Encyclopedia of Latin American Popular Music

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Encyclopedia of Latin American Popular Music Page 51

by George Torres


  and became Panama’s Minister of Tourism.

  Further Reading

  Balaguer, Alejandro. “Ruben Blades: Minister of Salsa: Better Known Outside

  His Country as a Singer-Songwriter and Actor, This Renaissance Man Today

  Speaks from a Political Stage, as Panama’s Minister of Tourism.” Americas 60

  (Jan.–Feb. 2008): 14–21.

  Rebecca Stuhr

  Panama

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  during the American occupation of the Dominican Republic (1916–1924); the

  name pambiche is derived from a phonetic corruption of Palm Beach, which was

  the fabric worn by American soldiers during the occupation. As the legend goes,

  the merengue estilo yanqui (Yankee style) became known as pambiche (Palm Beach

  style) because the Americans were neither capable of dancing well, nor with the nu-

  ance appropriate for the rhythm. While it is possible that the name pambiche origi-

  nated during the U.S. occupation, it is more likely that the form existed long before

  the name pambiche was given to the dance. It is performed at a slower tempo than

  the merengue and utilizes a cinquillo -based tambora rhythm.

  Further Reading

  Austerlitz, Paul. Merengue: Dominican Music and Dominican Identity. Philadelphia,

  PA: Temple University Press, 1997.

  George Torres

  Panama

  As a passageway between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans as well as the North and

  South American continents, Panama is largely defined by its geographical identity

  as the crossroads of the world. Panama’s history as a former Spanish colony, Co-

  lombian province, and United States protectorate have created inextricably inter-

  woven cultural pathways that contribute to its rich tapestry of popular expressive

  cultures.

  Though identified as a Central American country, Panama is culturally more

  akin to its South American and Caribbean neighbors. Colombian vallenato and

  cumbia , for example, have significantly influenced Panama’s folk music traditions,

  known collectively as música típica . Throughout the 20th century, the rise of radio

  and television media, along with the importation of commercial recordings and

  touring musicians from Cuba, Puerto Rico, and other Caribbean countries, have

  played a pivotal role in the commercialization of música típica today considered to

  be Panama’s most popular music.

  Caribbean music genres such as calypso , soca , and reggae are very popular.

  Although calypso groups were emerging as early as the 1930s, the genre’s golden

  age of commercial development occurred in the 1960s and 1970s when artists

  such as Lord Cobra and Lord Panama achieved considerable fame in Panama and

  abroad. Panama has also played a pivotal role in the development and popularization

  of reggae throughout Latin America. Starting in the late 1970s, artists cultivated

  a musical sound that intertwined Jamaican reggae rhythms with Spanish lyrics,

  consequently spawning the reggae en español movement. In the early 1990s, Ed-

  gardo Franco Low, otherwise known as El General, popularized a dancehall music

  style sung or rapped in Spanish (often recording English and Spanish versions of

  294 | Panama

  the same song) now known as reggaetón . Today, reggae en español and reggae-

  tón continue to enjoy immense popularity throughout Panama, especially with the

  country’s young population.

  Panamanian salsero and songwriter Ruben Blades is the country’s most promi-

  nent exponent of salsa . Blades’s collaboration with Puerto Rican composer and

  trombonist Willie Colon led to the production of several albums under the Fania

  label. Their 1978 album Siembra continues to be the best selling salsa album ever

  at over 25 million copies. Other Panamanian musicians who have established in-

  ternational careers in salsa include trumpetist and member of the Fania All-Stars

  Vitín Paz. From 1968 until 1990, the salsa group Bush y sus magnificos, fronted by

  percussionist Francisco “Bush” Buckley, was a dominating force in the salsa scene,

  having recorded multiple albums of original material and touring internationally.

