana ends standing.
more
The
floor
work has
Graham
a distinct
77
•
base, but includes
rippling flexibility in the spine and folkloric pecking and twisting
motions of the head. tion seated
on the
It is
not unusual to go from a
Graham
fourth posi-
floor to a shoulder stand to a standing releve balance.
Traveling work begins with turns and extensions, with the floor pattern often doubling back
on
itself in space. If
the musicians play a familiar folk
tune or orisha song, the dancers often join in singing as they wait to dance.
Turns
in classical attitude are frequently practiced with a high spiral of the
upper body, while pique turns are usually done in
parallel with a contrac-
tion into the passe hip. If pique turns are practiced turned out,
it's
not
unusual for the dancer to go in and out of contraction in the course of one revolution on a plie in releve.
men
Oftentimes the
on the choreographed combina-
will elaborate
tions, taking a standing turn to the floor, balancing feet,
on the tops of
their
diving to their hands and sinking slowly to the floor, ricocheting back
huge second position
to standing, or springing into a
walking off the osity with
floor.
Cuban male dancers nurture
good-natured competition in
Leaps,
Graham
class.
jumps are
attention paid to petit allegro, big
buffalo jumps, tours en
l'air,
a
split
jump before
their exceptional virtu-
While there
is
not
a lot
barrel turns,
and
all
sorts of
turns without names are followed by spectacular improvisation by more pyrotechnical dancers at the end of class. air
Company class step that
is
cubana usually ends with
in the tecnica
a variation
freshwater goddess
on
a
the
low traveling
several orisha images, including that of the
Oshun observing
stamping walks are followed by dancer takes tiny steps in
of
highlight of the technique.
plie,
herself in the mirror.
a rapid
These low
shaking of the rib cage as the
vibrating from the
tail
bone through
to the
top of the head.
The
tecnica cubana includes a full set of floor exercises and a complete
standing
warm-up holding onto the barre. Both of these are used as the fit. Manolo Vasquez, who has trained a generation of
ballet masters see
Cuba's finest dancers, invokes martial arts and yoga in his teaching. Other
more specifically to Afro-Cuban sources, to Graham, or Cunningham. Some focus on footwork, speed, or balance. As more dancteachers refer
ers graduate ing, the
from La ENA, and others pass from performing into teach-
technique evolves further.
that continues to be expanded
tecnica cubana
is a
living practice
and refined by the master teachers and
dancers working in this young and
The power
The
vital tradition.
of the tecnica cubana, combined with the surreal imagina-
7K
•
Sulci John
tion of the
Caribbean and the urgent Cuban need
for self-expression, has
resulted in a vibrant dance culture that continues to flourish and expand.
Contemporary Cuban choreographers
— Medina,
Lidice Nunc/,
Lesme
Grenot, Rosario Cardenas, Isabel Bustos, and Mariana Boal, to name tew
— continue
to
experiment with and enlarge upon the tccnica cubana
a
in
which they were trained. Small companies hurst on the scene across the island even as established troupes continue to
work
steadily,
with and
without government support. Despite material poverty, lighting outages, the lack of
good shoes, costumes, technology, and vitamins, Cuban danc-
ers constantly
experiment with new choreography, finding ways to use
their superior training to dramatic effect, creating riveting dances with
the glowing raw material of their bodies.
O O
JAMAICA
6
o o o Jamaican Dance Theatre Celebrating the Caribbean Heritage
Rex Nettleford
Jamaican dance theatre enjoys an ancestral pedigree dating back centuries.
But
fifty
or so years,
as a conscious
when
performance
art
it
may be
said to date
Ivy Baxter and her Creative
the spirit of the self-government
movement
Great
where
else
generally,
would
and
mere
Dance Group caught its
form and purpose on
this spirit express itself
a
in Jamaica's nationalist urge
not only to delink the centuries-old colony from Britain, but also to find
back
more than
Mother Country,
its
own
terms.
No-
in the creative arts
specifically in the dance that played a central role in that
awesome process of "becoming," shaped in the dynamic encounters between Africa and Europe on foreign soil, between plantation and plot, between Great House and outhouse, between martial law (massa's law) and the imaginative wit and creative resistance of chattels.
For the African that
slave discovered
soon enough that his/her control over
prime instrument of expression, the body that encased the
intellect
and imagination, placed such expressions beyond the reach of the oppressor,
who,
in
any
case,
needed that very instrument for the energy so 7
for high productivity in the cultivation of sugar. ation, ritual worship,
vital
Dance, through recre-
and nonverbal communication of the inner
stirrings
of the soul, became a survival tool that spoke to conquest over dispersal
and denigration. It,
indeed, celebrated the African Presence in this part of the Americas, as
well as the iconic stature of that Presence in the civilisation, as
it
had done time out of mind, both 81
making of
a definitive
in antiquity in the
Medi-
82
RcxNettleford
•
terranean and later in the Iberian peninsula before extending
itself
across
the ware tenebrosum, the Atlantic, to the Americas. So, flag
on "August
6,
1962, Jamaica pulled
of imperial Britain and replaced
of an independent Jamaica.
marked will to
a
A
it
down
the red, white and blue
with the gold, green and black flag
national
anthem and other emblems also as a mark of the
break with the past" (Nettleford 1985, 39). Hut
own
a future that
would make sense to Jamaicans and the
Anglophone Caribbean, the National Dance Theatre Company
rest
of the
(NDTC)
of Jamaica was founded, with restrained enthusiasm and guarded confi-
dence admittedly, but with
a
firm "purpose to secure for the Jamaican
people one way of articulating their cultural identity and to build
faith in
was virtually denied them by the three centuries of
a historical reality that
British subjugation" (Nettleford 1985, 39).
Jamaica's
NDTC was a cultural
but out of "the genuine belief that a nation, a
spirit
institution created not out of hubris, in
order to survive as
a political entity,
people, must nurture the ambience within which the creative
of the people can enrich the polity" (Nettleford 1985, 39).
The
founders of the
minded
company were
"political" objective
achievement of excellence
mance,
in
the wider
all
seized by the fact that this high-
had to be matched and bolstered by the
in the art of
dance
itself
—whether
pedagogical discovery and transmission, or in
its
in perfor-
outreach into
community and the wider world. But none of this could happen
without experimentation and exploration towards
a truly distinctive
vo-
cabulary, technique or set of techniques, and style faithful to the Carib-
The
bean's sense and sensibility.
tremendous energy,
NDTC founders brought to the exercise
integrity, sustained application, dedication,
ligence rooted in field investigation, in debate critics
and
intel-
among themselves and
(none of whom has been indulgent), and
in the
with
building of arenas of
action in an ongoing discourse through the establishment of a School of
Dance (now forming annual
a division
of the Edna Manley College of the Visual and Per-
Arts), as well as in
festival
community dance programmes through
the
competitions presided over by the Jamaica Cultural Devel-
opment Commission (JCDC), and in nearly a hundred overseas tours to the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada, the old USSR, Finland, and Germany, various countries in Latin America, and the wider Caribbean including Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Martinique. Besides being the nodal point from which other efforts have sprung
both
in
Jamaica, where there are
sembles, each with
its
own
a
growing number of smaller dance en-
"voice," and in the wider Caribbean (from the
Fig. 8. Celebrations.
work
Choreography by Rex Nettleford.
A Caribbean Creole dance-
inspired by the joropo and Carnival of Trinidad, the scarf dances of the
French West Indies, Rastafari ofJamaica, and the coquette's dances found
all
over.
Photograph: Denis Valentine. Used by permission of National Dance Theatre
Company of Jamaica.
84
Rex Ncttleforcl
•
Bahamas
NDTC has remained something of a flagship of
Guyana), the
to
Caribbean dance, with the Jamaican sample being now, arguably, variation
on
So what distinctive
tency?
is
theme? What
this
does one look for
itself in Jamaica,
mere
this
Caribbean dance (theatre) that its
own
is
so
inner logic and consis-
Caribbean dance-theatre
as
it
Cuba, Barbados, Trinidad, and elsewhere
in
the region?
Caribbean dance, which in a
is
and recognisably an entity with
What
a
theme.
a
is
in
expresses
the dance of people nurtured over centuries
dynamic Caribbean environment of nearly
million souls,
fifty
in-
is
creasingly seeing the need to liberate itself from the narrow classifications that turn
on the amount of melanin
perform dance
tions of predestined
in the skins
White domination and non- White
bean dance cannot possibly accept the current dance-art (and
all
of those
who
create or
Caribbean. For these categorizations indulged no-
in the
other art forms) into
classical
inferiority.
classificatory
Carib-
scheme of
(meaning European),
con-
temporary or modern (meaning
White American with Martha Graham,
Charles Weidman, and Doris
Humphrey
European counterparts dating back
their
as chief historical icons
to
Mary Wigman), and
(placed at the base of some cultural hierarchy and
and especially the ordering and
a
art
what needs
meaning everything else
coming out of people of African
ancestry).
re-defining are here mandatory, especially
aesthetics, standards of excellence,
to be released
Caribbean dance,
like
and
ethnic
if
A
re-
questions of
and practice merely serve to prop up
from current Eurocentric other definitive genres of
bias. artistic expression,
is
demonstrably capable of multiple and interactive modes of expression, better perceived and described as ancestral/traditional, contemporary/popular,
and
classic.
mined
Just as Europe deeply
traditional) dances
and lore and
its
its
own
national (ancestral/
popular expressions emerging from
mannered "indulgences" at court, to create European classical ballet, the Caribbean for some half a century has been forging out of its traditional lore, for the concert stage, what can be called
the urban streets, as well as the
a classic
mode. These dances
all
they are shaped by the creative
share
many common working
artists
McBurnie's Little Carib Theatre and
in
elements, whether
Trinidad with Beryl
Cuba with Ramiro Guerra s work in the work of La-
in
informing the Danza Contemponinea, or expressed vinia
Williams and Jean Leon Destine
in Haiti,
Santo Domingo, of the early Ivy Baxter tional
Dance Theatre
in
Bridgetown, or
in
of Fradrique Lizardo
in
Jamaica, of the Barbados Na-
in the extensive
and internation-
Jamaican Dance Theatre: Celebrating the Caribbean Heritage
ally
acclaimed repertory of the National Dance Theatre
Company
85
•
of Ja-
maica.
The emergent "classicism" in Caribbean dance art also has much in common with the traditions of American dance theatre identified with Katherine Dunham and Pearl Primus, pioneers of African-American dance, with Geoffrey Holder of later years and with latter-day exponents like
Garth Fagan, the Jamaican-born and bred choreographer who
is
now
company and his success choreographing the Broadway musical The Lion King. His company is seen by some as a modern dance ensemble with a "Caribbean impulse," in creating waves in the United States with his dance
contrast to the Jamaican
NDTC described by the critic Clive Barnes as "a
Caribbean company with
As Richard Long,
a
modern dance impulse."
in his well-researched
and
Black Tradition in American Dance, points out,
dance have
a
common
finely illustrated
all
book The
the above expressions in
source of energy in the ancestral/traditional dance
and lore of the Caribbean. Ms.
Dunham owes much to Jamaica and Haiti,
Pearl Primus and Geoffrey Holder to Trinidad, and Garth Fagan to Ja-
maica, for inspiration, raw data, and ways of moving that are valid alternatives to the
"approved"
some would
see as essentially
balletic
forms that came originally from what
"White" sources.
Back in Jamaica and the Caribbean, forging genre out of the
realities
of Caribbean
life,
a
Caribbean dance-theatre
music, movement, and tradi-
became the commitment of McBurnie
tional lore
Cuba, and the moving in Jamaica.
As an
art
spirits
Guerra
in
of discovery, dance demands continuing exploration
The
and experimentation.
traditional sources, alongside the fecund
dynamic innovations of the contemporary urban all
in Trinidad,
who founded and have nurtured the NDTC
streets,
and
and along with
the inescapable influences from elsewhere, continue to inform the pro-
cess of creolisation that
foot
began from the time the very
first
migrants set
on Caribbean
started to
soil from the Old Worlds of Europe and Africa and become "new beings" on the Planet. Later arrivals from India
and other parts of Asia
in the nineteenth century have only intensified the
process, especially in places like Trinidad,
where the descendants of once-
indentured East Indians participate in the annual Euro-African pre-
Lenten
carnival, while Black
West Indians
are to be found
drumming or own
dancing in the Muslim Hosay Festival of the East Indians, whose
dance and music forms are undergoing creolised transformation of Europe and Africa in earlier centuries have done.
as those
K6
Rex Nettleford
•
Debate as to whether Blacks arc suited is
irrelevant in a truly multiracial
especially
macy
to
when such debate
is
to
dance White European ballet
and culturally textured environment,
predicated on
non-Caucasian elements
in a social
a
denial of cultural legiti-
complex whose dynamic
measure by these very elements.
determined
in large
mit that
predominantly Black colonial societies
in
only
is
It
fair to
is
ad-
Caribbean,
as in the
who feel the debate is critical to their own sense of selfworth, since they may well have been taught to believe that things European are superior to their own achievements. So one is likely to get many there are people
Caribbean people and American Blacks arguing with deep conviction that
no dance-art ballet.
sive
is
valid
without
The hyphenation
and limiting,
a
thorough grounding
of identities
becomes
European
irresponsible,
if
classical
not offen-
Black dancers functioning in societies that regard
as
themselves as homogeneously White
An
in
understanding of
may
well discover.
complex process of creolisation
this
is
critical to
the understanding of Jamaican and Caribbean dance, coupled with an
understanding of the myths, legends, cosmology, and ontologies that determine and characterise the emergent culture that
Nothing
in this
is
is
the Caribbean.
uniquely "Black," since the same process has deter-
mined time out of mind the development of all civilisations. The remarkable thing is that one is forced always to remind the wider world (and particularly the powerful North Atlantic), that this is so when applied to African civilisation and
its
offshoots in
its
diaspora in the Caribbean and
the rest of the Americas or elsewhere.
The lective
traditional ancestral repertoire of dance
Caribbean imagination
is,
for the
most
and music out of the col-
the products of early cross-fertilisation are varied and luxuriant.
bas and comparsas, the
and
festival
ring
games
And The rum-
part, African-derived.
merengues, cumbite (work) dances, carnival
beles,
dances, the quadrille and contredanse, the schottische and are
some of the
Creole sources that
prompt from Caribbean
choreographers movement-designs for the concert stage.
