Bomba
http://www.antillania.com/Puerto_Rican_Folk_Music.htm
ensembles usually feature three
differently pitched drums made from rum barrels, and a single maraca. Two
kinds of calls and responses alternate: The singer and chorus respond
alternatively to one another, and the high-pitched drum, buliador,
alternates with the dancer. Drummer and dancer talk, tease, and challenge
each other in their unique language, and when performed well, come
together in a sensual duel.
The bomba is associated with the Northern
area of the island around the city of San Juan. The bomba seems to have
fewer clear Spanish elements in it than the 'plena' and would seem to be
the outcome of cultural expression of a people who knew the African
rhythmic tradition but who now had to use Spanish as a common language.
The pattern as well as the drums used traditionally to perform it are
known as bomba. In addition to these drums some players beat on the side
of the drums with small sticks to create a secondary pattern and maracas,
or rattles are also employed. Originally performed by singers to the
accompaniment of these drums and maracas, the bomba, like the 'plena' has
gradually become adapted to the popular dance style of Puerto Rico and its
rhythm serves as the basis for new compositions using the 'bomba' rhythm
as a basis.
Bomba
www.nyunews.com/news/2004/03/02/UndefinedSection/Bomba.Capoeira.And.BBoying-2390285.shtmlBomba is an Afro-Puerto Rican music and dance form that
dates back to the 17th century. Puerto Rico is the smallest of the
Greater Antilles islands in the Caribbean. It shares with the rest of
the region a colonial history marked by slavery and the production of
sugar, tobacco and coffee. Many of the slaves brought to Puerto Rico to
work in the plantations during the slave trade came from West and
Central Africa, particularly from the Bakongo nations. Popular music
and dances, especially those developed along the sugarcane fields in
coastal areas, were highly influenced by African traditions, religious
beliefs and expressive forms.
Slaves also came from the French,
Dutch and Danish Antilles as part of the slave trade, and freed or
runaway slaves also migrated there. These coastal areas became cultural
melting pots where people from African, Spanish and European ancestries
influenced each other in their singing, dancing and drumming. This is
the cultural setting where bomba developed. Because of the cultural
juxtapositions of the time, it is common to hear "families" of bomba
rhythms in other parts of the Caribbean. Slave owners allowed bomba
playing and dancing, probably because they felt it served as
entertainment.
Yet it also provided a space where the slaves
could communicate safely with each other, maintain cultural and
religious traditions and it sometimes served as a planning arena for
subversive action. In the 1950s, Ismael Rivera and Rafael Cortijo
popularized bomba rhythms in the United States. Bomba became an
official folk music and dance form. A number of families, like the
Cepedas in Santurce and the Ayalas in Loiza, have kept the tradition
throughout the years, teaching and performing. Bomba is still danced in
community settings in Loiza during the Fiestas de Santiago Apostol.
Since the 1990s, bombazos have been organized both in Puerto Rico and
New York City. The dance form is characterized by a rhythmic dialogue
where the dancer, who is improvising, executes steps that the lead
drummer must try to match simultaneously.