Encyclopedia of Latin American Popular Music

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Encyclopedia of Latin American Popular Music Page 11

by George Torres


  latter type of song that had the greater affect on the bolero, with musical traits

  that include tonal harmonies, a melodic style that emphasizes a strong and clear

  technique, and a strong emphasis on vocal tone production. Influential songs that

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  Bolero

  employed this style include “La Paloma,” “La golondrina,” and “Estrellita” by

  Manuel Ponce.

  The first signs of the bolero in Mexico come from the period just after the Rev-

  olution when songs such as “Estrellita” were most popular among their listeners.

  Through a musical connection between Cuba and the Yucatan Peninsula in Mex-

  ico, traveling Cuban troupes did much to introduce regional Mexican audiences to

  emerging genres such as the bolero. The most important exponent of this Yucatan

  school of bolero composition was Guty Cardenas from Mérida. Using Yucatan as

  an entry point, the bolero spread throughout the rest of Mexico.

  The period from the 1930s to about 1960 marks the era known as the “ epoca de

  oro ” (golden age) of the bolero. Beginning with the works of Agustín Lara and ending with the performances and recording of tríos romantícos like Trio Los

  Panchos, the bolero in this era went through a kind of urbanization and crystalli-

  zation that changed it from a rural sound to a more urban popular style. This was

  largely due to the influence of Agustin Lara, whose style of writing, using modern

  melodic and harmonic formulas as well as smoothing out rhythmic features, made

  an everlasting change in bolero style.

  After Lara, the most strongly felt changes in bolero performance lie in the hands of

  the Mexican tríos romantícos, which were a product of the Cuban and Mexican duos

  and trios that had existed in the period just prior, including Los Hermanos Martinez

  Trio Los Panchos

  Trio Los Panchos was comprised of singer-guitarists from Mexico who from

  1944 to 1981 were the foremost exponents of the trío romántico and its

  musical speciality, bolero. The original group consisted of Alfredo Gil (1915–

  1999), Chucho Navarro (1913–1993), and Hernando Aviles (1914–1986), the

  latter performing the role of lead vocalist.

  At their peak, Los Panchos were the most popular musical ensemble in

  Latin America, but they also toured successfully in Europe, Asia, North Africa,

  and North America. In Japan they sold records by the thousands, eventually

  recording six records in Japanese. Los Panchos recorded some 2,500 songs on

  250 albums. They also collaborated with solo singers such as Javier Solis and

  American pop chanteuse Edyie Gormé. The latter collaboration, Canta en Es-

  pañol yielded Los Panchos one of their biggest selling albums, and the recording

  of “Sabor a mi” became a favorite among Hispanic Americans in the United

  States. Los Panchos performed with different lead vocalists until 1981 when

  Gil offi cially retired. Navarro continued to perform until his death in 1993.

  Bolero

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  Further Reading

  Torres, George. “The Bolero Romántico: From Cuban Dance to International

  Popular Song.” In From Tejano to Tango: Essays on Latin American Popular

  Music, edited by Walter A. Clark, 151–71. New York: Garland, 2002.

  George Torres

  Gil and Trio Calaveras. But it was Trio Los Panchos who had the greatest influence

  on the tríos romantíco. Los Panchos, whose debut was at the Teatro Hispano in New

  York in 1944, consisted of three singers, all who accompanied themselves on guitar

  and sang in a high, sweet sounding, three-part harmony. By 1945, Alfredo Gil added a

  new sound to the group by incorporating his newly invented requinto (a small soprano

  guitar) with which he played florid introductions and interludes between the verses

  giving the trio its characteristic instrumental sound. Coupled with a rhythm section on

  recording and live performances, the sound of Trio Los Panchos was at once melodi-

  cally and harmonically sophisticated, with a subtle, underlying Afro-Cuban rhythm.