  Panama’s contributions to jazz, while manifold, are not well known beyond the

  country’s borders. One of the earliest figures to emerge, Luis Russell, relocated to

  New Orleans where he began a career as a jazz pianist and bandleader. Flutist and

  saxophonist Mauricio also became an important jazz musician working with major

  figures such as Machito, Mongo Santamaria, Tito Puente, Charlie Mingus, and

  Dizzy Gillespie, among many others. In recent years, Panama has experienced a re-

  newed interest in jazz. Grammy award–winning jazz pianist and composer Danilo

  Perez, who has served as cultural ambassador to Panama, founded the Panama Jazz

  Festival in 2003.

  Panama’s complex political, economic, and military relationship with the United

  States, spanning most of the 20th century, has left an indelible mark on the nation’s

  popular cultural landscape. Just as rock music was gaining ground as a popular

  music genre in the United States and Britain during the 1960s, a similar music scene

  was also flourishing in Panama. While many of the first Panamanian-based rock

  groups were cover bands, others such as Woodstock created a hybrid style of rock

  that incorporated Caribbean and Pan-Latino musical styles such as salsa. Panama’s

  rock music scene, based largely in the nation’s capital, has produced many success-

  ful rock groups who have gone on to receive international acclaim.

  Panamanian singer and songwriter Pedro Altamirada is an important popular

  cultural figure whose music defies generic categorization. Starting in the late 1970s,

  Altamirada created songs that commingled calypso rhythms with musical elements

  from salsa creating a sound that attracts a multigenerational, as well as ethnically

  and racially diverse fan base. Altamiranda’s music is also strongly influenced by

  the Panamanian murga, a brass and percussion ensemble that performs a repertoire

  of Panamanian traditional musics and Caribbean popular, especially during the

  Carnival season. Altimirada is also recognized for his songwriting, which contains

  politically charged lyrics and social commentary, often expressed with Panama-

  nian colloquialisms. In fact, several of his songs were censored by the Panamanian

  government during the 1980s.

  Pandeiro

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  295

  Further Reading

  Buckley, Francisco. La Música Salsa En Panamá Y Algo Mas . Panama: Editorial Uni-

  versitaria “Carlos Manuel Gasteazoro,” 2004.

  Guerrón-Montero, Carla. “Can’t Beat Me Own Drum in Me Own Native Land: Calypso

  Music and Tourism in the Panamanian Atlantic Coast.” Anthropological Quarterly 79, no.

  4 (2006): 633–63.

  Rivera, R.Z., Marshall, M., and Hernandez, D.P, eds. Reggaetón. Durham, NC: Duke

  University Press, 2009.

  Steward, Noel Foster. Las Expresiones Musicales en Panamé: Una Aproximación . Pan-

  ama: Editorial Universitaria, 1997.

  Melissa González

  Pandeiro

  The pandeiro, a type of tambourine (a single-headed frame drum with metal jin-

  gles), is a versatile Brazilian percussion instrument played with the thumb, f
ingers,

  and palm of the hand. Used in hundreds of local and regional musical traditions in

  Brazil during the mid-20th century, the pandeiro became the country’s de facto

  national percussion instrument through its associations with choro and samba in Rio de Janeiro. Contemporary performers have explored virtuosic techniques and

  electroacoustic possibilities on the instrument.

  Historical records of pandeiros in Brazil are rather sketchy, but frame drums

  with jingles (often called adufe in rural areas) were likely introduced into Brazil

  by Portuguese settlers and missionaries early in the 16th century. During colonial

  and imperial periods, pandeiros became common rhythmic accompaniment instru-

  ments in the music traditions of privileged and subaltern populations throughout the

  country. Numerous Brazilian processional and dramatic music and dance traditions

  use the pandeiro (including pastoril, folia de reis, congada, cavalo marinho, and

  moçambique ). The instrument is also found in many social dance contexts ( samba

  de roda, coco, forró ) and as accompaniment to specific song genres ( embolada ).

  The pandeiro also accompanies the Afro-Brazilian martial arts–like game dance

  of capoeira.

