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Encyclopedia of Latin American Popular Music

Page 30

by George Torres


  Estribillo

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  159

  bandola oriental, mandolin or accordion, caja, guitar, or marimba . It also has a 6/8 meter, with a fixed harmonic pattern in a major key. Melodies are improvised

  on the main instrument in a rhythmic pattern of two groups of three-quarter notes

  in the form of an ostinato. The singing is characterized by cotorriao (a phonetic

  corruption of cotorrear, to chatter) and is sometimes performed in competition.

  Further Reading

  Miró-Cortez, Carlos. “The Nativity in Iquique, Chile. The Christmas Carols of the Fra-

  ternities of Las Cuyacas and Pastoras.” Studia Musicologica Academiae Scientiarum Hun-

  garicae, T. 18, Fasc. 1/4 (1976): 81–152.

  Riedel, Johannes. “The Ecuadorean ‘Pasillo’: ‘Musica Popular,’ ‘Musica Nacional,’ or

  ‘Musica Folklorica’?” Latin American Music Review / Revista de Música Latinoamericana,

  7, no. 1 (1986): 1–25.

  Liliana Casanella

  Estudiantina. See Rondalla.

  F

  Filín

  Filín is a musical genre that developed in Havana, Cuba, in the 1940s. It is char-

  acterized by its melodic and harmonic style, literary content, and use of the Cuban

  song. By the 1970s it had gained widespread popularity surpassing the intermediate

  period of the Cuban trovadoresco movement. It was preceded by the trova tradicio-

  nal movement and was followed by the nueva trova movement. The trovador Luis Yañéz reputedly popularized the use of the term filín within the movement, which

  stood for good taste in music, style, depth, and singing with feeling. The word filín

  is derived from the English word feeling.

  Filín developed in informal musical gatherings in the houses of young people

  from the more modest sectors of society. They would meet to listen to and play pop-

  ular songs and dance music. They derived their musical styles from genres such as

  jazz, blues, swing, tango, trova tradicional, and Cuban dance music. Through their improvisations and fusions of styles, the older forms gave way to new creations,

  which went on to become standards. In this way the filín established new groups

  or studios and trovadores. The musicians would play “Rosa Mústia” by Angelito

  Díaz at the start of the musical gatherings, as it was the filineros ’ anthem, and they

  ended the evening with “Hasta Mañana Vida Mía” by Rosendo Ruiz.

  The most common meeting places included the Callejón de Hammel (where tro-

  vador Angelito Díaz lived) and Jorge Mazón’s house. It is here that several authors

  and performers flourished, such as José Antonio Méndez, César Portillo de la Luz,

  Ñico Rojas, “ El Niño” Rivera, Rosendo Ruiz, Justo Fuentes, Leonardo Morales,

  Aida Diestro, Rolando Gómez, Tania Castellanos, Elena Burke, Omara Portuondo,

  and Moraima Secada. Other notable artists included Martha Valdés, Piloto y Vera,

  Frank Domínguez, Ela O Farril, and Meme Solís. In their frequent rehearsals, they

  relied on “ El Niño” Rivera and occasionally Bebo Valdés and Pedro Justiz for the

  instrumental arrangement of the repertoire.

  In the 1960s, Pablo Milanes merits mention, as do accompanying guitarists Froi-

  lán Amézaga, Elena Burke, Martín Rojas, all of whom made filín a specialty. Other

  important musicians in the movement included guitarist-composers César Portillo

  and José Antonio Méndez, pianists Adolfo Guzmán, Frank Domínguez, and Frank

  Emilio Flyn; vocal quartets included Orlando de la Rosa, las D’Aida, Meme Solís,

  and Los Bucaneros y el Rey; and ensembles included Conjunto Casino. Recordings

  161

  162 | Filín

  and performances of the filín repertoire by musicans in other genres helped to

  spread the movement to a wide audience.

  The nightclubs Sherezada in the Fosca and El Pico Blanco in the Hotel St. John

  (the filín corner) were places that, after 1959, offered a professional-commercial

  venue for the movement. El Gato Tuerto and Dos Gardenias also contributed to the

  success of filín and its repertoire was published by the Asociación Editorial Musi-

  cahabana and affiliated with the Partido Socialista Popular (PSP). The radio station

  Mil Diez provided programming time to César Portillo de la Luz. Some charac-

  teristic songs include “La Gloria eres tu” (José Antonio Méndez), “Contigo en la

  distancia” (César Portillo de la Luz), “Fiesta en el cielo” (“ El Niño ” Rivera), “Mi

  ayer” (Ñico Rojas), “En nosotros” (Tania Castellanos), “Oh, vida” (Luis Yañez y

  Goméz), “Tú me acostumbraste” (Frank Domínguez), “Duele” (Piloto y Vera), and

  “Con tus palabras” (Martha Valdés).