No
less vital to
the creative urge are the rituals out of the African religious complex that
have survived involuntary uprooting and transplantation across the
Middle Passage. Kumina of Kongo origin and Pukkumina, of
as well as
Kongo and Yoruba
Etu
(a
rites
Yoruba-based of
thrives, the
Rada and Petro
Yoruba, and
Kongo
its
syncretised form,
rite) of Jamaica,
the wide range
Cuba and of Trinidad where Shango still of Haitian Vodou which are of Eon,
rites
origin, like the "nation dances" of Carriacou of the
Jamaican Dance Theatre: Celebrating the Caribbean Heritage
Grenadines, have
all
served as rich sources for what
bean dance" by outside observers of dance
is
called "Afro-Carib-
in the region.
Contemporary sources follow the popular music forms such and
soca (out
87
as
calypso
of Trinidad and the Eastern Caribbean) and reggae and
dancehall (coming out of Jamaica with strong diasporic counterparts in the United Kingdom). Zouk and cadence from the "French" parts of the
region are also
a source.
Dancehall
is
supreme
in Jamaica,
spreading to
parts of the region, while variations of son remain a staple in a priately isolated since 1961
from the rampant
all
Cuba appro-
cultural penetration that
American (U.S.) pop culture (including televangelism) threatens these days.
The contemporary pop forms
offer challenges for distillation in the
hands of the imaginative choreographer, and the
NDTC,
along with
many
smaller ensembles in Jamaica and elsewhere, have in their repertory
works based on the pop idioms.
They have been
integrated into a serviceable
body of technique and
dance vocabulary taught under various nomenclatures abroad and developed within the region by
a
at
home and
number of exponents.
Back in Jamaica and the wider Caribbean, the technique, research, and vocabulary-building for art dance gathered strength through research,
ongoing experimentation
in choreography, exploration in pedagogy,
and
exchange of teachers working mainly out of Jamaica (Rex Nettleford, Sheila Barnett, Ivy Baxter, Bert Rose, Cheryl
Ryman, and Barbara Requa,
who is currently dean of performing arts at the forming
Cuba (Eduardo Rivero of
Arts),
College of Visual and Per-
Dance
Santiago's Caribbean
Theatre and others from Danza Contemporanea), Haiti (Lavinia Williams and Jean Leon Destine), and Trinidad (Beryl McBurnie of Little
Carib Theatre).
The straightforward repertory of actual traditional dances is one But the technical discoveries are strong people move, whether in
motor responses
fear,
joy,
thing.
terms of the way Caribbean
ritual, for recreation,
concerns; whether in jumping for
standing frozen in
in
or in reaction to everyday
crawling with
fear,
writhing in pain,
or shimmying with anger. Very few of such loco-
are peculiarly "Black" or "Caribbean," but Caribbean
people do express these emotions in body language that betrays releasing energy and a vocabulary of "dance" that
from that of other
is
a
way of
distinctively different
cultures.
A rigid back centered on a firm pelvis is bound to craft designs different from
a supple
undulating spine synchronised into
a contraction-release
88
RexNettleford
•
Therein
signature of an equally supple pelvis.
one important
lies
differ-
ence.
The body
setting
in axial
up of polyrhythms through simultaneous
isolations in the
splendour and the syncopated contouring of designs
from point
release of energy' and the progression
in the
to point are signatures of
cultural significance that speak to African continuities in the heritage of
the region. Europe's heritage also persists, albeit in newly reconnected,
long adapted versions of jete, fouette, arabesque, attitude, pas de bourree,
pasde basque, with
its
sissonne
and so on,
as
can be found
in the
Jamaican quadrille
heel-and-toe polkas, or in the Haitian contredanse with
its
elegant
balance and waltz steps, which admittedly finally break out into earthy gyrations.
As
I
have said elsewhere there
way Caribbean people move
is
a logic
and inner consistency
that gives to the
commonplace
jump, and walk distinctive aesthetic significance.
skip,
The
emphasis on weight
movement-pattern
in the negotiation
and shaping of many
modern dance,
does the contraction-release complex, usually identified as
ham
invention, but organic to
modern dance by attenuated. steel.
Arms
a
It is as
all
a
as
Martha Gra-
African dance, which predates American
few centuries.
Movement
is
moulded more often than
though the material being worked on
is
clay rather than
flow like rivers and torsos undulate like the outlines of rolling
or the ebb-flow of the surrounding sea.
tions in the preparation of the
Caribbean dances,
These
are technical founda-
body as the instrument of dance
as I say in
my
expression.
1985 publication Dance Jamaica —
Cultural Definition and Artistic Discovery, emphasize the body's centre as to celebrate
life itself.
These dances seem
ation and childbearing guaranteed
to recall a period
men and women
purpose. Building strength in the legs and feet toes are
a
finds kindred association with the fall-recovery, ten-
sion-relaxation complexes of some schools of American
hills
in the
crawl, hop,
is
a
when
sense of place and
critical:
strong feet and
needed for earth-centered movements, and sinewy calves
resistant to the strains of site for attitudes
shuffling.
of obeisance to the gods during
strong thighs support particular spirit.
marching and
The
a
if
procre-
will
be
Strong knees are requiritual
ceremonies, and
torso rippling horizontally while possessed of a
flexed foot
is
useful as
symbol not only of hoe and
pickaxe, but also of resolution, strength, and earthiness.
The
arms, like
other parts of the body, must be able to describe the curve of mountains, the flow of rivers, and the ebb and flow of oceans, just as in other traditions the
movements of swans and
the shapes of Gothic cathedrals, sky-
Jamaican Dance Theatre: Celebrating the Caribbean Heritage
and pine
scrapers,
trees piercing the winter sky have
dences in dance attitudes.
Movement
open; in northern environments
perhaps
as protection
it is
in the
•
89
found correspon-
Caribbean
is
more contracted and
outward and self-centered,
of one's body against the wintry cold, or as psycho-
logical retreat into the caves of the heart, reflecting
some kind of Freudian
escape from a cruel world. Such spiritual imperatives are beginning to
impinge on urban and middle-class
life
(NDTC) dances have portrayed them. if
and
in the Caribbean,
a
number of
But the natural environment, even
now more fragile, is less eroded and peasant sensibilities still abound. The flow from toe to crown dictates technical training that encourages
coordination of the total body, while different parts of the
many aid
body
to set
also allows for the isolation of
it
up rhythmic counterpoint. There are
technical discoveries throughout the international dance world to
Caribbean choreographers and teachers.
It is
not
difficult to justify
borrowing from established techniques of Western dance-art to serve the Caribbean dancer. But indiscriminate eclecticism
special needs of the
must
give
way to an
integrated system of technical training.
Much
of this
be accomplished by conscious efforts in schools and studios, but the
will
most satisfying solutions will
inevitably be developed
by means of innova-
choreography addressing technical needs. Caribbean dance culture
tive
must therefore speak with kinetic force
its
own voice;
is, it
must move with
and aesthetic conviction. That voice
ance of a vocabulary that
is
is
its
summary
the
own
utter-
served by the technique.
only for the sake of convenience,
If
that
have also said that distinctive
I
dance movements and gestures must have names. In the Caribbean the question immediately arises as to which language should be used.
European
classical tradition settled for
The
French, at one time the lingua
franca and international diplomatic language, only recently eclipsed by
English.
The modern dance idiom
—such
English terminology
and
in the
United States has
But for many people
steeped in the Eurocentric bias, a plie seems to suggest a technical feat than the "deep-knee bend," and rising
than
a developpe,
a releve.
An
communication, especially for those a
one's toes
is
best
and the "change of the back" may be considered somein carrying
ment. In Jamaica the question of language presents
they lack
on
more profound
"extension" carries less prestige
what inelegant when an epaidement succeeds
when
on
as spirals, relaxation, tension, contractions
releases, leaps, stretches, bends, falls, recoveries.
accomplished by means of
insisted
a
out the move-
problem
in
dance
who settle for the use of French, even
knowledge of European
ballet technique.
90
•
Rex Nettleford
Of course,
American modern dance
the terminology of
able since English
the official language of the entire
is
is
also accept-
Commonwealth
Caribbean. Yet there are no English words that describe the basic steps
from Kumina, Drnkimini, Tambu, and
all
/•.'///,
Thus dance steps derived from Caribbean
The low back-bend with
native names. air
on top of inching toes
community ofJamaica tively in
and
described by face
up
in the
Maroon
the masumba, which Sheila Barnett used effec-
her dance-drama, "Ni-VVoman of Destiny." This inching move-
ment using
on
the toes
a flat
bras where the arms are set
earning
as if
foot firmly fixed
Western dance. Nor
in traditional
head
pelvis forward
called the limbo in Trinidad. In the
is
it is
indigenous Jamaican dances. rituals are best
twisted extension classical ballet
a
is
akimbo
weight.
there a
on the ground has no name
word
for the kind of port de
— whether placed on the hips or over-
There
is
no word
for the extension
—of the spine into the shape of the
manuals
this
posture
is
letter S; in
even frowned upon.
Nor
—or
many
are there
terms for the countless movements of the feet or the pliant torsos of Caribbean dancers re-creating the throes of
possession (as in Puk-
spirit
kumina, Shango, or Cimifa) or imitating the improvisations of recreational dances.
For the purposes of codification, an analogy to Caribbean music may be instructive. sic
The
oped out of the calypso, it
Trinidadians have added calypso to international
mu-
terminology to mean specifically the balladic musical forms that devel-
is
ritual of
pre-Lenten Carnival.
even more expressive.
a distinctive
name
The Jamaicans
that describes the music that
from the urban ghettos of Kingston. being native to tango, and
K/iiso,
It is also
the Creole term for
created reggae and gave
emerged
since the 1960s
creole in the strict sense of
Caribbean country. Rumba, samba, cha-cha, mambo,
a
merengue have
also
been Latin America s contribution to the
vocabulary of music and dance throughout the world. As with jazz
United
trovertible.
The
rituals
Vodou complex with
tradition has
all
them
of
is
in the
incon-
of Vodou, Kumina, Pukkumina, Santeria, Shango
and masquerade have lent their names to Haiti's
on
States, the imprint of the African presence
its
specific
dance forms, especially
panoply of rites. Jamaica's dance theatre
drawn on the Haitian
tradition as part of the sources of Afri-
can continuities in the Caribbean.
Cheryl Ryman,
a
dance researcher and former
isolated a core vocabulary that evolved
four decades of the National
now
also informs
NDTC
and sustained
itself
Dance Theatre Company's
Jamaican dance
activities
principal, has
over the nearly existence and
independent of the company.
Jamaican Dance Theatre: Celebrating the Caribbean Heritage
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>H
Glossal)
strong resemblance to the kadjia of Benin. Also called damn- and for-
merly spelled
I'ag'ya.
Lalinkle (French Caribbean 16)
dances performed
—
In northeast Martinique, a series
at night, at funeral
very Laplas
fast
bele.
The
of
dances
mango, ting-bang, mabelo, and kanigwe.
are: karcsc-yu, benezuel, ironic
Lanflanmansyon (French Caribbean
Nickname by which
wakes and sware
16)
— Creole
for "the
ignition."
quadrille dancers call the finale, because
it is
in a
tempo.
—Vodou sword-hearer. Nearly always
a
man, he dances between
the two flag-bearers in the Flag Corps.
Latin Jazz (Cuba
3)
—A major
division of jazz music that integrates basic-
structures of Cuban music, including clave organization and the use of
percussion in the
Laud (Cuba
3)
full
range of the African traditions of Cuba.
—A string instrument with rounded back from North Af-
rica via Spain, played characteristically in pnnto librc or freestyle
form
Leggo
in the
(Virgin Islands
behave
in
song
western region of Cuba. 1
5)
any way one
— "Let go"; to
let
go of all
inhibitions, be free to
without the fear of consequence or reputa-
feels
tion.
Lewoz (French Caribbean loupe. The set comprises and mennde.
It is called
16)
—African-derived
set
dance of Guade-
tumblak, kaladja, kadjenbel, graj,
ivonle, lewoz,
lewoz-au-commandement when performed with
a
caller.
—Men and women freed from Limbo (Trinidad and Tobago —A competitive dance originally seen Libertos (Puerto Rico 12)
slaver)-.
1
Waking ceremonies
7)
Passing below a bar held by two individuals progressed acts to the
at
for the dead, passed to the realm of entertainment.
"human limbo," with
in
nightclub
the dancers' bodies replacing the bar.
—
An African ethnic group that has come to be syn3) onymous with Yoruba in Cuba; the name of an African religion in Cuba; the name of an African language in Cuba; the name of a dance/
Lucumi(s) (Cuba
music tradition that
Lwa
(Haiti 9)
is
— A Vodou —
also called spirit.
Yoruba, Oricha, or Santeria
The
older spelling
is
in
Cuba.
loa.
Madruga (Cuba }) A metal cross-shaped shaker instrument, used in rumba to set the pace and assist the division between singing and dancing sequences.
Majo jon
(Haiti 9)
— Baton major. Costumed
in a
cloak
made up
ot sequins
or bits of mirror, and sporting sunglasses, he twirls his baton and
dances the chay o pye.
— Glossary
Make
(French Caribbean 16)
gwoka ensemble.
It
—The dominant drum
•
359
Guadeloupean
in a
plays the rhythmic variations in response to the
dancers' movements.
Makuta (Cuba
3)
Mambo
3)
(Cuba
—A Kongo-Angolan dance that survives Cuba. —A twentieth-century type of son music with two in
tions in the dance: a bouncy, playful quality in
Cuba,
a
varia-
smooth and
suave quality elsewhere; also a section of the son music where brass
instruments take the lead and make improvisational developments.
—A Vodou
Manbo, Mambo
priestess.
Mangulina (Dominican Republic
10)
—A Dominican
social
dance of the
southwestern region in 3/8 time, perhaps derived from the Andalusian seguidilla.
Today performed
in a triptych with the carabine
and the valse
or danza.
Mani (Dominican Republic
10)
—A
spiritualist party
Vodu
of Dominican
that celebrates initiation, healing, or a patrons saint's day. Traditionally
public and characterized by music and dance with either palos or, in the central-south, salves ensembles.
Manman—The
"mother" drum of the Vodou ensemble, played by the
master drummer. Largest and lowest-pitched, leads conversations with the
Maraca(s) (Cuba
3)
it
executes the kase and
segon drum.
—Handheld shaker, musical instrument usually played
in pairs.
—
Marimbula (Cuba 3) A percussion instrument with metal prongs over an opening of a wooden or gourd structure that is plucked or hit with music sticks. (Dominican Republic 10) Marimba is the Dominican term for the same instrument (not to be confused with the wooden xylophone widely known
marimba), the Cuban-originated adapta-
as a
tion of the African thumb-piano or mbira in giant form. Developed to
serve as a bass instrument in a social dance ensemble.
Maroons
(ed.)
— Escaped
slaves
Mas (Trinidad and Tobago Maskawon a
18)
who formed
their
own communities.