  During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, pandeiro players entered hybrid

  artistic contexts of urban music-making. In Rio de Janeiro, pandeiros were used

  to accompany parading Carnival clubs known as ranchos and blocos and later in

  the escolas de samba (see samba ) forming in the hillside slums where the major-

  ity of the black population was located. In Recife, Pernambuco, the pandeiro was

  used in the Carnival blocos of middle-class Italian immigrants as well as in the pe-

  destrian frevo clubs of urban laborers comprising working-class black and mestiço

  populations.

  296 | Paraguay

  In Rio de Janeiro, the pandeiro became an essential component of choro en-

  sembles in the 1910s and was included in Brazil’s first important popular music

  group: Pixinguinha’s Oito Batutas. In the 1930s, the pandeiro became the primary

  percussion instrument of the conjuntos regionais (professional choro ensembles

  used in the broadcast and recording industry). Simultaneously, the pandeiro was a

  key percussion instrument in the emerging urban samba music of Rio de Janeiro, a

  complex field of artistic activity that included the nascent Brazilian music industry

  and spanned racial and class divisions. Important pandeiro players from the early

  era of Brazilian popular music included Jacó Palmieri and João da Baiana (Ernesto

  Joaquim Maria dos Santos).

  In contemporary Brazil, a variety of regional and national styles of pandeiro

  playing can be found. In the Northeast, unique forms of pandeiro are associated

  with the coco, cavalo marinho, and the frevo . In Rio de Janeiro, distinct styles include those used in the escola de samba, pagode, and in choro. Some contempo-

  rary percussionists such as Marcos Suzano and Bernardo Aguiar specialize in the

  pandeiro and have incorporated electroacoustic innovations into their playing and

  have developed new virtuosic techniques. Such innovations have helped establish

  the Brazilian pandeiro as an important global percussion instrument.

  Further Reading

  Bolão, Oscar . Batuque é um privilégio: A percussão da música do Rio de Janeiro/

  Batuque Is a Privilege: Percussion in Rio de Janeiro’s Music. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: Lu-

  miar Editora, 2003.

  Feiner, Scott. Pandeiristas: Player Bios. Pandeiro, www.pandeiro.com/players.php

  Larry Crook

  Paraguay

  Paraguay is one of the only landlocked countries in South America, bordered

  by Brazil, Argentina, and Bolivia. Of the population, 95 percent is mestizo and the country has two official languages, Spanish and Guaraní, as a large percentage of the population is bilingual. A hybrid language, Jopará, has developed

  as a result of the combination of the two languages. Paraguayan folk music is

  closely related to national identity. In 1944, the Paraguayan government des-

  ignated “Campamento Cerro Léon” by Giménez and Fernández and “India” by

  Flores and Ortíz Guerrero as Canciones Populares Nacionales. In 1959, the

  government passed a law mandating that 50 percent of all music played on the

  radio be composed by Paraguayans, a law which still exists today, although it

  is not enforced.

  The most iconic Paraguayan instrument is the arpa paraguaya. It was adapted

  from the European harp brought by the Spanish in the 17th or 18th century. The arpa

  Paraguay

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  297

  Some 50 Paraguayan harpists perform at the presidential house in Asuncion to celebrate

  the World Harp Festival in 2009. (Noberto Duarte/AFP/Getty Images)

  is particularly prominent in music from the Guairá region and may be played by a

  soloist or in a conjunto . Two of the most famous arpistas from Paraguay include

  Luis Bordón and Félix Pérez Cardozo, who wrote the well-known polka “Pájaro

  Campana.”

  The polka is considered the national genre. It differs significantly from the Eu-

  ropean dance style of the same name. The dance music of the polca paraguaya is

  comprised of a duple rhythm. The different variations of the dance are known by

  adjectives describing the dance, such as polca popó (jumping polka), polca syryrý

  (slippery or smooth), and polca valseado (like a waltz, or vals ). José Asunción Flores is credited with the creation of guaránia, a musical genre derived from polka,

  usually played in a minor mode.

