The Caribbean
- Related Topics:
- tango
- juego de los voladores
- samba
- rumba
- conga
Cuba
During the colonial period, Spanish ships stopped in Havana to have their cargoes inventoried and taxed. The ships then sailed to their final destinations of Buenos Aires, San Juan (Puerto Rico), and other ports. When they returned to Spain, they would stop again in Cuba for inspections and taxation. Consequently, Cuba’s developing dances, such as the closed-position habanera (with its steps on counts “1, 2, and,” to a 2/4rhythm), were as well known in Montevideo, Uruguay, as they were in Havana. In the 19th and 20th centuries Cuba’s habanera, danzón, son (not to be confused with the Mexican son), cha-cha-chá, and mambo would continue the island’s influence on dance throughout Latin America.
The first Cuban danzón is credited to Cuban cornet player Miguel Faílde, who composed “Las Alturas de Simpson” (1879; “Simpson Heights”). Faílde, born of a Spanish father and a mother of mixed African-European descent, began his musical career playing for bailes de color (dances for people of colour). His music quickly gained popularity with middle-class Criollos (Creoles), the Cubans of European descent who had fought alongside Black Cubans during the war of independence against Spain (1868–78). The Creoles hungered for subtle statements of rebellion against the Spanish, some of which they made by adopting Black-infused Cuban music and dance forms. Artistically, danzón marked a separation from colonial domination and the emergence of an independent Cuba.
At the turn of the 20th century, the danzón was a model for organizing and patterning social behaviour on the dance floor. Although social dancers of the Americas were familiar with the closed-partner position of the waltz, polka, and schottische, the danzón allowed couples to dance even more closely together, thereby directing the movement toward fluid and soft sways. The closeness of partners in the ballroom position, the swaying hips, and the minimal use of floor space created the danzón’s characteristic look: a couple would be no more than 4 inches (about 10 cm) apart, dance on a single floor tile (ladrillo), and slide the entire foot on the floor for a small step (about 2 inches [5 cm]). The dance structure alternated between the basic step and paseos or descansos (rests), which allowed the dancers a moment to stop, listen to the orchestra, converse, and watch others at the gathering.
The Cuban danzón of the 1890s was refashioned into the Cuban son of the 1920s by the incorporation of more Afro-Cuban dance elements—such as hip isolation, the tornillo (a man’s pivot on a single foot as he fully flexes the support leg)—and the discarding the descanso. The mambo was made popular by the Cuban musician Pérez Prado and developed in the 1940s as a marriage between son and swing. The cha-cha-chá replaced the mambo in the 1950s as a spin-off from the son characterized by the rhythmic pattern marked by the feet and counted “1, 2, 3, 4-and-1.” In the 1980s the son casino burst onto Havana dance floors and took over beach parking lots. Casino was faster in pace and was characterized by multiple turning figures. It is clearly related to New York salsa, though sources vary on which dance was a response to the other. Casino rueda developed from casino and placed couples in a circle; typically, the dance’s choreographies moved the women counterclockwise and the men clockwise as they switched partners.
Salsa—characterized by vibrant, energetic hip swinging inflamed by an intense beat—coalesced in the 1960s as a blending of Cuban mambo and Latin jazz infused with choreographic and stylistic imprints from Puerto Ricans living in New York City. In Colombia and Venezuela salsa gave expression and identity to the marginalized barrios of urban centres. Salsa dancers constantly manipulate and vary steps to create new ones, and competition becomes part of the fun. Salsa has broken the barriers of ethnicity and class to become the epitome of Latino pride and sentiment. By the 21st century, salsa was considered a world beat, a variety of music and dance performed throughout the world.
The son had been the national dance of Cuba before the Cuban Revolution (1959), but the Fidel Castro administration designated the rumba as the country’s official dance because it emphasizes Cuba’s African heritage. Rumba has three distinct forms: yambú, guaguancó, and columbia. Before the dance section of each form, a diana, or sung prelude, establishes the mood: romantic, erotic, or competitive. Yambú is a dance in which a single couple slowly and respectfully dances within a circle created by the conga drummers, singers, waiting dancers, and spectators. The partners seldom touch, except when the man moves to the side of the woman and places his hand on her shoulder; they gracefully lower themselves almost to the floor and then come back up. Guaguancó places the man and woman in opposition, as they circle each other in symbolic sexual play. The dance is characterized by the vacunao, a hip-thrusting gesture by the man toward his partner; to avoid his advances, the woman must immediately turn away from him or use her skirts to cover her pelvic area. The columbia is a dance for men who individually enter the circle and compete against each other. They may use candles balanced on their heads, carry knives that they move around their bodies, or place on the floor items such as bottles or hats, around which they perform acrobatic movements. Both the columbia and the yambú allow for the possibility of mimetic movements, such as flying a kite, playing baseball, or scrubbing the floor. As a popular dance, the rumba establishes an ambience of play, competition, and kinetic beauty.