—The Carnival costume; from masquerade.
—Dance associated with
a
prominent Carnival band. Displays
trembling of the shoulders.
Masumba
(Jamaica 6)
Mayi, Mahi the
—Jamaican Maroon form of the limbo dance.
— One of the dances associated with the Rada division within
Vodou
pantheon.
Named
after the
Mahis of West
Africa,
it
uses a
kind of backward pedaling foot movement.
Mayoacan (Dominican Republic that
10)
—The wooden, horizontal slit-gong
accompanied the Taino areito song-dance
ritual.
360
•
Glossary
Maziouk (French Caribbean
16)
— Mazurka.
European-derived dance of
Martinique. Similar to the Lakonmet pitche of
decade
new version
a
has borrowed rhythmic elements from
Mazouk ((Aiba
3)
St.
Lucia. In the past
has developed, called the maziouk-zouk because
it
zouL
—A contemporary mazurka with Caribbean instrumen-
tation, in 3/4 meter.
Mereng gave
(Haiti 9) its
name
— In
French, meringue,
to a popular dance
dence. Represents
a
has
social dance. It
become
frothy pastry that possibly
fusion of slave dances and French ballroom forms.
Merengue (Dominican Republic minican
a
around the time of Haitian indepen-
is
10)
— Currently the most popular Do-
the variant of the northern Cibao region that
nationally popular, and there the original guitar family in-
struments of the nineteenth century were replaced by the accordion starting
around the 1880s. In the early twentieth century
7
a
process of
adaptation to the ballroom began, leading to the development of a
commercial, orchestrated merengue, which diverged from the folkloric
merengue
Minuetes (Cuba
known
tipico (also
Both are
coexists.
3)
as perico ripiao),
with which
it
now
in 2/4 meter.
—Minuets; court dance form of sixteenth and seven-
teenth centuries in Europe, performed by colonists in the Americas up to the nineteenth century.
Mitotes (Cuba
3)
—Ancient indigenous dance/music form
South America; resembles native dance descriptions
in
in
Mexico and
Cuba
at
time of
contact; see areitos and batocos.
Mizik rasin
—
Literally, "roots music."
commercial music
style influenced
A
late
twentieth-century Haitian
by 1970s rock and reggae. Tends to
use the rhythms of Rara.
Mokojumbie
(Trinidad and
Mulato/a (Cuba
3)
Tobago
18)
—Carnival masquerader on
—A person of mixed African and European
stilts.
heritage;
somewhat privileged class in Cuba. Musique tipique (Cuba 3, West Africa) Mainly son but also rumba or Caribbean music in West Africa. Muzikdi zumbi (Curacao 19) Literally, "music of the spirits"; Curacaon formerly
a
—
—
music form.
Myal (Jamaica (the inner
Nago (Haiti
7)
—An African-derived ceremony honoring the ancestors
sanctum of Kumina). 9)
— Dance of the Nago or Yoruba division within the Vodou
pantheon. Powerful, Oguns),
it
like the spirits
utilizes thrusting chest
it
dramatizes (the several
movements.
Ogo us or
Glossary
Nanigo(s) (Cuba
3)
361
•
—Another name for Carabali cultures from Africa that
survived in Cuba; like
Abakua and iremes,
masked
refers to the
spirit
dancers and their stories.
Nasyon
— "Nation." A division of the Vodou pantheon, sometimes
rectly associated with an ethnic a
group from
Africa.
di-
Each nation shows
unique temperament, or ethos.
NT Night
(Jamaica 7)
—Ninth Night postdeath ceremony. Ninth Night
a number of islands. Novena (Dominican Republic 1 o) The nine-night
ceremonies are held on
—
(i.e.,
ritual for the
a saint's festival) or for the dead; the final event
is
Virgin
the largest and
longest of the sequence.
Nyabinghi (Jamaica
7)
—Warrior; Rastafarian term derived from Jomo
Kenyatta's Nyabinghi fighters; the
name of
a three-part
drum
en-
semble, and the drumming, chants, and ceremony at which they are played.
—Metal percussion instrument
Ogan
in
Arara dance/music tradition of
Cuba; functions as organizer of rhythm instruments in performance. (Haiti 9)
clapperless bell, sometimes a
The
basic timekeeper of the
Oricha(s) (Cuba 3)
—The
hoe blade, or sometimes
Vodou drum name of
Lucumi, or Yoruba
in
a
a flattened,
machine
part.
ensemble.
divinities, divine spirits
manifest through dancing; a called Santeria,
ceremony or
—A small iron gong, sometimes
of Yoruba belief
who
the Yoruba-based religion also
Cuba;
also Orisa, Orisha (usual
spelling in the United States), or Orixa (Brazil).
Orisha religious system or Shango (Trinidad and Tobago anthropologists registered the tentions found in Trinidad.
common terms
1
7)
—The early
for African religious re-
Shango became the popular term
for the
predominantly Yoruba system inherited and maintained by adherents
who
follow the tenets of the ancestors.
Orquesta
pean
tipica
trio
(Cuba
3)
—The name
for the musical
ensemble of Euro-
of violin, piano, and flute with added African percussion and
rhythms for danzon complex dances of the nineteenth century
7 ;
also
called charanga francesa during different periods; in twentieth century
involves the sweet, elegant sound of a
Cuban
or Latin orchestra for
chachacha and son.
Ougan, Houngan
(Haiti 9)
—A Vodou —Vodou song
Ougjenikon, Houngenikon
priest. specialist.
Leads
in call
and re-
sponse singing. Ousi, Hounsis
—A Vodou
initiate.
One who
has gone through
a
kanzo.
362
Glossary
Palo, Palo
Monte (Cuba
religion ol
j)
— A Kongo-Angolan or Central African-based
Cuba.
Palo (Dominican Republic to)
— The Afro-Dominican drum made
hollowed-OUt tree trunk. Also called atabal
in
many
with extra-official religious brotherhoods and saints' in
Iroin a
areas. Associated
Played
festivals.
ensembles of two or three.
Palo abajo, palo arriba (Dominican Republic 10)
— Two rhythms of the
south-central region. Originally played for the dead, but also
danced by the living
in
some
lugubrious tempo; palo arriba
Pambiche (Dominican Republic merengue
ti'pico
areas. Palo abajo has a triple in
is
10)
may
be
meter and
duple meter with faster tempo.
—A variant rhythm and dance of the
that developed in Puerto Plata. Consists of the jaleo
section only, allegedly an adaptation of the dance-style ineptitude of
the U.S. Marines during the
first
—A Dominican hand drum
Pandero
liturgical salves, altar
music of
occupation by U.S. troops (1916-19). tambourine. Accompanies non-
like a
saints' festivals.
Generally
a
woman's
instrument.
Papiamentu (Curacao
19)
— Language
spoken
in
Curacao, Aruba, and
Bonaire.
Parang or Parranda (Trinidad and Tobago
18)
—The
first is
Trinidadian
came
Creole, the second Spanish for the old Spanish-type songs that
from Venezuela, performed Parigol
at
Christmastime.
— One of the dances of the Rada
theon. Like a slow, graceful mayi.
Pasadia (Dominican Republic 10)
division within the
Some
call it ftva rigol,
—A daylong dance party held
bar or pub for the enjoyment of any and
and end of
a
—
The 14) bomba dance
Paseo (Puerto Rico
certain social dances
Vodou
stylized
at a local
all.
walk steps used
solo, (ed.)
pan-
or three streams.
at the
beginning
—Also, the walking section of
from Spanish-speaking
islands, including
danza
(Puerto Rico), merengue (Dominican Republic), and danzon (Cuba).
(Dominican Republic
10)
—The
first
part of the orchestrated
meren-
gue, allegedly derived from the polka, adopted from other ballroom
dance to make the merengue acceptable
in the dancehall.
Played for
the purpose of the man's selection of a dance partner and their posi-
tioning on the dance floor.
Pasodoble (Dominican Republic
10,
Spain)
— A Spanish popular dance,
the two-step, characteristic of bullfighting music as well as the dance hall.
Glossary
for,
Peristyle (Haiti 8)
363
—
Synonymous with, and the more Dominican merengue tipico. The front part of a Vodou temple (hounfor) where
Pericoripiao (Dominican Republic 10)
popular term
•
the
—
the public ceremonies are held.
Petwo, Petro (Haiti
two main
9)
—The hot dance of the Petwo division (one of the Vodou pantheon. The chest trembles, disjointed movement with respect to each
divisions) within the
the feet execute a kind of other.
Pique (Trinidad and Tobago with
much
1
7)
—A
spicier version of the bele or bel air
coquetry and accented hip movements.
accompany the dancers Piquete (Puerto Rico 14)
in
Drums and
chants
both dances.
—The
bomba drummer
improvised movements of the
dancer that are to be interpreted musically by the lead (subidor).
Pitche (French Caribbean 16)
—Variable step with
a lift
on
3, 5,
or
6,
toes
pointing down.
Playing mas (Trinidad and Tobago
formance of a Carnival costume;
1
8)
—The actual enactment and per-
also, to
don
a
costume and participate
in the competitions at Carnival time.
Plena (Puerto Rico 12)
—Developed
in
Ponce toward the end of the nine-
teenth century, the plena integrates African and European elements. Traditionally accompanied by the accordion or the armonica (har-
monica), the
out
giiiro,
jingles), the
and the pandereta (hand drum or tambourine with-
plena has a contagious rhythm and a vivacious dance
step. Its lyrics serve as joyful social
Pocomania, Pukkumina (Jamaica
7)
commentaries and newsletters.
—A Jamaican
religious rite fusing
Baptist and African rituals.
Polka-la-poule (French Caribbean 16)
—Last figure
of the Martinican
version of the French quadrille.
— One of two bearers the Vodou Flag Corps. —The centerpost of Vodou around which
Pot drapo
flag
Poto-mitan (Haiti initiates
dance.
It is a
in
a
9)
peristyle,
channel through which the lwa enter the material
world.
Pot-pourri (French Caribbean 16) contredanses.
— Small
suite
of two or three French
The contredanses en pot-pourri were very fashionable in
the French salons at the end of the eighteenth century.
—
Premye chante Lead Vodou, Carnival, or
singer in call and response singing, whether in folklore representations.
m
^64
(
Pripri
loss.
i
(Dominican Republic
10)
—The
social
dance ensembles and ac-
companying dances of the eastern and southwestern regions of the Dominican Republic, each with different types of ensembles and music. Profesionales (Cuba 3)
among
(Aiba; concert level
Pueblo (Cuba
3)
— Generally, artists.
—The people, the
Pukkumina, Pocomania (Jamaica
public. 6)
—An
African Jamaican possession
syncretized with Christianity.
ritual dance-rite
Punto guajiro (Cuba Cuba;
trained, fully accredited workers in
also called
3)
—The
rural,
country music/dance complex of
campesino.
—Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century French
Quadrille (Virgin Islands 15) set
dance widely danced in the Caribbean. See French quadrille for the
form
set in early nineteenth century; see chapter 15, Virgin Islands,
and chapter
16,
Quelbe (Virgin
French Caribbean, for modern continuations.
Islands 15)
—Also
and
called fungi
A
scratch.
distinctive
Virgin Islands musical tradition; an essential accompaniment to
St.
Croix quadrille.
Quinto (Cuba
3)
— Soprano
or high-voiced tumbador, a small barrel-
shaped drum.
—
Raboday A Carnival or Rara band and the dance associated with it. Makes use of much hip and foot movement. Rada (Haiti 9) A major division of the Vodou pantheon. Derived from Arada, a people from Dahomey (now Benin). The other major division
—
is
Petwo.
Rancheros (Cuba
3,
Mexico)
— Contemporary
Mexican farm workers; related Rara (Haiti
9)
— Public
festival
tures include hocketing in
Jamaica
Leonard
P.
7)
Howell
Reggae (Jamaica
7)
—A
rural couple dances
son and punto guajiro
in
of
Cuba.
held throughout Lent in Haiti. Special fea-
bamboo trumpets and
shimmering sequins or
Rastafari
to
bits
a
baton major costumed
of mirror.
religious concept developed
in
Jamaica by
in the 1930s.
— Indigenous popular music of Jamaica developed
in
the 1960s.
Reto (Puerto Rico
drummer
in
14)
—The challenge that
bomba,
to
the dancer's improvised
make sounds on
a
the
dancer makes to the lead
drum
that correspond to
movements.
Rezo (Dominican Republic
10)
—Term
brotherhood of Villa Mella for the
in
last
the Afro-Dominican religious
and longest
(all
night or
all
day)
Glossary
prayer ritual of the nine nights following burial.
drumming, and dance by the relative
of the opposite
spirit
•
365
The rezo includes who possesses a
of the deceased,
sex.
Ritmo de habanera, ritmo de tango (Cuba
3)
—A rhythmic pattern of
five
pulses sounded within three beats; also called cinqnillo.
Rocksteady (Jamaica
Rumba (Cuba
3)
7)
—A slow ballad-tempo counterpoint to
ska.
—A Cuban dance/music creation of the nineteenth cen-
tury that continues in the present; the
name of a dance/music
family of
dances or complex from the mixtures of African and European cultures in
Cuba; percussion, human voice, and improvisation within
a set
structure of dance and of instruments.
Rumba, Rhumba
(International
dance, distinct from the
cial
basic
son step pattern and
—
ed. in consultation with Y. D.)
—A so-
Cuban rumba defined
above, that follows a
became popular
in the 1930s in the
first
United States and elsewhere outside of Cuba.
Rumba clave (Cuba ies
by one-half
3)
—The organizing rhythmic pattern of rumba; var-
beat from son clave; a stretched syncopated rhythm
a
from Carabali music/dance tradition that helped to identify the new creation in Cuba.
—True rumba performers. —A type of son music and dance of the twentieth century;
Rumberos (Cuba Salsa
(Cuba
fast,
3)
3)
a
constantly turning, couple dance in virtuoso display; developed by
Puerto Rican and other Caribbean musicians in the United (Puerto Rico
City in the
1
2)
—Music/dance phenomenon originating not a new rhythm, but
late 1960s. Salsa is
making music,
a
new way of freely combining
a
in
States.
New York
new way of
diverse Afro-Caribbean
rhythms. Salve (Dominican Republic 10)
—Altar and procession/pilgrimage song
genre of Dominican folk Catholicism. cred, liturgical salve de la Virgen,
The genre
includes: (1) the sa-
sung antiphonally and unaccompa-
nied, in groups of three, during a saint's festival of personal sponsorship
and during processions and pilgrimages;
accompanied enced
salve con versos
salve con panderos (with
(2)
the African-influenced,
of the East and yet more African-influ-
hand drums) or salve
con palos (with long-
drums) of the central south. This nonliturgical salve the altar after the salve de
sponse form.
