Recordings of Latin American Songs and Dances
Author : Gustavo Durán
Publisher :
Page : 84 pages
File Size : 35,6 MB
Release : 1942
Category : Folk music
ISBN :
Author : Gustavo Durán
Publisher :
Page : 84 pages
File Size : 35,6 MB
Release : 1942
Category : Folk music
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 16 pages
File Size : 26,58 MB
Release : 1953
Category :
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 92 pages
File Size : 33,84 MB
Release : 1950
Category : Folk music
ISBN :
Author : Gustavo Durán
Publisher : Washington, D.C. : Division of Music and Visual Arts, Department of Cultural Affairs, Pan American Union
Page : 122 pages
File Size : 16,40 MB
Release : 1950
Category : Dance
ISBN :
Author : Pan American Union
Publisher :
Page : 174 pages
File Size : 21,12 MB
Release : 1942
Category : Music
ISBN :
Author : United States. Office of Education
Publisher :
Page : 182 pages
File Size : 39,88 MB
Release : 1943
Category : Education
ISBN :
Author : Pablo Palomino
Publisher :
Page : 273 pages
File Size : 10,9 MB
Release : 2020
Category : Art
ISBN : 0190687401
The ethnically and geographically heterogeneous countries that comprise Latin America have each produced music in unique styles and genres - but how and why have these disparate musical streams come to fall under the single category of "Latin American music"? Reconstructing how this category came to be, author Pablo Palomino tells the dynamic history of the modernization of musical practices in Latin America. He focuses on the intellectual, commercial, musicological, and diplomatic actors that spurred these changes in the region between the 1920s and the 1960s, offering a transnational story based on primary sources from countries in and outside of Latin America. The Invention of Latin American Music portrays music as the field where, for the first time, the cultural idea of Latin America disseminated through and beyond the region, connecting the culture and music of the region to the wider, global culture, promoting the now-established notion of Latin America as a single musical market. Palomino explores multiple interconnected narratives throughout, pairing popular and specialist traveling musicians, commercial investments and repertoires, unionization and musicology, and music pedagogy and Pan American diplomacy. Uncovering remarkable transnational networks far from a Western cultural center, The Invention of Latin American Music firmly asserts that the democratic legitimacy and massive reach of Latin American identity and modernization explain the spread and success of Latin American music.
Author : Kuss, Malena
Publisher : University of Texas Press
Page : 572 pages
File Size : 29,36 MB
Release :
Category : Music
ISBN : 9780292784987
The music of the peoples of South and Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean is treated with unprecedented breadth in this multi-volume work. Taking a sociocultural and human-centered approach, Music in Latin America and the Caribbean gathers the best scholarship from writers all over the world to cover in depth the musical legacies of indigenous peoples, creoles, African descendants, Iberian colonizers, and other immigrant groups that met and mixed in the New World. From these texts, music emerges as the powerful tool that negotiates identities, enacts resistance, performs beliefs, and challenges received aesthetics. More than two decades in the making, this work privileges the perspectives of cultural insiders and emphasizes the role that music plays in human life. Volume 2, Performing the Caribbean Experience, focuses on the reconfiguration of this complex soundscape after the Conquest and on the strategies by which groups from distant worlds reconstructed traditions, assigning new meanings to fragments of memory and welding a fascinating variety of unique Creole cultures. Shaped by an enduring African presence and the experience of slavery and colonization by the Spanish, French, British, and Dutch, peoples of the Caribbean islands and circum-Caribbean territories resorted to the power of music to mirror their history, assert identity, gain freedom, and transcend their experience in lasting musical messages. Essays on pan-Caribbean themes, surveys of traditions, and riveting personal accounts capture the essence of pluralistic and spiritualized brands of creativity through the voices of an unprecedented number of Caribbean authors, including a representative contingent of distinguished Cuban scholars whose work is being published in English translation for the first time in this book. Two CDs with 52 recorded examples illustrate the contributions to this volume.
Author : Gilbert Chase
Publisher :
Page : 302 pages
File Size : 11,52 MB
Release : 1945
Category : Music
ISBN :
Author : Walter Aaron Clark
Publisher : Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Page : 523 pages
File Size : 34,34 MB
Release : 2019-06-20
Category : Music
ISBN : 1527536254
Transatlantic Malagueñas and Zapateados is an exploration of two fandango dances, recording the circulations of people, imagery, music, and dance across what were once the Spanish and Portuguese Empires. Although these dance-musics seem to be mirror images, the unbreachable space between them reflects the political fault-lines along which nineteenth-century musical populism and folkloric nationalism extend into present-day debates about globalization, immigration, neoliberalism, and neofascism. If malagueñas are a fantastic incarnation of Spanishness, caught like a fly in amber by their anachronistic references to a fraught imperial past, noisy and raucous zapateado dances cut toward the future. Inherently marked by European conventions of zapatos (shoes), zapateados are nonetheless shaped by Africanist and Native American footwork traditions. In these Afro-Indigenous mestizajes, not only are European aesthetic values reordered and resignified, but the Catholic catechism which indoctrinated the New World yields to alternate spiritual systems springing out of a culture of resistance to European domination.