  The performance style associated with filín is intimate and familiar, reflective,

  and hopeful. It does not draw attention to technical or vocal virtuosity. The lyrics

  are a kind of poetic discourse full of amorous sentiment that uses a colloquial lan-

  guage. It is written fundamentally in the first person with a structured form. The

  musical accompaniment is consistent with this style. The stylistic range of inter-

  pretations present in versions of the same song can be heard in the various melodic

  elaborations and the idiosyncratic accents between the singer and accompaniment.

  A constant rubato is prevalent, which leads to a semideclamatory style, with use of

  phrase breaks and portamentos and sections of intense chromaticism. Instrumental

  sections serve as introductions and interludes and have a certain air of harmonic

  sophistication that highlights the performers’ competence. It compensates for the

  successive leaps of fifths, sixths, sevenths, and octaves with alternation of conjunct

  intervals, many times in a graceful flowing form. The harmonic sequences make

  use of ninths, elevenths, and other higher numbered chords.

  The filín is popular throughout Latin America. Its prevalence in Mexico is due to

  the influence of Vicente Garrido, Mario Ruiz Armegol, Álvaro Carillo, Luis Deme-

  trio, and Armando Manzanero; in Costa Rica, Ray Tico has helped to popularize

  the style. More recently, the repertoire gained international recognition through

  covers done by Grammy-winning Mexican singer Luis Miguel.

  Further Reading

  Moore, Robin. Music and Revolution: Cultural Change in Socialist Cuba. Music of the

  African Diaspora, 9. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006.

  Morales, Ed. The Latin Beat: The Rhythms and Roots of Latin Music from Bossa Nova

  to Salsa and Beyond. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press, 2003.

  Sublette, Ned. Cuba and Its Music. Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2004.

  Liliana González and Grizel Hernández

  Flute | 163

  Flauta. See Flute .

  Flute

  The European transverse flute began as single-piece, six-holed, cylindrical-shaped

  wooden instruments made from different varieties of wood. The model for the con-

  temporary flute, the Boehm flute, was developed in the 19th century and gradually

  standardized in terms of its dimensions and length. It was not until well into the

  20th century that metal (primarily silver, but also gold, and platinum), most evi-

  dent in the performance of Cuban flute music, became the standard material used

  to make the body of the flute.

  There are two popular types of flutes, the transverse or side-
blown flute and the

  vertical or duct flute. In the transverse or side-blown flute, sound is created when

  the flutist presses the mouthpiece just under his or her lower lip and blows across

  the embouchure. Depending on style, the tone can be pure, warm, and buzzy, or

  high-pitched. The duct flute is played vertically with the mouthpiece in the player’s

  mouth. The flute, both vertical and transverse, is prevalent throughout Latin Amer-

  ica. Different types of Latin American flutes include the European metal flute, a

  five-keyed, wooden Cuban flute, a variety of end-blown Andean flutes and pipes,

  the Colombian gaita, a duct flute used in cumbia ensembles, and the Brazilian pife , which is a small, high-pitched, open-holed instrument.

  The flute is particularly important in the Brazilian choro . The choro evolved

  out of the terno, a trio consisting of a transverse flute, guitar, and cavaquinho.

  This ensemble played both European dance music for parties and social occasions

  and informally, improvising melodies and accompaniments. This spirit of impro-

  visation became an important part of choro. The flute would take an often familiar

  melody and improvise with it in counterpoint to the accompaniment. As the choro

  evolved other instruments took the melodic line but the flute remained an im-

  portant part of the genre. Joaquim Antônio da Silva Callado was one of the first

  choro composer-flute players. He was a highly acclaimed classical flutist and his

  playing featured chromaticisms and octave leaps and created one of the first ensem-

  bles, Choro Carioco, in 1870. Pixinguinha (Alfredo da Rocha Viana, Jr.) was another

  popular choro flutist in the first half of the 20th century. Like Callado, Pixinguinha

  was also a composer and virtuoso performer. He spread choro to Paris and added

  a saxophone and elements of jazz to the genre. Other important choro flutists in-

  cluded Benedito Lacerda, Patápio Silva, and Mário Séve (a flutist/saxophonist

  who performed progressive choro with the ensemble Nó em Pingo D’Água in the

  late 1970s).

  164 | Folk, Art, and Popular Music

  The flute is also an important part of the Cuban charanga tipica. Charanga en-

  sembles feature transverse flutes and violins as primary melodic instruments and

  use the piano, acoustic bass, timbals , güiro, congas , and vocals as accompaniment.