The term
la
Virgen and
versos, in
erence to the salve prayer,
songs that are not salves.
is
is
addition to
also a generic
is
performed
at
structured in call and re-
meaning
extra text in ref-
term
all
for
folk-Catholic
366
Glossarj
•
Samba (Cuba tage with
Sanba
3,
—A Brazilian dance from Kongo-Angolan heri-
gestural naval
a
bumping; related
to
rumba
in
Cuba.
— Poet or composer of the people. Leads Carnival and Rara hands,
as well as the
Santeria (Cuba in
Brazil)
bands that accompany cooperative work (konbit).
— The Yoruba-based religion of Cuba; discussed often
7,)
terms of "syncretism" or the interpenetration of African and Catho-
lic beliefs;
today
is
discussed in terms of the range of African beliefs
beneath an "umbrella" of Catholic symbols during the period of
sla-
very and other oppressive times in Cuba.
—
Sarambo (Dominican Republic 10) A Dominican social dance of the Cibao region, and El Seybo, where it is called guarapo, in a fast 6/8 tempo. Based on the zapateo. Sarandunga (Dominican Republic 10) The music and dance of the Afro-Dominican religious brotherhood of St. John the Baptist in or
—
near Banf. According to oral history, originally from Port-au-Prince, Haiti,
and associated w ith r
a
Dominican extended
pattern to baile de palos, but the male role
Segon
is
Segundo (Cuba
3)
is
much more
— Second drum of the Vodou ensemble. Engages
versations with the
The music
family.
and instruments are unique variants of palos. The dance
similar in
virtuosic.
in musical
con-
mother drum.
—The second tumbador or mid-range, barrel-shaped
drum. Seis (Puerto Rico 12)
— One of Puerto Rico's most important
folk musical
genres, preserving the Spanish 10-line stanza poetic form, the decima.
Known
as im'isica jibara or ca?npesino,
songs are composed in
a strict
Seu (Curacao
19)
evolved
among
The dance
evolved from the
The fresix-
seises.
—Music and dance form from Curacao; original word
means "harvest"
in
Bantu.
Shouters or Spiritual Baptists (Trinidad and Tobago that blends
peasants.
music and rhyme scheme and are
quently improvised by trovadores.
couple Spanish
it
1
Old Testament Judaism with modern
7)
—A belief system
Christianity while
retaining fundamental aspects of African religious practices. Sica (Puerto Rico 14)
—A bomba
variants [see chapter for
rhythm complex with twelve known
names and
Siyak (French Caribbean 16)
details],
played in 2/4 time.
— Scraper made out of bamboo and used
most quadrille bands of the French Caribbean.
— An indigenous up-tempo Jamaican pop music. Soberao (Puerto Rico —The dance that formed bomba. Ska (Jamaica
7)
14)
circle
is
in
in
Glossary
Soca
—As
a party music, the older calypso has
been succeeded
367
•
in many-
by the hard-driving, wining-inducing soca (standing for soul-
locales
calypso), developed
from calypso, and,
like
it,
originating in Trinidad
and now widely popular on many English-speaking
Son (Cuba
3)
—The name of
islands.
Cuban dance/music complex
a
that surfaced
in the sixteenth century and has evolved to permeate folk, popular, and
symphonic music of Cuba, the Caribbean, Latin America,
Africa,
rope and perhaps other places in the twenty-first century;
a
Eu-
popular
blend of European and African concepts of dancing and music-making.
Son
clave
(Cuba
3)
—An organizing rhythmic pattern
for
son music and
dance. Spliff (Jamaica 7)
—Marijuana —The percussive but melodic metal orchestra of Trincigarette.
Steelband or Pan
idad, originally
made from
Subidor (Puerto Rico 14)
drummer who plays of the bomba dancer. lead
Sucu-sucu (Cuba
3)
drums.
oil
—The high drum used this
drum
in
bomba music;
also the
while interpreting the movements
—A type of son music/dance from the western region
of Cuba.
Sware bele (French Caribbean
1
6)
—From the French
soiree.
Martinican
bele dance parties that take place during the evening and part of the night.
Tambora (Dominican Republic minican merengue. zontally
by
a
10)
—The drum associated with the Do-
A medium-sized,
double-headed drum, held hori-
cord around the neck and beaten on one head by
a stick
and on the other by the hand.
Tambu
(Curacao)
—African-Curasao's
and the name of the event where
it
ritual-derived music and dance, takes place; also, the
name of
a
drum.
—An African Jamaican —Collective name drums. Tanbouwine — Drummer. Tibwa (French Caribbean — Pair of Tambu (Jamaica
6)
Tanbou
for
16)
ritual dance.
all
sticks that sets the
musical genres of Martinique. In the north, the tibwa side of the bele
drum;
in the rest of the island,
Ticano (French Caribbean
16)
—Other name
on
a
is
tempo
bamboo
for calenda
in all
played on the
branch.
danced only
in
northeastern Martinique.
Timba (Cuba
3)
—A contemporary, highly improvisational musical orga-
nization of Cuban, Caribbean, and Latin American music, based in son
— 368
—
Glossary
•
and contemporary jazz and funk sounds; evolving from "happenings" or spontaneous gatherings with free-form improvisation.
Tiple (Cuba
3)
— A Spanish instrument of the colonial period
Toast Jamaica 7) DJ's banter. Toeheel (Congolese 2, Jamaica)
in
Cuba.
— Popular dance to Jamaican dancehall
that looks like a slow samba.
Trankamentu (Curacao a partner)
men
by
19)
— Shoulder-pushing dance
(after cutting in
on
Tambu.
in
—A small Cuban-style, double-stringed Tumba (Curacao) — Carnival music and dance from Curacao. Tumba francesa (Cuba —The dance/music tradition of French HaiTres (Cuba
guitar.
3)
3)
who
tians of African descent
arrived in
Cuba
at the
end of the eigh-
teenth century; continues today in the eastern provinces.
Tumbadores (Cuba
3)
—The
barrel-shaped drums of Kongo-Angolan
heritage, also called congas.
Twoubadou oped by
— From the French troubadour. A secular music
itinerant Haitian workers returning
style devel-
from Cuba and the Do-
minican Republic. Impacted the evolution of konpa.
Vaksin (Haiti
— One of
9)
a set
of
bamboo
trumpets. Deliberately disso-
nant, they intone in hocket fashion while players strike the sides of the
instruments with
sticks.
Velacion (Dominican Republic 10) tival
—The all-night Dominican
held at the homestead of an individual
act in
music
payment of a vow (salves, versos);
who
saint's fes-
offers this devotional
and
altar
dance;
may
Vodou peristyle. Each
veve
for divine healing. Includes rosaries
may
include
drumming and drum
also include social dance.
Versos
Veve
see salves.
—A cosmogram traced on the floor of
both represents and invokes
Virgen de
la
Altagracia (Dominican Republic 10)
most venerated
Her
a
a spirit.
deity of
—The
extra-official,
Dominican Catholicism and
folk Catholicism.
date of celebration, January' 21, draws vow-based pilgrims to
Higiiey from throughout the country, even from Haiti.
pilgrimage
Vodou
but
is
(Haiti 9)
Haiti,
it
has
August
secondary-
14.
— In the Fongbe language of Benin,
come
The
it
means
to signify Afro-Haitian spirituality
"spirit." In
and the
rituals
it
entails.
Vodii (Dominican Republic 10)
Vodou, with
its
own
—The
Dominican version of Haitian
characteristics as well as regional variants. Like
Glossary
Vodou,
and divination, characterized
a religious society for healing
it is
Afro-New World
by spirit possession by African-derived and
Vodu includes both
369
•
deities.
private consultations as well as public celebrations,
drum Vodu and leader or medium as
the latter including music (palos or salves) and dance (embraced
dance or
similar).
Dominican
practitioners avoid the term
prefer to refer to altars of los misterios, and to their
Servidor or Servidora de misterios.
—
Voye/reponn
Literally,
"send and respond." Better translated as
and response." Refers to antiphony, that
is,
a
"call
chorus responding to the
lead of a solo singer.
Wapa (Curacao) —A name Wining (Cuba
common
for the
way women sang and danced
in seu.
—A hip gyrating dance of the Anglophone Caribbean;
3)
to Carnival dance
movements and comparsa dancing
in
Cuba.
—A piece of ribbed metal pipe used musical —"Working up"; thrusting of the hips Wukkin' up (Virgin Islands Wiri (Curacao
instru-
as a
19)
ment.
1
though the dancer Yanvalou (Haiti the
Vodou
9)
is
5)
a
as
practicing sexual moves.
—One of the dances
pantheon. Famous for
in
its
honor of the Rada
division of
undulating spine, evocative of
Danbala, the serpent god. Fongbe for "praise."
Yoruba (Cuba
3)
—An African
ethnic group, sometimes including the
neighboring Lucumi; an African language;
a
music/dance tradition
Cuba; also an alternate name for the Oricha, Santeria, or Lucumi
in
reli-
gion.
—
Yuba (Puerto Rico 14) A bomba rhythm complex, played in 6/8 time. Yuca (Dominican Republic 10) A Dominican social dance of the Cibao
—
region, possibly related to the merengue.
It
consists of the paseo
and
a
short conventional dance section followed by an elaborate jaleo section, characterized
by many turns, made more complex
if
danced by
two interacting couples.
—
Yuka (Cuba 3) A Kongo-Angolan dance ent of Cuban rumba. Zapateado (Cuba
3)
that survives in Cuba; anteced-
—The rhythmic foot and heel patterns
in the
dancing
tradition of Spanish flamenco; the zapateo dancing part of
punto
guajiro complex.
Zapateo (Cuba
3)
— Flat-foot, heel-stomping dance
style
from Spain; part
of identifying characteristic of rural dance in Cuba, the zapateado
dancing part of punto guajiro complex.
370
•
Glossary
Zepol, Zepaules (Haiti 9) ders,*'
because of
ally follows
its
— Named
after the
Yanvalou, bringing
Zouk (French Caribbean
16)
it
Freneh
les epaules,
movement. A Rada dance
characteristic
to a heated conclusion.
— Social dance of the French Caribbean. L'p
to the late 1970s, used in reference to private nighttime
only; since the mid-1980s, also applies to a
draws heavily on Carnival rhythms. love, is
hips.
danced by
The
faster
a
"shoul-
that usu-
couple
in close
new
dance parties
musical genre that
The slow-tempo
zouk, called zouk
embrace and emphasizes undulant
zouk beton or "hard zouk"
is
for individual
jump-up.
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ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS
Molly Ahye, author of Golden
Heritage: The Dance in Trinidad
(1978) and Cradle of Caribbean Dance: Beryl Theatre (1983),
knows
an ethnologist, the
McBumie and
Trinidad's dance and spiritual
of
artistic director
a
life
and Tobago
the Little Carib
inside and out as
dance troupe, and
as
Chief
Iyalorisha-Opa Orisha (Shango) of Trinidad and Tobago. She holds
Ph.D. from
Trinidadian-born Patricia Tamara Alleyne-Dettmers thropologist years,
a
New York University.
who
a linguistic an-
is
has studied Trinidadian Carnival for
and continues to research Carnival
spective of the native masquerader and
in
Great
more than ten from the per-
Britain,
from the outside
as a professional
anthropologist. She was commissioned by the Arts Council of England to
develop the is
first
national Carnival database for British Carnivalists and
an honorary research fellow in the Department of Anthropology at
University College, London, a foundation
member
of the Carnival in
Committee (Goldsmith's College), and a visitDepartment of Sociology, at the University of Hamburg,
Arts Education Steering
ing professor,
Germany. Halbert Barton
is
versity-Brooklyn.
assistant professor of anthropology at
He
in the humanities in
was awarded
a
Long Island Uni-
Rockefeller postdoctoral fellowship
1998 for his community development research with
young Puerto Rican bomba performers. He is cofounder and development director of CICRE (Centro de Investigacion Cultural Raices Eternas), a nonprofit community arts organization based in Carolina, Puerto Rico, which sponsors the group's "Bombazo de Puerto Rico" tour.
He
also
is
an accomplished
throughout Puerto Rico,
bomba
dancer, having performed extensively
New York,
and the Pacific Northwest over the
past several years as a lead dancer, percussionist, and artistic director.
387
388
About the Contributors
•
Ciabri Christa,
horn and raised
in
Curacao, arrived
in
New
York from
Puerto Rico, via the Netherlands and Cuba. She choreographed and
danced
few years
tor a
in
Cuba, where she was one
Danzabierta de Cuba. In the United States she has been Bill
founders
of the
of
dancer with
a
Zane Dance Company. She holds a degree from the Dance Development in Amsterdam and taught at and
T. Jones/Arnie
School for
New
received an M.F.A. from the University of Washington.
genheim Fellow, she
directs her
A
1999 Gug-
own company, whose work
has been
seen throughout the United States, the Caribbean, Latin America, and the Netherlands.
VeVe
A. Clark
and cultures sity
is
associate professor of African and Caribbean literatures
in the African
American Studies Department
at the
Univer-
of California, Berkeley. She has published widely on numerous sub-
jects,
including Haitian theater, Katherine Dunham's dance works, Carib-
bean
literature,
and
critical
feminisms.
Independent scholar, teacher, choreographer, and dancer, Alma Conception
is
a
and was its
graduate in literary studies from the University of Puerto Rico a
member
of Gilda Navarra's Taller de Histriones throughout
existence. Currently the assistant director of People and Stories, a
grassroots literature
the Humanities, she
program sponsored by the is
also the founder
New Jersey
Council for
and director of Taller de Danza,
volunteer organization dedicated to introducing children
a
Trenton's
in
Hispanic community to movement through the creation of story-dances.
She teaches at
at
Fordham University and
Ballet Hispanico in
New York and
Princeton University and Rutgers University and the Princeton Ballet
School
in
New Jersey.
Nathaniel Hamilton Crowell,
anthropology rica
Jr., is a
at Yale University.
and West Central Africa
America, has studied
a
He
candidate for
a
Ph.D.
in cultural
has traveled extensively in
West Af-
as well as in the Caribbean and South
range of African and Afro-American music and
dance with master musicians and dancers for more than sixteen years, and has performed African and Afro-American music and dance semiprofessionally for just as long.
He
Congolese dance troupe
in
with
its
sister
currently dances with Malaki
New York City,
company, Fua Dia Congo
Ma Kongo,
a
and prior to that apprenticed
in California.