  Los Panchos’s unique blend of instruments, rhythms, and harmonies would be emu-

  lated by other trios for the next 15 years, and their special sound would become pop-

  ular all over the world. Alfredo Gil, Chucho Navarro, and Hernando Avilés formed

  Los Panchos in New York City after coming to the United States to complete a radio

  contract. In their long career, the group toured extensively throughout the world in the

  years that followed, eventually recording songs in Greek and Japanese.

  The themes in bolero poetry often deal with themes of bittersweet, unrequited,

  betrayed, or eternal love. Although often categorized as sentimental or corny, bo-

  lero poetry has earned the respect of poets and musicians in Latin America. Indeed,

  Latin American authors such as Manuel Puig have used the bolero as a basis for

  their own novels. One of the techniques of bolero poets is the use of extremes in the

  texts. Bolero scholar Iris Zavala has shown that these words of affirmation, which

  are discretely negated, appear as at once positive and negative extremes: to die/to

  live, to love/ to abhor, presence/absence.

  In performance, the texts are often set as verse/refrain structures with the verses

  repeating in the form of two double periods in bolero rhythm, and with a formal

  structure of AABA, ABAB, or AABB. After 1955 and the emergence of the cha

  cha chá , it was not uncommon within an AABA structure to have the B section

  set as a cha cha chá, resulting in a bolero-chá. Vocally, the singers would sing in

  either unison or three-part harmony, with a vocal variation of some kind at the re-

  peat. For example, a section of a song with texted harmony might be repeated with

  the accompanying harmony being hummed underneath the lead vocal.

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  Guitars are the distinguishing instrumental feature to this sound, and the combi-

  nation of two guitars and a requinto balanced nicely with the voices. Transposition

  was done by use of the capo, which also provided alternatives to harmonic inver-

  sions on the guitars, thus avoiding the sound of the two standard guitars playing

  in the same tessitura. The requinto would play the majority of the passagework,

  including rapid melodic introductions, while the other guitars played a syncopated

  bolero rhythm underneath. The rhythm section usually consisted of two or three in-

  struments, usually maracas and bongos, the latter sometimes being replaced by the

  congas . Other instruments might include güiro , timbals, and clave . The rhythm section served as an anonymous backup, with the focus always being the trio.

  The trio format became standard and many groups followed in the path of Los

  Panchos, including, Los Tres Aces, Los Tres Diamantes, and Los Tres Reyes. An-

  other stream of performance practice comes from the solo singer/interpreter, which

  came from the tradition set forth by Agustin Lara. Solo song allowed more freedom

  for individual expression and remained popular in Latin America with interpret-

  ers such as Maria Grever, Toña La Negra, and Daniel Santos. The solo bolero was

  important in the development of salsa as ballad song, and it continues to hold an

  important place in that genre.

/>   In the 1980s, a younger generation of singers began to perform older epoca de

  oro repertoire as parts of their performances and recordings. Many of these younger

  artists, such as Gloria Estefan, Luis Miguel, and Linda Rondstadt incorporated it

  into their songs as a tribute to the music of their parents and grandparents. Most

  of these performances are in the form of a solo singer, though one group from Co-

  lombia, Los Trio, had great success in the late 1990s recreating the trio sound of

  three voices accompanied by three guitars. In spite of the rise and fall in popularity

  of the bolero throughout its history, the genre continues to be performed through-

  out the world.

  Further Reading

  Aparicio, Frances R. “Woman as Absence: Hetero(homo)sexual Desire in the Bolero.”

  In Listening to Salsa: Gender, Latin Popular Music, and Puerto Rican Culture, 125–41.

  Hanover, NH: Wesleyan University Press, 1998.

  Campos, Rene Alberto, and Robert Baum. “The Poetics of the Bolero in the Novels of

  Manuel Puig.” World Literature Today 65, no. 4 (1991): 637–42.

  Pedelty, Mark. “The Bolero: The Birth, Life, and Decline of Mexican Modernity.” Latin

  American Music Review/Revista de musica latinoamericana 20, no.1 (Spring–Summer

  1999): 30–58.

