The music of Haiti
is influenced most greatly by European colonial ties and African migration (through slavery). In the case of European colonization, musical influence has derived primarily from the French, however Haitian music has been influenced to a significant extent by its Spanish-speaking neighbors, the Dominican Republic and Cuba, whose Spanish-infused music has contributed much to the country's musical genres as well. Styles of music unique to the nation of Haiti include music derived from vodou
ceremonical traditions and the wildly popular Compas
. Haiti didn't have any recorded music until 1937 when Jazz Guignard was recorded non-commercially.
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Folk music
Voodoo music
The religion of the majority of Haitians is Roman Catholicism, but some people still practice
Vodou
and highly formalized
percussion is used in spiritual music.
Vodou
uses music, dance, and spirit possession as a part of religious rituals. The spirit possessions are a mixture of African spirits of popular religious figures and a mixture of popular religious figures of
Roman Catholic Saints. The
Virgin Mary was associated with the love and beauty of
Ezili Freda
and
Saint Patrick was associated with the driving of snakes of
Dambala
. These spirits are called
lwa
.
Ounsi
initiates the
voodoo
community dances to the music of drums, gongs, and rattles. The goal is to have the
lwa
travel to Haiti and possess a Haitian worshiper. This is also called “mounting of their horse”. Unusual movements or jerks from normal dancing indicates that the possession has taken place or the “horse mounted”. Once the possession has taken place, the worshiper takes on the personality traits of the
loa
. For example, if the
loa
is
Ezili Freda
, then the
lwa
will demand gifts of perfume, fine clothes, or jewelry from the rest of the worshipers. The
lwa
have their own music in the forms of ritual songs and these are sung at ceremonies to invite
lwa
participation. Songs are in combination of Kreyòl and the
langaj
languages that are derived from West and Central African religions.
Vodou
includes two different kinds of
lwa
:
rada
and
petwo
. Ceremonies may include either
rada
drums (
Tanbou Rada
in
Haitian Kreyòl) with cowhide covers attached with wooden pegs, or
petwo
drums (
Tanbou Petwo
), which have a goatskin cover attached with cords and a more aggressive sound. The rhythms and sounds of
vodou
performances have many regional variations. For example, some of the most popular
rada
rhythms from
Port-au-Prince and surrounding areas include
yanvalou
,
mayi
,
zepol
, and
dawomen
, while in
Gonaïves,
rada
takes such names as
wanjale
,
akbadja
, and
kavalye hounto
. In the
petwo
family one can find:
petwo makaya
,
fran petwo
,
petwo doki
,
makandal
,
bumba
, and
kita
.
There are many other
voodoo
rhythms, including
djoumba
,
kongo
,
ibo
,
tchika
,
raboday
,
banda
,
nago
,
maskawon
.
Voodoo-jazz
When the
United States invaded Haiti in 1915, the rituals of
voodoo
were used to reject the cultures of the occupying soldiers. Groups like Jazz des Jeunes brought the sounds of the voodoo drum battery to popular music performances in Haiti. The group Foula, formerly known as group Sa, was the first group to successfully incorporate the "voodoo" sound with jazz, which gave them a world wide appeal.
Rara
Rara music is a Lenten processional music with strong ties to the Vodou religious tradition. It has been commonly confused with Haitian Carnival since both celebrations involve large groups of dancing revelers in the streets. Rara is performed between Ash Wednesday (the day after Carnival ends) until Easter Sunday (or Easter Monday in some parts of Haiti.) Rara bands roam the streets of Haiti during Lent performing religious ceremonies as part of their ritual obligations to the "loa" or spirits of Haitian Voodoo. Gede, a spirit associated with death and sexuality, is an important spiritual presence in Rara celebrations and often possesses an ougan (male Voodoo priest) or mambo(female Voodoo priest) before the band begins its procession in order to bless the participants and wish them safe travels for their nightly sojourns.
Popular music
Mizik rasin
Starting in the late 1970s (with discontent surrounding the increasing oppulence of the Duvalier dictatorship), youth from Port-au-Prince (and to a lesser extent Cape Haitien and other urban areas) began experimenting with new types of life. Francois Duvalier's appropriation of Vodou images as a terror technique, the increase in US assembly and large-scale export agriculture, the popularity of disco, and Jean-Claude Duvalier's appreciation of konpa and chanson francaise led to a disillusioning of such youth. To question the dictatorship's notion of "the Haitian nation" (and thus the dictatorship itself), several men began trying a new way of living, embodied in the Sanba Movement. They drew upon global trends in black power, Bob Marley, "Hippie"-dom, as well as prominently from rural life in Haiti. They dressed in the traditional blue denim (karoko) of peasants, eschewed the commercialized and processed life offered by global capitalism, and celebrated the values in communal living. Later, they adopted matted hair which resembled dread locks, but identified the style as something which existed in Haiti with the term cheve simbi, referring to water spirits.