Afro-Cuban ritual dances form a huge group of Cuban dances and reflect the four main groups of Africans that were transported to Cuba: the Kongo-Angola of west-central Africa, Arará (as they are known in Cuba, descendants of Fon and other ethnic groups from what are now Benin and Togo), Yoruba (largely from Nigeria), and Carabalí (as they are known in Cuba, from the Calabar River regions of Cameroon and Nigeria). The best-known dances are attached to the Yoruba-based Afro-Cuban religion of Santería, or La Religión Lucumí. Santería is a syncretic interlacing of intra-African and Roman Catholic–African belief systems and religious practices. Both men and women sing and dance, but only men traditionally play the sacred batá drums that accompany the rituals. The percussive rhythms, songs, and dances of Santería are meant to please the orishas (deities) and to persuade them to join the celebration; their acceptance is signaled by their manifestation within the dancers’ bodies, what participants often describe as possession. Possession is signaled when a dancer abruptly breaks from the basic repetitious dance step, pitches forward or shakes, and then begins the distinct movements that characterize the orisha. For instance, Yemanya (whose name has several variant spellings) is the orisha of the ocean; when a female dancer experiences possession, she may lift her skirts and move them in a way that suggests the swells of an ocean wave. Transformation through dancing in pursuit of spiritual communication is also found in Haitian Vodou and Brazilian Candomblé (discussed further in the Haiti and Brazil sections below).
Cuba’s many other dance celebrations include a summer festival in the city of Santiago de Cuba at the end of each July. This event began as the feast of the city’s patron saint (Santiago, or St. James) on July 25. (In 1953 Fidel Castro chose the celebration of the extended festival to camouflage his assault on a military garrison in Santiago, an event commemorated in the name of the 26th of July Movement.) The festival also coincided with the traditional end of the sugarcane harvest. At this event it is possible to view traditional Carnival dances, such as conga and chancletas (“sandals”), which originated in the colonial period. Conga is an upbeat walking dance that accents the fourth beat of the measure as the dancers (solo or in groups) wind through the streets. In formal parade units, simple conga choreographies give form and shape to the dance, but the essence of the dance is most evident in the spontaneous crowd dancing along with the musicians through the streets. Chancletas uses a specific form of wooden shoe that accentuates or embellishes the music with rhythmic footwork under loose and swiveling hips. As with conga, it is the relaxed and spontaneous meandering that defines this dance.
Also, the African religious cofradías (confraternities), known as cabildos in Cuba, were allowed to parade on January 6, Día de los Tres Reyes (Three Kings’ Day), and during Carnival. In socialist Cuba many of the rituals of the Roman Catholic Church were eliminated or secularized; Carnival was separated from Lent and moved to July in Havana, for example. Yet the explosive joy that results from taking a break from work and dancing in the streets at night has remained central to the celebrations.
Puerto Rico
Spain’s seguidilla, fandango, and contradanza all helped to shape the early folk forms of Puerto Rican rural, or jíbaro, culture, which developed in the central mountainous areas of the island. In the south the elegant danza was born in Ponce during the second half of the 19th century. Danza was the first national music and dance genre of Puerto Rico, and, like the Cuban danzón, it was a subtle expression of opposition to Spanish rule. As mentioned above, the closed position of couples in the ballroom dance flouted the Spanish traditions of female chastity and proper decorum. Lyrics to the danzas were often used to awake nationalist feelings in the populace.
Danza begins with a paseo, or slow promenade of the dance space, with the couples holding hands or linking arms. In the danza of colonial times, women carried fans, which they might gracefully flutter during a promenade. There was also a series of messages they could convey to their partner or to a suitor watching from the sidelines: a closed fan dangling over the left arm meant “Someone is watching”; a fan held near the heart meant “You have my heart.” The opening musical theme for the paseo was repeated until the dancers had completed one circuit of the ballroom. The musicians then shifted to the section known as “merengue” (not to be confused with the merengue of the Dominican Republic, discussed below), for which couples assumed closed ballroom position and danced a stately four-beat, slow-quick-quick pattern until the end of the music. The steps were small, and the dancers’ feet slid along the floor as the couple gradually pivoted.
Puerto Rico’s cultural distinctiveness developed in part from its agricultural economy based on sugarcane, coffee, and tobacco. The Black labourers, slave and free, who worked on these plantations created the bomba in the 18th century as their primary social dance; it spread throughout the island to diverse groups. The bomba resembles the Cuban rumba in its spatial pattern. The dancers create a circle that includes at least two drummers, a palitos (small sticks) player, maraca players, and singers. Bomba begins with a solo voice singing a phrase to which the chorus, supported by the musicians, responds (in a pattern known as call and response). A single dancer (or a couple) enters the circle and begins the dance with a paseo of the inside circumference. Next the dancer approaches the drummers and salutes to express respect. From this point, the dancer improvises piquetes (accents) to challenge or converse with the subidor (high-pitched drum). The more equally matched in skill that the drummer and dancer are, the more intricate and satisfying the bomba will be. The spectators add their voices to the chorus and wait their turn to enter as dancers. In many respects the bomba is similar to the Cuban columbia, except that the bomba is danced by both men and women, and dancers face the subidor with which they are conversing.