About the Contributors
Dominique
389
•
her doctorate in musicology from the
Cyrille received
Universite Paris IV, Sorbonne. As a specialist in the music of Martinique,
her native island, she
is
the author of several articles, has been invited for
lectures in the Caribbean, France,
and the United
States,
and
is
presently
an adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Black Studies
man
at
Leh-
College, City University of New York.
Yvonne Daniel teaches dance and anthropology at Smith College. She holds a Ph.D. in anthropology from University of California, Berkeley, an M.A. in dance, and a B.A. in music. She is a Ford Fellow and has been studying
Cuban dance forms
1985. Daniel rary
is
since she
began her
field
work
in
Cuba
in
the author of Rumba: Dance and Social Change in Contempo-
Cuba and has produced three videos on Caribbean dance
culture.
Martha Ellen Davis, anthropologist and ethnomusicologist, has been doing field research in the Dominican Republic, her primary field site, since 1972. She has served as a professor at the country's public university, the
Universidad Autonoma de Santo Domingo, a curator of sociocultural an-
thropology
at the
Museo
Hombre Dominicano, and a researcher at Musica. Her book La otra ciencia: el vodii
del
the Archivo Nacional de
dominicano como religion y medicina populares received the tional nonfiction award.
She
is
currently
on the
Dominican na-
faculty at the University
of Florida.
Henry Frank is a Haitian anthropologist who has lectured and consulted widely on Vodou and other Haitian subjects and was for nine years assistant director of Caribbean studies in the education department of the
American
Museum
community eral in
in
of Natural History.
Much
New York in a variety of roles,
1990 and
is
involved in the Haitian
he was Haitian consul gen-
currently executive director of the Haitian Centers
Council.
Brenda Dixon Gottschild versity, is
is
professor emeritus of dance at
where she teaches performance
and
history, theory,
Temple Unicriticism.
She
the Philadelphia critic for Dance Magazine, author of the final chapter of
Black Dance from i6ig
to
Today (revised edition), coauthor of the third edi-
tion of The History of Dance in Art
and Education, and author of Digging
Africanist Presence in American Pefformance: Dance latest
book
is
Politics in the
and Other
Waltzing in the Dark: African American
Swing Era.
I
Contexts.
audeville
the
Her
and Race
About the Contributors
390
Suki John
is
a
choreographer, teacher, and dance writer
in
New
York and
Havana. She and her husband, Horacio Cocchi, founded the group
ANDANDO Cuba and
as
an intercultural and humanitarian exchange between
the United States.
Melinda Mousouris articles
on the
Attitude,
arts
is
a
freelance journalist based in
and Cuba have appeared
New York City. Her
American Theatre Magazine,
in
Dance Magazine, Dance Teacher Now, the
New
York Times, and the
Village Voice.
Rex Nettleford
is
vice chancellor of the University of the
where he has taught
of continuing studies and
as professor
for the University's Cultural Studies Initiative
West is
Indies,
responsible
Programme. He
is
also the
founder, artistic director, and principal choreographer of the National
Dance Theatre Company of Jamaica (NDTC). Cynthia Oliver
working in
is
an award winning choreographer/performing
artist
New York and abroad. She is a doctoral candidate at New York
University's
Department of Performance
Studies,
where her scholarship
has centered around performance in the Caribbean, specifically the
United States Virgin dance
Islands.
at the University
Thomas Osha Pinnock artist/writer.
He
She
is
currently an assistant professor of
of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
is
an award winning choreographer/performance
has been involved in Caribbean dance-theater for over
thirty years.
Ramon ater
Rivera-Servera
and Dance
is
a
doctoral student in the
at the University
Foundation predoctoral fellowship.
Modern Languages and
Department of The-
of Texas at Austin, where he holds
Cultures
He
at the
a
Ford
has taught at the Department of
University of Rochester, N.Y., the
Department of Speech and Theater at John Jay College, and the Department of Women's Studies at Hunter College. His research focuses on U.S. Latina/o and Caribbean performance.
Susanna Sloat
is
a writer, editor,
and
arts consultant in
New York City.
1
As
an associate editor of Attitude— The Dancers' Magazine, she has written extensively
on modern, postmodern, and many kinds of world dance.
About the Contributors
Robert Farris
Thompson
is
•
391
Colonel John Trumbull Professor of the His-
tory of Art at Yale University.
He
is
the author of
many books
including
African Art in Motion, The Four Moments ofthe Sun: Kongo Art in Two Worlds,
and Flash of the Spirit, and numerous, much anthologized articles on topics ranging from the influence of African art on U.S. sports and drama to the black impact on John Cage's prepared piano and Martha Graham's stance.
He lectures widely and in
1995 received the Leadership Award of the Arts Council of the United States African Studies Association for distin-
guished contributions to scholarship in the
American
field
of African and African-
art.
Dr. Lois Wilcken, ethnomusicologist, has researched the music and dance
of the
spirits in
hoods. She
is
Port-au-Prince and
executive director of
New
York
City's Haitian
La Troupe Makandal,
a
neighbor-
company
that
mystically demystifies Haitian folk music and dance. Dr. Wilcken has
written The
Drums ofVodou
City (1998); her
Arts of Haiti.
(1
992) and co-edited Island Sounds
forthcoming book is
Crossroads, a Teachers
in the
Guide
to
Global
the Folk
1
NDEX
Abakua, 33, 49, 61; masked dancers 36-37; movements of, 36;
influence
and rumba
in,
in,
36-37; origins
on Columbia,
of,
Alonso, Alberto, 59 Alonso, Alicia, 27; experimental dance
group
49;
clave, 49; secret societies in,
6
of,
Alonso, Fernando, 27
Alonso, Manuel A., 299
36-37
Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, 92,
Adams, Dotty, 343
Edward
Affranchis, 54, 113
305, 321-22;
Africanist aesthetic concepts, 3-10;
The Magic ofKatherine Dunham, 3 19; The Prodigal Son, 324-28; Briana Reed,
aesthetic of the cool,
munal
nuity between 8; cultural
7;
collective/com-
human and
spirit
5;
em-
ephebism,
7;
high-affect juxtaposition, 6; improvisa-
foci, 9;
thew Rushing, 325-28; Clifton Taylor,
world,
fusions/inclusions, 10;
bracing the conflict,
tion, 9-10;
325-27; Renee Robinson, 325-26; Mat-
communication/conti-
trust, 10;
marathoning, 8-9; multiple
polycentrism/polyrhythm,
5-6
325; Richard Witter, 327
Anacaona (dance group), 123 Anacaona (Taino
1
34
Anansyism (Trinidad), 279 Anderson, Michelle: describes temple
Chakaba
stilt
dancers, 268; Fara
kurang, 266; Gagalo
Gue Gblin
stilt
Kan-
dancers, 265;
stilt
Antigua, 273 Arara, 33, 36, 40, 54; in Baile de los
Apalencados, 329
265, 268
Arawaks: represented in Trinidadian Carni-
Aguilar, Pedro, 343
val band,
Aguinaldo, 168, 173
Arei'tos: in
Ailey, Alvin, 113, 333.
See also Alvin Ailey
30, 134; in Haiti (Ayiti),
(Borinquen), 134; in Santo
American Dance Theater
Argentina, 129, 295, 338
in Virgin Islands, 213;
Akan
mambo, 343-44 Andrew (Moose), 263-64
rattle in
Alexander, Otis: dance club
dance training on
St.
Almestica family, 187
of,
Domingo
(Quisqueya), 30, 134-35
Omofolabe Soyinka, 280
Akan-Amina:
Alexander,
275-76, 285
Cuba,
113; in Jamaica, 30; in Puerto Rico
116
head
in
Jacmel, 118
dancers, 268-69;
Egungun masquerade,
Ajayi,
princess),
Anansi, 279-80
African masquerade traditions, 264-69;
Ai'da,
Franklin, 325-27;
Arrocha, Eduardo, 64, 67
Aruba, 292; calypso
217-18; on
Croix, 215-16
in,
295
Aschenbrenner, Joyce: on Katherine Dun-
ham, 307 Ashanti:
bomba
traced to dance of, 186
Augustin, Frisner, 119, 121
393
2
1
VH
Index
Wiles, Arthur, \i
Baxter, Ivy, 84, K7,
1
Dance Group,
brothers, 185, 1H7-88
\v.il.i
tional
Baba Roue: 51,
Jamaican masuillba, 250-
oil
and Jamaican Na-
Dance Company,
Beguine. See Biguine
Baez, Joseflna: Dominicanish, 152-61; use
Bejart,
of kuchipudi dance
153-61. 5ee also
by,
Dominicanish
1
palos, 133, 135-40; in
38; nature as baile
New York
tie
F.I
Maurice, 93
respeto,
sware beles, 231; possible
Seybo, 1
^6-38;
City nightclubs, 150; in
ogy
of,
240-41. See also Bele
lino;
Bele
occasions for quadrille, 224
1
San Juan, 176, 179
in,
236;
of, to
11 of:
and kadjia fight dance,
Bettleheim, Judith, 266; on Junkanoo, 2
Dominican Republic, 142
tress, 1;
revivals
209-10, 217; sacred form, 208 10; in
1
13; in
The
and Legend of Marie he Veau, 323; to be derived from Chica,
Cuban
1
117-18
Biguine (beguine), 221-22, 226, 242-44; ingredient in L'Ag'Ya, 309-10, 312, 316;
Banda, 324, 327-29; expo-
New York,
7 3-74
Biberman, Abner: and The Golden Mis-
Virgin Islands, 200, 208-1
Bantu. See
235-36; resemblance
Bermuda, 273
in
of, in
232-34
240
in
nents
in,
influences
other dances, 236
3
Bambouche, 143 Bamboula, bambula
1
of,
Kongo
Benin, Republic
Bamba, 24 Bambosche, 9
of,
231;
Bendongue, Fred: As Seen With One Eye,
13
Ballet Hispanico, 322
Banda,
lisid
Belize, 273
Balanchine, George, 178, 262 Bal des afrranchis, 54,
lisid,
music
(Martinique): in Fort de France, 242; as
Bele
Bele (Trinidad), 86, 236, 249 Bele lino, 12, 231-32; steps
138-139
Kongo etymol-
241; underlying meanings of,
Peravia, 139-40; in southwest, 139; in
Balakadri (Guadeloupe), bal boutchc
— —
on
Belafbnte, Harry, 342
Villa Mella,
Ballets de
7 2
17;
French Caribbean, 224,
236-38, 241 and
lisid
343-44; rite in
36
Kongo
Kongo
pose, 194, 343;
Vodou, 111; Kongo symbolism,
Chipping (Trinidad), 273
277; and lewoz of Guadeloupe, 237; pel-
Chivo, 143
vic thrust in
dance influenced
Christa, Gabri, 291-302, 321
35, 49, 238;
and slave trade, 18-19;
Christian, Bradley: and Heritage Dancers,
St.
Croix,
2
1
3.
15-18,
by,
m
See also Cuban African
dance traditions (Kongo); Kongo dance
214-15 Ciboney, 29
(Haiti); Palo;
CICRE, 194
Congo dance
Clave, 13; in danzon, 52; relation
of,
contradanza cubana rhythm, 51;
rumba, 47, 48, 49;
to
Yowa
(Haiti).
See Kongo dance
(Haiti)
Conjunto National de Danza Con-
in
temporanea,
in salsa, 173; in
son, 42
87;
Cleo Parker Robinson Dance Company,
company
27, 57, classes,
62-72, 73-77, 84, 75-77; Cubadanza
workshops, 75; founding loses Guerra, 57-58, 70;
306 Cofradias (Santo
Domingo and Dominican
teacher
of, 57,
61-62;
and master
Manolo Vasquez,
75, 77; other
Republic): founded by ladinos, 131; to-
choreographers under Guerra, 66;
day, 131, 135
nature work, Sulkari, 74; tours
Colombia,
Columbia
13, 61, 70; vallenato,
(dance). See
See also Guerra, Ramiro (and creation
144
under rumba
of tecnica cubana)
Columbus, Christopher,
29,
Commandeur
French Carib-
(caller): in
sig-
of, 66.
131,222, 285
Connor, Edric, 251, 256 Contant, Andree,
1
18
bean, 226-28; in lewoz of Guadeloupe,
Contradanza, 32, 51-52, 61, 143, 167
2
Contredanse, 30-33, 51, 86, 141, 167; de-
37
Compagnie Montalvo-Hervieu, 322 Comparsa, 34—35, 86. See also Conga Compas,
1
1,
rivatives of, in
French Caribbean, 224-27, 229,
24
bols and beliefs, to, 252-53 29, 34-35.
Cortijo, Rafael, 171
See also Comparsa
Congo, Congo/Angola, Caribbean culture,
1
10, 54, 61, 86;
2 39; in
Haiti, 88
Confluence of Christian and African sym-
Conga,
Dominican Republic,
142; evolution of, into quadrille, 225; in
(
and
1-13, 17-20; and
lotillion,
33
Coumbite/konbit (cooperative work tem), 115; dances, 86,
1
1
2
sys-
Index
Courlander, Harold:
in
The Drum and
the
Cuban
Creolite (French Caribbean): and qua242; and zouk, 243
Dunham's
in
Puerto Rico, 167-70, 172-
73, 175; in Virgin Islands, 201,
Santen'a 13, 24, 129, 173,
295
Cumfa (Guyana), 90 Cunningham, Merce: technique
208
of, in
tecnica cubana, 74, 76
(Virgin Islands), 201
Crowley, Daniel: on
329; Yoruba, 33, 37-41, 54, 61. See also
Cumbia,
224-25, 229, 242; in Gabri Christa's in
40-
40-41, 54, 61,
30, 34-36,
Abakua; Arara; Lucumi; Orichas; Palo;
L'Ag'Ya, 310; in French Caribbean, 222,
work, 302;
Kongo,
41, 54;
Do-
85-87; in Cuba, 41-43, 46-47; in
minican Republic, 135;
African dance traditions: Abakua,
33, 36-37, 41, 54, 71; Arara, 33, 36,
Creolization: in Caribbean and Jamaica,
Crop Over
329-30. See also Conjunto Nacional de
Danza Contemporanea
Hoe, 109
drille,
397
•
Moko Jumbie,
266-
Curacao, 48, 291-302; Carnival, 295; history
69, 271, 274
Cuba, 12-15, 23—55, 56-72, 73-78, 82, 8487, 131, 143, 150, 167-69, 171-72, 242,
of,
292-93; influence
of,
186, 299; language of, 293;
on bomba,
Maroons
flee-
music and dance forms,
ing, 299; local
295, 329-30, 336-38, 340; Batista re-
291, 294-95, 296; and slave trade, 292-
gime, 58, 61-62; casas de cultura, 27-28;
93;
as center
nections
of,
with Curacao, 296-97; Na-
ENA),
tional School of Art (La
74, 77;
National Theater, 61-62, 67, 73; Revo-
32-
lution, 50, 57, 61, 67, 73; slavery in, 33.
of:
Dahomey,
1
10
Damie. See Ladja
Dance Dramas: on Dancehall,
1
St.