The most well-known of these were Sanba Zao (Louis Leslie Marcellin), Ayizan (Harry Sanon), Azouke (Gregory Sanon), Aboudja (Ronald Derencourt), Kebyesou Danle (Jean Raymond) and Chico (Yves Boyer). They formed a band called Sanba yo and later, Gwoup Sa. Later still, other musicians like Lolo (Theodore Beaubrun), Papa Bonga, and Eddy Francois joined the trend. This was the modern precursor to what would become mizik rasin. One of these groups recorded a song in the 1980s for a UNICEF campaign for vaccination which is included on the LP
Konbit!
.
In the 1990s, commercial success came to the musical genre that came to be known as
mizik rasin
, or "roots music". Musicians like
Boukman Eksperyans, and
Boukan Ginen, and to a lesser extent
RAM, incorporated
reggae,
rock and
funk rhythms into traditional forms and instrumentation, including music of
rara
, music from
kanaval
, or traditional spiritual music from the rural hamlets called lakous, like Lakou Souvnans, Lakou Badjo, Lakou Soukri, or Lakou Dereyal. Though initially the people involved followed the ways of the Sanba Movement, eventually this began to fade away. Increased political and economic pressures saw many of these people move outside of Haiti (to the US and Canada, primarily). Both those who stayed and those who traveled between countries began adding more non-Haitian (strictly speaking) elements and implemented a more commercial sound to earn more money and a wider audience.
Although the message of much of the sanba-oriented bands espouse values of equality, several members have been linked to male chauvanist ideas and even domestic violence. (C.f. the book Walking on Fire, Beverly Bell)
Compas
Compas
(in
French) or ''Kompa (in
Creole)
Compas is a modern meringue. The meringue born in the 1800s is called meringue in Haiti and merengue in the Dominican Republic. Haitians occupy the western part of the Island while the Dominicans live in the eastern part of the same Island of Saint Domingue no wonder why the two music are very close.
Compas direct
was popularized in the mid-1950s by the sax and guitar player Nemours Jean Baptiste. its light meringue soon became popular throughout the
Antilles, especially in
Martinique and
Guadeloupe, where it is called
zouk.
Webert Sicot and
Nemours Jean Baptiste became the two major powers in the group. Sicot left and formed a new group and an intense rivalry developed between the two, though they remained good friends. To differentiate himself from Nemours Sicot called his modern meringue cadence rampa
Mini-jazz
As
cadence rampa
became more and more experimental, and
Compas direct
incorporated more effective
pop structures, American- and French-style pop spawned
mini-jazz
bands that became perhaps the first fully Haitian form of pure pop.
Ibo Combo,
Les Ambasadeurs,
Les Fantaisistes de Carrefour,
Shleu Shleu,
Les Frères Déjean,
Le Bossa Combo,
Los Incognitos de Pétionville and others remain influential and popular artists. In the early 1970s, Los Incognitos de Pétionville became
Tabou Combo, whose 1969
Haiti
incorporated major influences from American
funk and began a swift rise to international stardom for the band and the Haitian music scene. By 1984, Tabou Combo had become chart-toppers in
Paris and elsewhere across the globe.
Compas and the Midi technology
The mid-1980s saw the success of zouk (itself a Compas-derived genre in other words,the French antilles compas). In reality, this success was mostly due to the full used of the Midi technology by the group cassav. Haitian along other Caribbean musicians who saw the success of the French Antilles band cassav, which repertoire is mostly compas, applied the electronic sound in their music at this time.
Haitian rap
The local homegrown Haitian hip hop movement is rising in popularity in Haiti and other communities where there is a strong Haitian presence. It is becoming more and more popular with Haitian youth, often communicating social and political topics as well as materialistic concepts.
Compas as well as other popular local music beats are used frequently with urban sounds. Popular Haitian hip hop artists are Black Alex from
King Posse,
Original Rap Staff,
Top Adlerman. The recent years have seen a rise in popularity for Haitian Hip-Hop with artists such as
RockFam Lame-a,
Barikad Crew,
Vilx ,
Seca Konsa,
Bennchoumy,
Young Rich,
Mystik 703,
Magik Click,
Mecca AKA Grimo. Other Haitian hip hop artists have yet to evolved. Among them Solo, known for his story telling ability and a style which resembles the late American hip hop icon Tupac Shakur and plenty others.
Haitians in general are on the Hip Hop on the global level as well.
Torch (rapper), aka (), has been rapping since the mid-1980s has been one of the most influential contributors to German hip hop. He is "a hip hop activist, appointed by rap-
godfather Afrika Bambaataa to head the first German chapter of Zulu Nation... Advanced Chemistry [his band] burst onto the
hip hop scene with a maxi-single released in November 1992. The song, “Fremd in eigenem Land” (foreigner in your own country), made a pointed statement about the position of immigrants in German society."
[1]
See also
References
- Brown, Timothy S. “‘Keeping it Real’ in a Different ‘Hood: (African-) Americanization and Hip-hop in Germany.” In The Vinyl Ain’t Final: Hip Hop and the Globalization of Black Popular Culture, ed. by Dipannita Basu and Sidney J. Lemelle, 137-50. London