Various bomba rhythms, verse structures, and intensities guide the dancers in movements and attitudes, such as yubá, sicá, and holandés. Each rhythm calls for a different attitude: regal, playful, aggressive, respectful, and so on. Broadly speaking, distinctive bomba styles have developed in various parts of the island: Ponce in the south, Mayagüez in the west, Loíza in the north, and Santurce between Loíza and San Juan. The Ponce style blends Spanish and African elements. The female dancer wears a long, ruffled skirt and heeled shoes reminiscent of European dress, but her head is wrapped in a scarf, an African adornment. The male dancer is dressed in slacks and a long-sleeved shirt. In posture both dancers use a lifted torso, and the man dances stiffly, as if imitating a Spanish military officer or someone from upper-class Spanish or Creole society. The Santurce style is similar to Ponce’s. The man lifts his torso and keeps his arms rather stiff. He dances with sharp shifts of weight and produces accents with his legs. The woman wears a head scarf and a wide ruffled skirt over a starched white petticoat. She holds the ends of her skirts to signal the drummer and embellishes her dance with quick flicks, snaps, and repeated arcs of the material.
The Loíza style of bomba has more African-based movements; the dancers employ isolations of the hip and shoulders (i.e., movement of those parts alone), flexible torsos, and greater use of improvised steps and body shifts. Bomba dancing is the main attraction during Loíza’s festival of Santiago in mid-July. Accompanying the street processions centred on three images of the saint are open trucks with orchestras playing waltzes and danzas; some people ride horses along the route. The bomba musicians set up in vacant lots or in townspeople’s front yards. As the community procession moves through the streets, anyone can stop and dance with the drummers. Included in the crowd and dance circle are the four traditional festival figures: the vejigante (masked trickster, a symbol of Africa), the caballero (horseman, a symbol of Spain), the viejo (one who wears rags, symbol of the common man), and the loca (men dressed as women who traditionally swept filth from the streets).
The Puerto Rican musical genre of the plena may be danced, but it is more important for its lyrics, which have dealt with contemporary events since the end of the 19th century. The basic step is a side-to-side, step-touch movement with subtle motion through the rib cage and shoulders. Panderos (tambourines), drums, güiros (scrapers), guitars (especially the type of guitar known as the cuatro), and accordions give the music its characteristic sound and buoyancy. In the early 21st century it was done as a couple dance, but older practitioners often dance apart.
Dominican Republic and Haiti
The island of Hispaniola, of which the Dominican Republic now forms the eastern two-thirds and the Republic of Haiti occupies the rest, has a turbulent history that is reflected in 21st-century cultures. Christopher Columbus landed on Hispaniola in 1492. The Taino who were established on the island resisted Spanish incursions, but it did not take long for their numbers to be decimated through disease and the effects of forced labour. The first permanent European settlement in the New World was Spain’s Santo Domingo (1496), which became the capital of the Dominican Republic. Mines and plantations were established, and slaves were imported. In 1697 the French obtained the western third of the island, which they at first called Saint-Domingue; that colony, based on sugar plantations worked by slaves, prospered through the 18th century, while its Spanish neighbour suffered from an early loss of European attention. From 1795, when Spain ceded that part of the island (named Haiti, which became independent in 1804) to France, until 1844, when the Dominican Republic gained its independence, turmoil was constant. Upon independence the Spanish-speaking Dominicans worked immediately to attempt to eliminate Haitian (and by extension African) cultural influences. Although the elite may have been able to cling to their Spanishness, in fact much of the population was of African or mixed descent. An early Dominican dance, the baile de palo (“long-drum dance”) is an African-derived couple dance that is based on death rituals in which the spirit of the deceased entered an heir and danced.
In contrast, Haiti retained an abundance of African-based religions, which after the Haitian Revolution (1791–1804) coalesced under the collective term of Vodou. Transcendence through the dance, including trance states, was a way to release anxiety and tension from a life of near destitution. Devotees were organized into “nations,” which were based loosely on African ethnic groups. From the time of slavery through the present day, through crises of poverty and political turmoil, Haitians have found healing, release, and diversion in the Vodou nation dances of Rada, Congo, Petwo, and others; the folk dances of affranchi (“freed slaves”); and the ceremonial parading dances of rara. The heritage of European dance is retained in dances such as the Congo minuet and contredanse. Many such dances were exported to other parts of the Caribbean by Haitian exiles, both Black and white, during the Haitian Revolution.
For all their differences and conflicted past, both countries claimed the same national dance: mereng in Haiti and merengue in the Dominican Republic. The dance arose during the Haitian occupation of the Dominican Republic (1822–44). After their country broke away, Dominican musicians distanced themselves from Haitian roots by increasing merengue’s tempo and using the major mode rather than minor in their music. Like other closed-couple dances, the merengue was branded as obscene, and dancers were punished if they were caught. By the early 20th century the dance had been structured into three distinct sections: an opening paseo of 8 measures, the merengue proper of 16 measures, and a final section of jaleo that allowed improvisation and stronger rhythms. The merengue experienced a surge in popularity from 1916 to 1924—during the U.S. occupation—when Dominicans adopted it as a symbol of pride and resistance to outsiders. In the 1930s the dance structure was simplified to a one-step, also called a walking step, which allowed everyone to dance regardless of skill.