Croix, 207
1-12, 86, 95, 218, 291
Dance Theatre of Harlem: Banda,
37-3 8
—dance
and tambu, 291-302
of Caribbean music, 171; con-
African dance elements
in,
41,
43; African Haitian influences on, 33, 41, 54, 71;
government support and
training structures for, 26-28, 74;
European dance elements
in, 32,
iams, 329
Dance
training: for
43;
bomba
in
Puerto Rico,
n Cuba, 26-28, 64, 73-77; in Jamaica and wider Caribbean, 82, 87188-89,
indigenous, 29-30; French Haitian in-
324,
327-29; Dougla, 324; and Donald Will-
x
96;
i
89; in St. Croix,
215-17
Dance yards (West Kingston, Jamaica), 96—
fluences on, 30-32, 41, 54; Spanish
African influences on, 31; Spanish in-
98, 100-102; appearing cool in, 101-2;
fluences on, 30-32, 41, 52, 54; under-
drop legs competitions
representation
of, in
video collections,
system operators
24-26, 54
—dance/music complexes
of:
Ceremonies
Danois, Jackie, 343
53-54
Dans
Camaguey, 75;
27; Ballet Nacional, 27,
Cutumba,
28;
Contemporanea,
in,
100; yard
sound de-
Daniel, Yvonne, 4-5, 23—55; Public
54; punto guajiro or campesino, 41, 5354; rumba, 41, 47-51, 54; son, 41-46,
of: Ballet
97; inspiring
velops, 100-101
cancion
cubana, 41, 46, 53-54; danzon, 41, 51-
—national dance companies
in,
Pinnock's dance works, 103-4; sound
de
73-
Danza 27, 57, 62-72, 73-77,
in Haiti, 4,
lalinkle (Martinique),
can elements formations
in, 2 }8;
in,
Yodun
7-8
237-39; Afri-
dances, steps, and
238-39
Danza: Cuba (concert dance,
28, social
dance, 51); Dominican Republic, social
84, 87; Folklorico de Oriente, 27-28;
dance, 128, 143-44; Puerto Rico, social
Folklorico Nacional, 27, 62, 74, 296,
dance, 143, 167, 190
7
398
Index
and shared culture with Haiti, 133; and
Danza Libre, 74 Danzon, 23, 128-29, *43>
3
22
>
33^. 339;
influence of waltz on, 51; instrumentation in, 51-52; hip
movement
in, 52;
32-33; Trujillo's promotion of in,
in:
128-29, 131, 141
African heritage acknowl-
Cuba,
in
folklorico" on, 148; national folkdance 31, 53; in
Puerto Rico,
troupe, 148; supported by Trujillo and
Bosch, 148; and
168
Dehn, Mura, 340-41
De Lugo, Ron:
organizes carnival on
St.
Thomas, 205-6
New
York City, 149-50
Donay, Millie, 343 Drake, St. Clair: on Katherine Dunham, 308 Drewal, Margaret Thompson: describes
Mille, Agnes, 60
Deren, Maya, 318; Divine Horsemen: The Living Gods of Haiti, 4-5,
of,
1
orishas,
Drop
122
7, 10,
Destine, Jean Leon, 84, 87, 113, 116,
choreography
revivalists' role,
129-30, 149-51; influence of "ballet
Danzonete, 51-52
iy;
278-80
legs challenge
dance (Jamaica), 97;
drop legs masters, 101
Drum
324
challenge dances: bele lino, 230-34;
bomba, 183-96; calenda
Dinkimini, 90
DJ
1
merengue
edged, 147; current folk
51-52
Danzoncha, 51-52
De
131-33; sources of African heri-
tage of,
— folklore
origins of, 51; paseo in, 52; variants,
Decima:
slavery,
toasting, 103; precursor of rap music,
ticano, 239;
Columbia, 50
Dufrasne-Gonzalez, Jose Emanuel: on
103
Djuba/Martinique (dance
in Haiti), 111 —
12, 121
Doc James
Talent Club
(St. Croix), 2
bomba and Curacao, 299 Dunham, Katherine, 41, 85,
102, 113, 116,
178, 305-19, 324, 342, 344; biographies
1
Domi'nguez, Leonardo Ivan: and Conjunto
305; Caribbean field work, 309;
of,
Folklorico of the AJianza Dominicana,
plications of role of, 306-9;
150
tal
Dominicanish (Josefina Baez), 152-61; use of African American
music
in,
movement and
movement
in,
153, 161; use of
gaga video
in,
hamsapaksha hand ges-
ture in, 157-58; use of kuchipudi dance in,
153-61; and
identity,
New
York Dominican
152-61; use of performance
homes, 154; use of polyrhythms use of verbal language
Dominican Republic,
in,
157-61 1
dance band musicians
Dominican
27—
and Trujillo
regimes' promotion of hispanidad, 29;
in
in, 160;
11, 23, 30, 84,
51, 152-61, 324; Balaguer
in,
1
28—
141-42;
of,
306-8; research films by,
as
Quisqueya and Santo Domingo, 130-32;
309, 318-19; and
of,
separation of ethnography from artistic representation, 308-9; technique of, 318; training of, 305
—works 25
1
,
3
of: 1
1 ;
Journey
to
L 'Ag'Ya,
Accompong (book),
309-1 9, Rites de
Passage, 309, 317; Shango, 309. See also
L Ag'Ya Dunham company
— members: Vanoye Aikens, 310; Talley Beatty, 318; Wilbert Bradley, 310; Syvilla Fort, 309;
318; Harold
Morris,
identity as reflected in
Dominicanish, 152-61; occupation by
and independence from Haiti, 132;
work
318-19; school
160-61; use of city inhab-
itants in, 160-61; use of
Group's demonstration program,
308-9, 318; on LAg'Ya, 314; reactions to
158-60; use of Caribbean
com-
Experimen-
3
Tommy Gomez,
310,
Gordon, 309; Lenwood
1
—productions: Bal Negre, 307, 309; Caribbean Rh.wsodv, }10; Tropical Revue.
306-7,309,317-19
399
Index
Edwards, Julia:
as
exponent of Limbo, 250-
54 Ejagham, 36, 54 Elder, J. D.: on Congo influence, 260
Funerary dances: dans
The
in,
242-
Kitchen,
of
lalinkle
Martinique, 237-39,
Alton, 100-101; and
zouk
44. See also Guadeloupe; Martinique
Arnold, 118
Ellis,
special dances of, taught
to slaves in 17th c, 225;
Efik, 36,
Elie,
42, 244; songs of, as carriers of collective
memory, 230;
51,254,256
Limbo of Trinidad,
247-61; rezo and banco of Dominican Republic, 138-39
100
Emery, Lynne Fauley, 209, 251 Gaga:
Emmanuelli, Jorge, 187-89, 196
Cuba,
in
54; in
Dominicanish, 153;
Dominican Republic,
Emmanuelli, Jose, 187-89, 196
in
English country dance, 32, 141-42
151;
Ensley, Ernest, 343
140-41. See also Rara
in,
140;
133, 140-41,
women's dance
in,
Gallardo, Marili: and Kalahi Danza, 150
Etu, 86, 90
Ewe,
mayores
Garcia, Ana, 176, 178
228
36, 54,
Garrido de Boggs, Edna, 148 Fagan, Garth: dance company 35;
The Lion
King, 85;
of, 85,
333-
Moth Dreams,
Feets of Rhythm, 123
Flamenco, 31, 342-43; and bomba, 184,
Henry
Louis, 157 1
18
Gestos Transitorios, 74 Gillis, Verna: and SoundScape's Voodoo Theater, 114, 119-20
186; similarity of, to salsa, 173
Glasser, Ruth, 172
Fokine, Mikhail, 59 10, 36, 54, 86,
Gates,
Germain, Andre,
333-345 Telling a Story, 334-35
Fon,
Garvey, Marcus, 96, 98
1
10, 228, 279,
Goldberg, Alan, 118, 120
299
Forces of Nature Dance Theatre Company:
Gonzalez, Ernesto, 179-81
The Life and Legend ofMarie Le Veau, 323-24; Dyane Harvey, 323-24; Abdel
Gonzalez, Lydia Milagros: on
Salaam, 323-24; Dina Wright, 323
Goombay: drums
Foxtrot, 141
tival,
Francis, Carlton: as exponent of
Limbo,
French Caribbean, 15-17, 87, 221-44; rican-derived dances flage of African
230-41; camou-
in,
customs
228-29; Creolite,
in,
222, 224,
in,
identity,
242-44; creolization
^'
and dance,
222, 224-25,
228-29, 242; headdresses
315; histori-
of,
and geographical background
of,
222-
ritual ele-
bomba, 170
in
(Virgin Islands), 201; fes-
274
Gottschild, Brenda Dixon, 3-10, 24, 41
Graham, Martha,
251, 256, 258
cal
ments
nique
of,
56, 59-60, 84, 333; tech-
64, 74, 76-77, 88, 102
Green, Doris: on Chakaba and
Gue
Gblin,
268-69; on Egungun, 265; on Masai dance, 282
Grenot, Lesme, 78
Guadeloupe, 322; geographical description of,
222; lewoz in, 236-37; quadrille
in,
23; implied sacred functions of certain
226; slavery in, interrupted under
dances
French Republic, 223. See also French
224, 232-34, 237, 240-41;
in,
influence
of,
on bomba,
186;
duction of new genres, 243; dances, 235; quadrille revival of traditional
in,
and intro-
map
of,
241-
42; slavery in, 222-26, 228, 230; social class
Caribbean
Guaguanco. See under Rumba
of
224-29, 242;
dance forms
first
and dance forms, 224-25, 230, 241-
Guajira, 13, 173. See also
Guaracha,
13, 129, 168,
Guarapo: relationship 142
Punto guajiro
172-73
of, to
bade de palos,
;
400
Index
Guerra, Ramiro, 56-72, 84-85; and Ballei
ture, 24, 33; exemplifies Africanisl aes-
Russc, 60; ami Franceses Boas, 60;
thetic concepts, 4-10; folklore artists
C'oonlenadas Dan/arias (l)ook) reissued,
of,
72;
and creation
of tccnica cubana, 57,
63-64, 73; early desire
Cubanness
59-61; folkloric research
by, 61,
on Graham technique,
Magloire regime,
70-71;
works,
64; and
Memoria fragmentada (TV),
59; publishes lishes
Dance
work
64-65, 67-
ire,
66; site-specific
70;
and Stanislavski, 61; studies with
of,
Haiti
of,
61-72; Chacona, 64-65;
Chante
et
Danse,
on
in,
slaves,
2
1
1
16
1
2;
on
on ethnic origins of
3
Hart, Armando, 58, 70 Haute-taille (Martinique), 227
Hazzard-Donald, Katrina: on codes unseen or negated by mainstream,
1
74
Hernandez, Rafael, 172
Higher Heights:
Habana, 61; Impromptu Gaiante, 66-67;
Hinkson, Mary, 333 Hip-hop, 29, 173-74, 184, 195-96, 218,
Mambi,
62;
62;
in-
187; revolution
El Decalogo del Apocalipsis, 67-70, 72;
La Rebambaramba,
1
Do-
slaves' music, 201;
slave mimicry, 2
Graham, and Limon, 60
Verchinina,
—dance works
132; as part of Santo
Hall, Neville:
Prize, 72;
reputation rehabilitated, 58, 70; on sat-
-
modern dance
and Vodou, 109-13
La Teatralizacion del Folklore,
71; receives National
16; in
and republic established, 131-32, 187;
and
dance journal, 58; pub-
1
spired by revolution
Elena Noriega, 57, 63-64; and Peking opera, 66; and Pro-Arte Musical Society,
14-23, 324; immi-
mingo, 130-35; Puerto Rican slaves
I. as
71;
1
323-29; occupies Santo
13,
1
Domingo,
Mascaras, 61; loses directorship, 57— 5H, 70;
in,
life of,
founds Danza Contempor£nea, 57, 6i62;
U.S.A., 118-19; folk-
i
movement
grants from, in Cuba, 30-33, 41, ^4,
of, to translate
into dance, 61; early
immigrate
loric
in Rastafari,
98-100
Medea y los Negreros, 65, 71; Orfeo Antillano, 65-66, 71; The Pilgrim of
Hiran, Manuel, 74
Anaquille, 62; Suite Yoruba, 62-63, 7*5
Hispanidad (Dominican Republic), 128-
Toque, 61;
322,339-40
Trinitarias, 71; Triptico Ori-
29; antithesis of, 149
Hispaniola, 30, 130-33; indigenous
ental, 71
Guy, Jackie, 92
Curacaons shipped
Guyana, 84
Quisqueya, 130
Gwoka. See Lewoz
Hodson,
Millicent:
to,
292; as
on Katherine Dunham,
308 1
Holandes rhythmic complex:
labanera
—dance, 314; — ritmo de,
in
51; also
known
as
ritmo de
Holder, Geoffrey, 85,
I2 9-35- 153. l6 7. 2 34*
Domingue,
2
3
6 ~37'
2
79-
132; contributes to Jamai-
Dumarsais Estime regime,
Duvalier dictatorship,
1
299
1
16;
18; exhibits
early signs of distinct Caribbean cul-
1
16-17,
122
Hosay I
Carter and Reagan administrations on, 18;
of,
13, 254, 342;
Honorat, Michel Lamartiniere,
becomes Saint-
can dance, 90; differing effects of
1
1
Prodigal Prince, 324-28
12,23,35,84-88, 109-13, 114-23,
295, 299-300, 309;
bomba,
Bands, 324, 327-29; Dougla, 324; 77ie
tango, 51; in Puerto Rico, 168 Haiti,
in
189-90, 195; Curacaon origin
Puerto Rico, 167
Festival, 85
[umphrey, Doris, 84
Hurok, I
Sol, 306,
lustle, 184,
317-18
322
Hyppolitc, Hector: as depicted
Prodigal Prince, 325-28
in
The
3
1
7
1
401
Inde
Ibo dance (Haiti),
Kongo
2-1
1 1
and Classic Dance,
Institute of Folklore
116
Puerto Rican Culture, 187
Institute of
rite (Haiti), 111;
resemblance
Koregrafi (choreography),
Kumina,
Jacmel, 118
Laban, Rudolf von, 56, 60
merengue, 128
218, 250-51, 260, 273-74, 324, 332-35;
music industry dence
of, 82,
2 99>
class status in,
97-98;
100-101; indepen-
in,
101-2; tradition of dance
and vocabulary building
in, 81;
3°9>
96-97; growth of
in,
in dance,
87-92. 5ee also National Dance Theatre
Company Jarvis,
queraders, 200-201
with bomba, 184
St.