  Torres, George. “The Bolero Romántico: From Cuban Dance to International Popular

  Song.” In From Tejano to Tango: Essays on Latin American Popular Music, edited by Wal-

  ter A. Clark, 151–71. New York: Garland, 2002.

  Zavala, Iris M. El Bolero: Historia De Un Amor. Madrid: Alianza Editorial, 1991.

  George Torres

  Bolivia

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  Bolivia

  Bolivia is one of only two landlocked countries in South America, and as a result

  has been strongly influenced by the musics and cultures of its neighboring nations

  of Brazil, Peru, Paraguay, Argentina, and Chile. Bolivia has also drawn on its

  folk traditions for musical inspiration because it has a large indigenous population

  (30% mestizo, 30% Quechua and 25% Aymara) and three official languages, Span-

  ish, Quechua and Aymara.

  The first Bolivian popular music superstars were the La Paz female duos Las

  Kantutas (named after the national flower) and Las Hermanas Tejada (The Tejada

  Sisters). Similar in style to Mexican female vocal duos, Las Kantutas and Las Her-

  manas Tejada became famous in 1940s Bolivia through their live performances

  on nationally broadcast Radio Illimani. Both duos traveled to Argentina to re-

  cord because Bolivia lacked its own recording company until 1949. Las Kantutas,

  known for their interpretations of the taquirari and carnival , helped popularize both Eastern lowland genres throughout the country. Bolivian orquestas de jazz

  (swing bands) and orquestas típicas (Argentine tango ensembles) that played na-

  tional and international genres were fashionable as well in the 1940s.

  The Cuban-derived bolero was popular in Bolivia in the 1950s. La Paz singer

  Raúl Shaw Moreno, an ex-member of Mexico’s famous bolero Trio Los Panchos,

  toured the Americas and recorded for major international labels with his Mexican-

  style, Bolivian bolero trío romantíco Los Peregrinos (The Pilgrims). Arturo So-

  benes y Los Cambas was another popular Bolivian bolero group. In addition to

  their mainly international repertory, these tuxedo-clad groups also played local

  mestizo genres, such as huaynos , and were often accompanied with an Andean

  charango .

  Bolivian rock groups appeared in the 1960s. Benefiting from the local recording

  industry’s expansion, middle- and upper-class youths formed these bands inspired

  by popular Latin American Nueva Ola (New Wave) ensembles such as Uruguay’s

  Los Shakers. The earliest Bolivian rock groups, dedicated at first to Spanish lan-

  guage covers of international hits, include Los Bonny Boy Hots, Los Crickets (later

  named Los Grillos), Los Black Byrds, and Los Loving Darks. Since the 1990s Oc-

  tavia has been one of Bolivia’s most popular rock groups.

  The mid-1960s saw the rise of a new Andean musical style that quickly be-

  came the main Bolivian national popular music. The superstar La Paz group Los

  Jairas (The Lazy Guys) initiated this trend. Quena (end-notched bamboo flute)

  soloist Gilbert Favre of Switzerland founded Los Jairas in 1966 with three Boliv-

  ian musicians: guitarist Julio Godoy, singer and bombo player Edgar Yayo Joffré

  and charango soloist Ernesto Cavour. The group’s novel instrumental line-up

  became the model for countless Bolivian conjuntos . Played by groups wearing

  colorful ponchos, this musical style has usually been labeled folkloric music on

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  Bolivia

  recordings and at peñas (folk music venues), but it actually pertains to the realm

  of urban popular music. The national and international mass media played a key

  role in the creation of this new tradition, which was only loosely based on rural

  indigenous music. Like folkloric -popular music groups worldwide, Los Jairas

  and other Bolivian conjuntos, such as Savia Andina, stylized rural folk traditions

  to appeal to urban audiences. For example, conjuntos mainly used the kena and

  zampoña (pan-pipe) as solo and duo instruments—not as part of community-

  based wind ensembles ( tropas or consorts) as in typical highland villages.