  Another important traditional genre in Paraguay is the galopa, which contains

  two parts, the first of which is similar to polca. The galopa is danced by a woman,

  who improvises the steps while balancing a pitcher or bottle on top of her head. Par-

  aguayan folk music is frequently played in steakhouses, called parrilladas, which

  remain popular tourist attractions, as they serve traditional meals while conjuntos

  perform live music, sometimes including the danza de las botellas. During the

  danza de las botellas, which is performed to polka music, the woman balances

  bottles on her head, and more are added throughout the dance.

  298 | Pasillo

  While polka and guaránia are still popular in Paraguay today, rock has found

  an increasingly large following within the country. Rock bands often play both

  their own music and covers of American rock as entertainment for parties. Under

  the dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner (1954–1989), freedom of expression was

  limited, but in the 1990s, rock flourished in Paraguay. Contemporary popular rock

  bands include Flou, Revolber and Slow Agony. Paraguayan Creole music such as

  the polca may be adapted to popular urban styles. There is also some evidence com-

  piled by Paraguayan musician Luis Szarán of a nueva canción movement similar

  to that of Chile and Nicaragua.

  Agustín Barrios (1885–1944) was a famous Paraguayan guitarist and composer.

  He began his career playing popular music like polkas and valses. His music re-

  mains influential today, as famous musicians like John Williams acknowledge that

  Barrios was an influential, talented composer and guitarist.

  In 1947, Florentín Giménez (1925–) created his first orchestra, Ritmos de

  América. In 1950, h
e formed “ Florentín Giménez y su típica moderna, ” which in-

  cluded singers Oscar Escobar, Juan Carlos Miranda, Carlos Centurión, and Jorge

  Alonso. His “Symphony No. 6” was dedicated to Agustín Barrios. Luis Alberto

  del Paraná (1926–1974) is probably the best-selling Paraguayan artist of the 20th

  century. El Trío Los Paraguayos, comprised of Paraná, Digno García, and Agustín

  Barboza, performed around the world in the 1950s and 1960s, including a show in

  which they shared the stage with the Beatles in November 1963. He also di-

  rected the Conjunto Los Paraguayos. After his death, he was awarded the Ordén

  Nacional del Mérito by the government of Paraguay.

  Further Reading

  Colman, Alfredo. “El arpa diatónica paraguaya en la búsqueda del tekora: representacio-

  nes de paraguayidad.” Latin American Music Review. 28, no. 1 (2007): 125–49.

  Garcete Salvídar, Bernardo. “Luis Alberto del Paraná: Perfil de un Triunfador.” June 2,

  2012. http://www.musicaparaguaya.org.py/parana.html.

  González Páez, César. “ Florentín Giménez: La música como bandera. ” LANIC. January

  20, 2010. http://www.musicaparaguaya.org.py/florentin.html.

  Jeong, Johnna. “Agustín Barrios Mangoré: The Folkloric, Imitative, and the Religious In-

  fluence Behind His Compositions.” June 2, 2012. http://www.cybozone.com/fg/jeong.html.

  Caitlin Lowery

  Pasillo

  The pasillo is a Latin American variant of the vals that is especially popular in Colombia and Ecuador, though the genre has enjoyed success throughout the years

  from Mexico to Argentina. It was cultivated during the colonial period among

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  elite groups as an embraced couple dance in a moderate triple meter. There are

  two distinct varieties of pasillo practiced in Colombia: the pasillo lento and the

  pasillo instrumental. The former is usually sung as a solo or a duet, and in moder-

  ate time, accompanied either by piano (salon performance), guitar and tiple with percussion, or by an estudiantina . The texts reference an idealized or unrequited

  love, thus having poetic themes related to the bolero . The pasillo instrumental is, as its name implies, an instrumental genre for guitar and tiple and is much faster in

 

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