75;
in
Bahamas, 91, 273—
New Year's
Christmas and
Joseph, Firmin,
celebra-
Moko Jumbies in,
1
drums on
Lacroix, Luc, 121
Ladja (Martinique), 35, 239-40; Dunham's
Holy Saturday
film footage of, 309;
competition, 240; in L'Ag'Ya, 309-14,
La Fortune, Bravo, 322 See Ladja
319; Caribbean dances in, 309, 310; cosin,
310, 312-25,
319; form of narrative analyzed, 310—11;
meaning of l'ag'ya
273
273-75;
c.
Martinique, 235-36
317; Creole character of, 310; films of,
Croix, 206-7, ' n Trinidad Car-
Jonkonnu/Junkanoo:
tions,
describes dances,
tumes of John Pratt
Andrew, 341-43
on
P.:
238, 239; describes 17th
L'Ag'Ya (Katherine Dunham), 309-17,
Jazz: Latin, 45, 193; spirit of, connected
nival, 263,
calenda, 136
Labat, Father R.
L'ag'ya.
Jasperse, John, 322
Jigs:
35, 54, 86, 90, 102
317; and supernatural powers, 240
of Jamaica
Antonio: on bamboula, 209; on mas-
Jerrick,
1
Labat, Father Jean Baptiste, 127; describes
Jamaica, 12, 23, 30, 35, 81-94, 95 _1 °6>
ghetto conditions
1
Kriegsman, Alan, 94 Kuduru, 1
Iremes, 36-37
Jaleo: in
273-75
motifs
of,
in,
317;
movement
311-12, 314; music by Robert
Sanders, 310; program notes, 310; scene 1,
311-13; scene
31 1-14; scene
2,
St.
Croix, 199, in
Lakadri (Martinique), 226-27 Lastro, Geraldo, 66
Trinidad, 263
Juba (djouba), 144
Latin Empire, 165, 175
Juego de mam, 35
Latin
jazz, 45,
193
La Troupe Folklorique Nationale, La Troupe Makandal,
Kaiso, 90
Kalinda (Trinidad), 35, 136, 295, 298; jamettes involved
Kaseko (Suriname),
in,
259; at wakes, 259
24; derivation of
word, 54 1 1
.
See also Quizomba
Kongo, Kongo/Angola. See Congo,
Congo/Angola (Haiti),
and gwanbele in
rives
from
22; stages
Haiti,
Vodou
1
1
16-17
115, 118, 119-23; ar-
19; stages Rara,
121-
dances, 119—21
Lawrence, Monica, 92 Leaf, Earl, 318
(Angola),
Kongo dance
3,
311-17
19
Jouvert Qour Ouvert): in
Kizomba
of, to
lewoz of Guadeloupe, 237
Ibo Dancers of Haiti, 113,324
lisid
honor of Kongo
Legba Singers, 115-16 Lekis, Lisa, 318; 21 1-12;
12,35,91, 111-13; of Martinique, 236; deities,
1 1
on
historical quadrille,
on meaning of French Carib-
bean headdresses, 315 Lewis,
Gordon K: on
complexities ot
Mr-
gin Islands relationship with L^.S.A., 202
402
Index
•
Lewisohn, Florence: on the bamboula, 20H lewoz (gwoka)
Guadeloupe, 230, 242;
i>t
African descent
of,
236-37; implied
237; influence of qua-
cred functions
of,
drille on, 237;
resemblance
tian
sa-
of, to
I
[ai-
Kongo Vodou rhythms, 237 in,
Marley, Bob, 95, 102
Maroons:
of,
256; chart of
setting for wakes, 255; Christian con-
nections with, 252-53; exponents
of,
251, 254, 256; going under at waist level,
in
Santo Domingo,
native
name
with, 252-54, 260-
249-50, 254, 257-59;
movement described, 90, 256; and Skull of Death Mokojumbie, 282-83; theoof origin
Limon.Jose,
of,
Lindy hop, 101, 336, 338
Lizardo, Fradique, 84, 148-50; and na-
funerary dans lalinkle
headdresses
Masqueraders:
316; de-
of,
237-39; given
315; quadrilles of, 226-
of,
in
See also French Car-
Bahamas, 274;
Ni-Woman
African dance traditions (Yoruba)
340
on Guerra's Suite Yoruba, 62
of Destiny, 90;
115, 117
bamboula on
St.
Thomas, 209
Maziouk (mazouk, Creole mazurka), 23242-44; changed
young, 243;
among
in decline, 222;
demonstration
10
Mahler, Elfriede, 57, 66; and Danza Libra,
Islands,
Matthias, Clara Isabella Simmonds: revives
24, 227,
Grillo), 45, 172, 174,
in
m Virgin
described, 90
Mater Dolorosa,
18
Lovers rock, 95 Lucumi, 33, 37. See also Orichas; Santeria;
of,
the
Dunham
309; emblematic of
Martinique, 221; ingredient in L'Ag'Ya,
309-13, 315-16
Mazurka, 128, 167, 226, 294, 309; and Do-
Majumba, 309-10 Makuta,
15, 35
Mambo,
13, 23, 90, 129, 169; in Africa, 45;
minican mangulina, 142-43
difference between
Cuban and
interna-
tional, 44; in
Havana, 336-38; Kongo
meanings
336-40, 343-44;
Mexico
of,
(Jamaica), 90, 250-51, 260; in
movement
338-39;
laiti,
200-201, 204-6
Lopez, Orestes, 336-37
in,
I
30-36; calenda ticano and
Dunham's L'Ag'Ya, 309-19;
Barnett's
74;
Suriname,
to English to maintain slavery, 223;
Masumba
tional folkdance troupe, 148
1
31; in
239-40; dancehalls
Long, Richard, 85
iYIahi,
1
Trinidad, 259, 262-87;
Machito (Frank
299; in
Martinus, Frank, 293 stilt
dancers, 265
1
laiti,
ibbean
Liverpool, Hollis, 264; on Gagalo
Cuban
2
28; wealth of, 222.
250-57
56, 60, 181-82, 333
Louinis, Louines,
1
Djuba dance of
for
111; bele of, ladja of,
ries
y>; in
Martinique, 12, 18, 23, 35, 82, 309; alter-
picted in
of,
2
260, 293, 299; in Trinidad, 258
Kongo connections memories
322;
to Venezuela, 299; in
French Caribbean,
251, 256; in Jamaica, 250-51, 256, 260;
61;
As Seen With One Eye,
in
from Curacao
Jamaica, 90, 96, 250-51, 260, 299, 314;
Limbo, 90, 247-61; areas of popularity 257-59; breath control
Mangulina, 142 44
in
Lima,
Mambo Madness (film), 339; in City, 339-40; in New York City,
McBurnie, Beryl,
85, 216, 324;
and
Little
Carib Theatre, 84, 87 Mclntyre, Dianne, 102
McKayle, Donald, 32
1
Medina, Narciso, 78; and Gestos Transitorios, 74;
and Metamorfosis, 74-75
of couple leads to improvisation
Mendez, Alberto: on Ramiro Guerra, 56 Mento, 95
45, 337; turns
Merengue, 23-24,
340-44; origin of word, 336; separation
in,
on botecito, 337
44;
of, 44Winthrop Sargeant
86, 90, 141-47, 150-51,
173, 183, 190, 215, 294-95, 336; creole
Index
nature
of,
128-29; development of or-
chestrated variety 146; and
127-29, 141, 143,
in,
Dominican national
127-29, 151; jaleo
in,
identity,
128, 146-47; key
Nago: name dance for
Yoruba, 110;
in Haiti for
Ogun/Ogou
Nanigo. See Abakua; Iremes Narcisse, Andre, 117
146; off-beat phrasing in, 146; paseo in,
National Dance Theatre
Company of Ja-
maica, 82-94, 10 3> 332—33; choreogra-
128, 146; structure of, 146-47 tfpico (perico ripiao), 127-28,
difference from orchestrated
meringue, 147; instrumentation
phers
of,
founding
143-47, 150-51; current fashions in, 145;
deities, 110, 113,
120-21
musicians in orchestrated merengue,
Merengue
for,
92; core vocabulary of, 90-92;
school established, 82;
of, 82;
tours widely, 82; variety of repertory of,
87,89 Navarra, Gilda, 176-82; co-founder of Bal-
144-45
Meringue
(Haiti),
12,23
de San Juan, 176, 179; influenced by
lets
Pilar Lopez, 179; and mixture of idioms,
Mexico, 61, 63-64, 66, 131; Ballet Folklorico de Mexico, 216;
mambo
in,
339-40 Micler, Manolo: Baile de los Apalencados,
176, 179, 181; in 178;
New York in
Middle Passage,
19, 86, 230,
179; and Spanish dance, 178-79; and
and Teatro del Nino,
278
—works
Miller, Joan, 321
of:
1
78
Abelardo y Eloisa, 176;
Asfntota, 176; Atfbon, Ogu, Erzuli, 176,
Minshall, Peter, 262
La Cucarachita Martina,
Minuet, 32-33
182;
MockYen, Alma, 92
historia del soldado, 179-81;
Moiseyev, Igor, 324
Moko Jumbies,
271; clowns, 262, 271; early Trinidadian
dances
of,
266-69; movements and
263, 272-73, 278-83;
clature of, 266;
reappearance
on other
of, in
thing band, 262-64,
islands,
2 73'
Nettleford, Rex, 81-94, 102-3, 113, 166, 251, 332-33; redefines dance modes, 84
—works
of:
Blood
Canticles, 93; Bujurama,
332; Celebrations, 83; Drumscore, 332;
273-75;
Gerrehbenta, 91; Kumina, 332;
Some-
275—87;
stilts
262, 269-71; traditional costume of,
266-68, 271
Tintinabulum, 332-33
Neumann, David, 322
New York City:
Caribbean contribution to
vernacular dance
bean dance works
Monk, Meredith, 70
population
Montserrat, 216
dance and music
More, Beny, 339
tian
13
42; mulato composers of danza in
Puerto Rico, 167; mulato, in Cuba, 52; slave, in Virgin Islands, 201 di
spirits,
in,
in,
320-35; Caribbean
166, 320;
zumbi (Curacao), music of the 294
Myal, 102; ingredient
in
L'Ag'Ya, 309, 314
dance companies
mambo in,
in,
Dominican
149-50; Dominican
in,
York identity explored 1
Musicians: in Dominican Republic, 141-
Muzik
165-66, 172-73,
in,
175, 195-96, 322, 336, 339-44; Carib-
Mona, Eugene, 221
(Haiti),
La
nomen-
Port of Spain Carni-
269; in St. Croix, 199; and
Mousondi
178;
Ocho
Mujeres, 176; Tientos, 179
262-87; blue devils, 262,
Moko Jumbies,
of,
1940s,
pantomimic training with LeCoq,
Taller de Histriones, 176, 179, 181-82;
329
val,
403
•
in,
in,
152-61; Hai112, 118-23;
336, 339-44; origins of salsa
165, 172-73; Puerto Ricans in, 165-
66, 171-72, 195-9 6 3*li -
339-44
Nine-nights ceremonies, 95, 137-38, 247 Noriega, Elena, 57, 63-64, 66, 74 Novena (rezo) and banco (Villa Mella, D.R.), 138
1
4U4
Index
•
Emmanuel C,
Nunez, Lidice, 78
Paul,
Nyabinghi Groun'arion, 98—100; drums
lVmuuc.ll, Norwood, 3^4
of,
122
Pep6n Osorio,
Pepariin: Histories, 530;
98
Nzambi Mpungu, Bakongo supreme
being,
}
jo;
Merian Soto,
3
3 < >— 3
Perez, leresita, ^43
-53
Perez Prado, Damaso, 100, ^37-38 (
Peru
Chico, 45
)T'arrill,
ripiao.
i)
See Merengue
rfpi
54> 82,
l
Rap, 28, 103, 291
3°>
134, 143, 165-75, 176-82, 183-96, 236,
330-31; creolization
166-70, 172-73,
in,
54; distinguished
122; as
link with
165-66, 175, 195-96; hidden
in,
bomba, 168-70; and
in
influ-
ence of communications industries, 17172, 174; links with Caribbean,
Hispanic
gaga,
from Carnival bands;
Dominican gaga,
175; diaspora in U.S.A., 171-72, 175;
form
Cuban
Rara, 115, 121-22, 326; and
forging of identities through dance and
ritual
133, 140-41;
Vodou, 121, 140
Rasta, Rastafari, 92-93, 95-96, 98-100, 103, 218;
and censure of hip movement,
102
Rave dancing, 28
world, and U.S.A., 166-68, 170, 171-73,
Rebita, 18
175; links with Curasao, 299; 19th
Reggae, 24, 86, 90, 92, 95-96, 103, 173,
dance/music forms
c.
167-68; slaves
in,
in,
develop bomba, 168, 170, 187
Pukkumina,
405
Ragtime, 181
Pripri, 136, 141
Puente, Tito, 344
music
•
86, 90.
207, 211, 332; "rent-a-tile" dance to, 102; transition to, 102
See also Pocomania
Punto guajiro o campesino, 41, 53-54
Rejane (Martinique), 227
Requa, Barbara, 87, 92 Richards, Arlene, 92
Quadrille, 32-33, 86, 92, 141-42; and Bal
des Affranchis in Haiti, 113; in Jamaica, 88; in Virgin Islands, 200, 206-8, 1
—
5 (see also St.
in
210-
Croix in subentry below)
French Caribbean, 222, 224-29, 230,
231, 242-44; Creole identity leads to revival of, 242;
and creolization, 224-25,
229; in Guadeloupe, 226; influence
on
lewoz of Guadeloupe, 237; instrumentation in, 228; in Martinique, 226-28; and
slavery
—
and
social class,
223-26
masters role
groups 13;
in, 2 14;
in,
2 10;
on
214-
210; leaders and
and mimicry, 208,
movement in,
2
1
2-
plantations,
211-12; and playfulness, 214; resurgence of,
214; at
Quelbe
St.
Gerard's Hall, 210, 213-14
(fungi, scratch): in Virgin Islands,
200; instrumentation and bands, 207
seis,
172-73; notes African elements in
Rivera, Ismael, 171,
in Angola, 17-18.