  In the late 1960s, Los Ruphay of urban La Paz performed somewhat more

  faithful interpretations of rural indigenous music on recordings such as the

  tourist-oriented folk music of Bolivia. Grupo Aymara, Kollamarka, and the Paris-

  based Boliviamanta followed this trend in the 1970s and 1980s. The fusion

  group Wara played this nativist repertory too, as well as rock and heavy metal

  numbers.

  Since the 1980s Los Kjarkas have been Bolivia’s most popular conjunto. From

  Cochabamba, Los Kjarkas added the ronroco (a large charango ) and the wankara

  (a type of drum) to the standard conjunto line-up. The group’s recordings present

  mestizo genres from different regions, especially from the Andean highlands and

  valleys. Many of their hits are caporales and chuntunquis. Los Kjarkas helped pop-

  ularize both mestizo genres throughout Bolivia and beyond. The danceable capo-

  ral, often confused with the Afro-Bolivian saya , is much enjoyed by young people.

  The triple-meter chuntunqui resembles the Latin American balada (ballad) when

  interpreted in Los Kjarkas’s characteristic romantic style. Proyección and Amaru

  are among the numerous groups in this mold.

  Latin American música tropical (tropical music) has dominated Bolivia’s air-

  waves since the 1990s. Bolivian música tropical groups (who primarily hail from

  La Paz and Cochabamba rather than the tropics) mainly perform the Colombian

  cumbia genre, whose duple-meter pulse resembles that of the Andean huayno. Bo-

  livian groups like Maroyu and Climax, whose Peruvian-influenced style is known

  as cumbia chicha, often adapt local huayños into cumbias , as well as play their own compositions. More popular among the middle- and upper-class are música tropical ensembles modeled after Argentine and Uruguayan groups.

  Further Reading

  Céspedes, Gilka Wara. “Huayño, Saya, and Chuntunqui: Bolivian Identity in the Music

  of Los Kjar
kas.” Latin American Music Review 14, no. 1 (1993): 52–101.

  Forero, Juan. “Young Bolivians Adopt Urban U.S. Pose, Hip-Hop and All.” New York

  Times, May 26, 2005 (sec. A; Foreign Desk; El Alto Journal: 4).

  Solomon, Thomas. “Dueling Landscapes: Singing Places and Identities in Highland Bo-

  livia.” Ethnomusicology 44, no. 2 (2000): 257–80.

  Fernando Rios

  Bomba

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  Bomba

  Bomba is an African-related tradition consisting primarily of dance and drumming

  styles that were developed by black slaves in Puerto Rico during the Spanish co-

  lonial period (1508–1898). Bomba is based on a call-and-response structure with

  linguistic interjections in Spanish, Creole, or an African language. For every style,

  a group of dancers do one among eight dance forms while the choir replicates or

  responds in unison to a leading voice accompanied by barrel-shaped membrano-

  phones (or bulá drums) and two idiophones.

  It is estimated that there are between 27 and 52 different genres and substyles

  that fit under the umbrella of bomba. To European-trained listeners, most bomba

  styles may be categorized in two groups according to their time signature. The first

  is in the simple duple meter of 2/4 and includes the congo , for example. The second

  group includes bomba styles that are in simple 3/4 or compounded 6/8 meter, such

  as the holandé, leró, and yubá.

  Community-based gatherings known as bombazos feature a dance form of

  bomba that is known as piquetes. Piquetes consist of duel exchange between a

  solo dance performer and a drum. Other bomba dances consist mainly of cre-

  olized versions of European forms, namely the leró, tumba, kokobalé, and congo.

  During the Spanish colonial administration, bomba was restricted to plantations,

  haciendas, and religious holidays when bomba practitioners could do public per-

  formances in town squares and open spaces. The earliest known scores that had the

  specifically bomba -related cinquillo pattern were by visiting New Orleans pianist Louis Moreau Gottschalk. In subsequent years, cinquillo was notably featured in

  danzas by Manuel G. Tavárez and Juan Morel Campos.

  In 1898, when Puerto Rico became a territory of the United States, bomba was

 

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