1
74
Rivera, Sandra, 321
Rivero, Eduardo, 63, 66, 87; and Siilkari, 74;
and Teatro de
la
Danza
Robbins, Jerome, 60
Rocksteady, 92, 95, 101-2
Rodgers, Rod, 102 Rodriguez, Arsenio, 337 Rodriguez, Nereyda, 150
Rodriguez, Tito, 339 Roldan, Amadeo, 62 Roots: in Jamaica, 98-100
Rene V, 292, 295-99, 301
Rose, Bert, 87, 92
Roumain, Jacques, Patricia:
Rumba, 12-16,
See also
Kizomba
1
1
on Katherine Dunham, 307 23, 29, 47-51, 54, 62, 86,
90, 95, 129, 160—61, 169, 173, 295, 330,
338, 342; African languages
Rada, 36, 54, 86,
del Caribe,
74. 8 7
Rowe,
168
Quizomba:
on Anansi/Elegba, 279
Ring shout, 300
Rosalia,
Quintero-Rivera, Angel, 166-67; defines salsa,
275, 283, 285;
Ring games, 86
Roberts, John Storm, 248
in St. Croix, 210-15, 217; at balls, 15; floor
Richards, Francina Princesa, 263-64, 271,
1
10-12, 121, 234, 237; of
Dahomean and Yoruba also Vodou
origins,
1
10.
See
in,
48-49;
batarumba, 50; clave, 47-48; Columbia, 14,
49-50; confused with son, 51; con-
nections
of,
with Curacao, 296-97; foot
—
406
Index
•
Rumba
Sec also Lucumi; Orichas; Cuban Afri-
continued
patterns
in, 14,
48-49; guaguanco, 12-
16, 18, 49, 183, 242, 296; in,
improvisation
47; instrumentation in, 47-48; lyrics,
48, 50; rumberos, 48-49; used in pro-
moting Afro-Latin
identity,
50-51;
Santo Domingo: colony contredanse
of,
130-32,
and
142; occupation by
in,
independence from Haiti, i32;Taino areitos,
134-35
Sarabanda, 64
yambii, 14, 49, 296
Ruprecht, AJvina, 92-93; on Blood Canticles,
can dance traditions (Yoruba)
Sarambo, 136; relationship
of, to baile
de
palos, 142
93
Ryman, Cheryl,
87; listed core vocabulary
for
Jamaican and Caribbean dance, 90-
92;
on Egungun,
265, 268;
on moko-
Sarandunga, 139-40, 151 Savate: film footage of, 309
Schmiderer, Stephanie, 120
School of American Ballet
jumbie, 266
(New
York),
176, 178
Saba, 292 St.
Schottische, 86; in
Barthelemy, 222
Saint-Domingue,
30, 111;
contredanse
in,
Domingo, 132
St.
Thomas, 205-6
Scratchband (Virgin Islands), 206. See also
Quelbe
222
Saint-Juste, Serge, 113 St. Kitts,
Schulterbrandt, Eldra: organizes Carnival
on
142; differentiated from Santo
St. Eustatius,
Seis,
167-68, 173; aguinaldos (Christmas
songs), 168; improvised decima, 168
273
Saint-Lot, Emile, 113
Selassie, Haile, 98,
Saint-Lot, Paulette, 113, 119
Seu, 294
St.
Maarten, 292
St.
Martin, 222
Saint-Mery,
St.
Dominican Republic
(schotis), 143
Shango:
in Haiti,
90, 216, 260,
Moreau
de, 111, 136, 236; de-
1
283
10; in Trinidad, 54, 86,
280
Shawn, Ted, 59
scribes calenda, 15-16; describes chica,
Shouters (Spiritual Baptists), 260
16-17
Sica rhythmic
Vincent, 273
Salaam, Abdel, 323-24 Salsa, 12-15; 18-19, 2 4>
195-96, 207, 211, 215, 294, 330, 336; bridges social differences
among Puerto
Ricans, 174; complexity of music and of,
173;
Cuban
variants of, 45-46;
Quintero-Rivera on, 172-73; rhythms in,
13-15; romantic version
plified lyrics,
of,
with sim-
bomba, 189—90,
15, 29, 35, 49, 90, 129, 173,
Soca, 12, 54, 86, 207; in 1999 Carnival,
262
Something, 275-87; bandleader of (Francina Princesa Richards), 263-64, 271,
275; description of band (Watusi Carnival Cultural
Caravan), 275-87; meanings
evoked, 262-63,
name
of,
2 73>
275—87; pun on
275; and Trinidadian history,
275-87
174
Son
Salve: non-liturgical, 138
Samba,
in
Ska, 92, 101
_ 44 4^> 12 9> 146-
47, 160-61, 166, 171-74, 183, 190, 193,
dance
complex
'95
338
Samuel, Wilhelm: on Carnival, 206-7
((Aiba),
1
3,
23,
42-46, 50, 54, 86, 129,
143, 150, 172-74, 242; and
Bucna
Vista
Social Club, 46; clave, 42; instrumenta-
Sands, Rosita: onjunkanoo, 273-75
tion in, 42-44, 46; mixture of African
Sankeys: in Trinidad, 245
and European dance elements
Santeria, 37-41, 63, 65, 73, 76-77, 90, 295.
other countries, 42-43; possible origin
in,
43; in
2
3
407
Inde
of, in
Hispaniola, 143; regional variants
Mambo;
Tejeda, Dagoberto, 149
330-31; and Adal Maldonado, 330;
Thomas, Eddy, 92 Thompson, Clive, 92 Thompson, Montgomery, 216—17
Pelea de Gallos, 330-31; Revienta!, 330;
Thompson, Robert
43. See also Casino;
of,
Salsa
Soto, Merian, 330-31; and Terry Hollis,
Sacude, 330; and Stephanie Tooman,
3
330-31
41, 268, 272;
Farris,
277-78, 280,
36-44; in African Art in Motion, 4,
on Kongo cosmogony
7,
in
Soukous, 11,18
Flash of the Spirit, 252-54, 260-61; on
Steel band, 259
Kongo kundu, 256
Sterling, Awilda,
Ti
193-94
Ayrti,
123
Stines, L'Antoinette, 92
Tibaton (Battonie),
Stravinsky, Igor, 59, 179, 181
Timba, 28
Subidor: in bomba, 185-86, 189-95
Toe
Suriname, 260, 293, 295, 299
Tonel Lakay,
heel,
1
1
1
1
23
Tosh, Peter, 95 Taino: in Cuba, 29-30; on Hispaniola
Tresse Riban, 113, 133
bomba, 185
(Quisqueya), 113, 115, 130-32, 134-35,
Trickster image: in
147
Trinidad and Tobago, 12, 23, 35, 48, 54,
Taller de Histriones, 176, 179, 181-82
84-87, 90, 205, 216, 236, 242, 247-61,
Tamborito, 173
295, 298-99, 309, 324; African ethnic
Tambu
origins in, 264; Carnival in, 262-87;
—
in
Curacao, 48, 291-302; and banderas,
258-59, 285; connections
in,
with southern U.S.A., 248; Indian in-
brought to Venezuela, 299; dances, 297-
dentured laborers
98; developed during slavery, 293, 295;
fluence
as
form of resistance, 291-92, 301;
struments, 291, 296; of,
in-
Kongo etymology
of,
in,
in,
285-86;
Kongo
of,
in-
248, 260; mixed population
249, 258-59, 285; as originator of
Carnival, 203; significance of navel
in,
256; Spanish and French influence in,
295; Papiamentu's importance in,
291-92; proscription and regulation
of,
292, 295-96, 301-2; rhythms of, 296-
249, 252, 254;
submerged African
in funerary rites,
belief
247-61
98; ritual fights in, 298; ritual roots of,
Troupe Macaya,
292, 295, 297-98, 300-302; singing style
Tudor, Antony, 178; Pillar of Fire, 178-79
of,
291, 296, 298; traveling, 299-300;
women's
—
Chinese
300-301; brought to Puerto Rico, 299;
301-2
role in,
Tumba Tumba
Tanztheater, 74, 322
Tumbao, 168
Tap dance, Teatro de
90
Danza
del Caribe,
77;
75-76; combinations
in, 74,
Cunningham and Graham
76-
influence
on, 74, 76-77; Guerra and creation of, 57, 63-64, 73; musical for,
accompaniment
76-77; Yoruba influence on, 74,
76-77
dominicana, 142 francesa, 33, 54, 71, 142
74
Tecnica cubana, 73—78; center barre exercises in,
295; evolved
Twist, 101, 343
184, 322
la
16
Tumba, 294-95; in Curacao, from tambu, 294
Tango, 90, 129, 181, 221, 295, 338, 343
in Jamaica,
1
Vallenato, 144, 173
Van den Berg,
Atti,
216
Vasquez, Anibal, 340-42 Vasquez, Manolo, 75, 77 Vega-Drouet, Hector: defines ceremonial elements of bomba, 168; traces to Ashanti court,
1
86
bomba
1
408
1
Index
•
Vdacioius (Dominican Republic),
Wilson,
131,
Venezuela, 61, 131, 258, 294;
roons
in,
299; indigenous
Ma-
luracaon
(
luracaons sent
(
292; settlers from, in Trinidad, 277
to,
identities in, 202-3;
on
St.
bomba,
1
Vodou,
1;
?;
1
of,
quadrille
3;
quelbe music
of,
communica-
on identity
in, 2
in,
215; oriin,
207-
and
in tolkloric 12; in
performance,
1
rite,
111; loas, 110-13;
14-23; Ibo
1
m modern
dance
works, 113, 323-29; poto-mitan, 110, 120; sequence of Port-au-Prince dance, at
American
Museum
Natural History, 324; temples
of
of,
loas (lwas):
Huedo, 1
17,
324;
work
of, in
I
116-17
Iaiti,
300 Wilson, Tony, 92 W'ining, 12, 23, 54; in Curacao's rumba,
(Suriname), 295
323-24; Erzulie, 325-27; Guede/
deities, 110,
1
20-2 1
of manf sessions,
1
(Haiti),
1
;
10;
Vodu, Dominican Republic,
"Voodoo" show
Yambu. See under Rumba Yanvalou, 1
1 1
1
and Baron Zaka,
1
1
and Legend of Marie Le
eau,
French Caribbean, 224, 228; 10; in
Life
r
\
323-24
Yoruba: in Cuba, 37-38, 61, 86, 169;
in
in Haiti,
Jamaica, 102; in Trinidad, 260,
264, 277-80; in Virgin Islands, 213. See
masquerade
traditions;
Cuban
African dance
traditions (Yoruba)
Young-Hinds, Adjoa,
2
17
Yowa, 52-53; chart, 253 Yuba rhythmic complex
in
bomba, 189-90,
195
Yuka,
15,
Zapateo,
120-21
18,
Mistress,
The
18-19, 35' 49> 54
36; popular-
50-5 1
The Golden
1-13; in
17-18; in Lamharena, 323; in
Santerfa; Shango;
111; Aida
Damballah/Danbala, 111,
Samedi, 327; Shango,
ity
18, 333;
also African
Agwe,
Cede, 6-7, 112, 121, 323, 327; Guede Zarenyen, iio;Legba, 1 15, 279; Ogun/
Ogou
?
1
109-
10; videos of, 4, 7
Vodou
14
Wilson, Reggie, 299-300, 321; on tambu,
Wind
Jamaican dance, 90; Kongo
rite,
show
2
109-13; in Dominican Re-
public, 133, 140; Flag Corps, 121, 234;
121;
Williams, Curtis,
Croix, 200, 204
Africanist aesthetic concepts, 4-10; of,
Welsh-Asante, Kariamu, 4
295; in Curacao's tambu, 300; in St.
207, 215
54, 86, 90, 93, 132, 237;
dances
describes dance formations,
W'illiams-Varborougli, Lavinia, B7, 113,
influence of, on
186; influence of
gins of slaves
dance
Croix, 215-17; history
201-2, 204-5, 212_1
tions industries
[.:
I
Wigman, Mary, 84
212-14; conflict between U.S. and
training
8; 2
208-
in,
199-201, 203-7; and
10; carnivals in,
der Something
Weeks, J.
Weidman, Charles, K4
Virgin Islands, 199-218; bamboula
Caribbean
207
A-on.i,
229, 238
Verchinina, Nin.i, 60
class,
I
Watusi Carnival Cultural Caravan. See un-
135-36, 141
used
17; in
Cuba,
in, 53; in
30, 53; chancletas
Dominican Republic, 142
Zarenyen dance, 110, 113
W ailer,
Bunny, 95 Walcott, Derek, 93
Zepaules, 6
\\ alker, Sheila,
Zouk (French Caribbean),
Waltz
Zollar,
4
(valsc), 51, toi, 128,
141-42, 144,
167, 181, 226, 237; Creole, 221-22,
243-
Jawole Willajo, 321 24, 86,
and age differences, 242-43; 1
1;
in
242-44; Angola,
and beguine, 242; and Crcolite,
44; Curacao, 294; in Haitian contreilanse,
243; as new genre, 24:; subcategories,
88; at Virgin Islands balls,
242
2
15
Susanna Sloat consultant in
is
a writer, editor, and arts
New York City. She has
writ-
ten extensively on modern, postmodern,
and many forms of ethnic dance associate editor of Attitude
as
an
— The Dancers'
Magazine.
Front: Top,
Gwoup Matjoukan (Matjoukan Group)
Martinique, Bidjin Bele,
first quadrille,
from
of
over-
head. Bottom, Belia, salute to the drum, in
Martinique. Photographs: Dominique Cyrille. Used
by permission of Dominique
Cyrille,
Bronx, N.Y.
Back: Top, Merengue tipico or perico ripiao danced in
Santa Maria, province of San Cristobal,
during the Cuaresma Chiquita,
drum Davis.
is
at a fiesta
May 2000. The
the tambora. Photograph: Martha Ellen
Used by permission of Martha
Ellen Davis,
Gainesville, Florida.
Thomas Osha Pinnock, choreographer and Make a Joyful Noise, 1980. Photo by Otto Used by permission of Thomas Osha Pinnock.
Bottom,
dancer, in
Berk.
Spine, Josefina
Baez in Dominicanish. Used by
mission of Josefina Baez.
University Press of Florida 15
Northwest 15th Street
per-
"A wonderful and unique comparative examination of both the diversity and commonality
of Caribbean dance forms. see Caribbean dance in complexity."
— Sheila
S.
all
.
.
.
Allows one
to
of its exuberant
Walker, director of
the Center for African and African-American Studies, University of Texas
"A tour-de-force anthology in a Creole mode.
Shaped by committed and this
volume
articulate voices,
reveals the complexities
power of Caribbean dance aesthetic, historical,
and
in
its
and
multiple
cultural currents."
—Joan D. Frosch, University of Florida
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF FLORIDA ISBN O-813O-2549-4
780813"025490"