  The traditional Cuban flute is wooden and derived from the 18th-century French-

  style flute, which made its way from Haiti to Cuba and ultimately evolved into

  a distinctly Cuban-style, five-keyed flute. In charanga style ensembles the flutist

  plays rapid improvised passages on the upper registers of the instrument, an octave

  above the violins. This technique requires great skill and stamina, especially when

  played with the five-keyed wooden flute. Charanga flute playing features arpeggios, re-

  peated riffs and phrases that interact with the rhythm section of the ensemble. Like

  choro, the repertoire is derived from European dance forms and the music is com-

  posed, arranged, and written down and as a result it has classical elements but with

  a strong improvisatory character. Johnny Pacheco (b. 1930) is one well-known Do-

  minican charanga flutist. He learned the high-trilling Cuban style of flute playing

  from Cuban flutist and bandleader Gilbert Valdés as used in the traditional wooden

  instrument throughout his career. He received many honors as a composer,

  bandleader, producer, and versatile musician. With his orchestra, Pacheco y Su

  Charanga, he introduced a popular new dance known as “Pachanga.” One of his

  most notable accomplishments was the creation of Fania Records, which helped to

  start the careers of many Latin musicians. Other well-known charanga flutists in-

  clude Melquiades Fundora, Jose Fajardo, Nestor Torresm Richard Egües, Orlando

  “Maraca” Valle, and Eduardo Rubio.

  Further Reading

  Leymarie, Isabelle. Cuban Fire: The Story of Salsa and Latin Jazz. New York: Con-

  tinuum, 2002.

  Livingston-Isenhour, Tamara Elena Garcia, and Thomas George Caracas. Choro: A So-

  cial History of a Brazilian Popular Music. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2005.

  Miller, Susan. “The Charanga Flute Players of Cuba.” PAN 2 (2008): 2.

  Rebecca Stuhr

  Folk, Art, and Popular Music

  Folk, art, and popular are terms that describe three broad categories of music. These

  labels are applied for a variety of reasons including style, marketing, and academic

  taxonomy. They create areas of reference for understanding some of music’s in-

  trinsic processes such as issues of transmission, economics, audience, content, and

  musical training. But while these terms can be useful for organization and catego-

  rization, they can also be restrictive, and as stylistic identifiers they are at times

  misleading and inconsistent. For the labels folk, art, and popular to be applicable to

  Folk, Art, and Popular Music | 165

  the music of Latin America, the distinctions between them must remain broad and

  their boundaries, by necessity, fluid since the blending between them is an inevi-

  table part of the hybridization and intercultural contact that has occurred in Latin

  America, especially as a result of the urbanization and industrialization character-

  istic of the 1900s.

  Folk music is preserved through collective and cooperative action in societies

  where no one individual has the time or money to spare for the creation of music

  as their livelihood. Where self-sufficiency is rarely taken for granted, individuals,

  small groups, or whole communities take part in performing a shared repertoire

  of songs frequently labeled functional music because of its connection with non-

  musical activity. Even though a piece of folk music may be claimed by an entire

  community, it is usually composed by a single individual or small group and then

  transmitted to a larger population through incidental learning at special occasions or

  sociocultural events. Folk music is, as a result, usually vocal and instrumental with

  predictable rhythmic patterns, and carried out by nonprofessionals with minimal

  or incidental musical training on instruments that are not labor-intensive. While

  folk music is often considered the music of the rural, native, or indigenous people,

  this is not always the case. In the United States, for example, the songs “Take Me

  Out to the Ball Game” or “Happy Birthday” could be considered folk music because

  they are approved by the group, learned incidentally after prolonged exposure, and

  are usually tied to special occasions or events. In Latin America, the music per-

  formed in Haitian Vodou rituals or at Herranza, a Peruvian animal branding cer-

  emony, are forms of regional folk music that were created locally, passed down

  over generations, and exist independently of any popular or art music traditions.

  Within the Latin American context, art music is commonly associated with the

  ideals of European classical music and operates through a system of direct patron-

  age whereby musicians are supported by a single source (whether it be, for instance,

  an individual, university, or governmental body). Art musicians are professionals

  who perform their music, usually for elite groups, after years of formal training and

  apprent
iceship. Latin American art music first developed during European coloni-

  zation from the 1500s to the 1800s. It had its antecedents in the European classical

  tradition as Latin American social groups sought to differentiate themselves from

  the lower classes and aspire to the tastes and ideals of the Europeans. From the

  1920s to the 1950s, following the Latin American wars of independence, there was

  a period of strong nationalistic sentiment in art, literature, and music. This nation-

  alism was expressed in Latin American art music as composers began to include

  creolized European dance forms in their compositions as a way to honor the au-

  thenticity of the music of the mestizo, African, and Amerindian groups. Compos-

  ers such as Carlos Chavez and Heitor Villa-Lobos sought to incorporate uniquely

  Latin American elements of music into their compositions, integrating European

  art music with Latin American folk instruments and rhythms. Chavez, for example,

  166 | Folk, Art, and Popular Music

  based his Sinfonia India on Mexican Amerindian melodies, and Villa-Lobos was

  well known for incorporating Brazilian popular genres into his compositions as

  seen in his Choros #1 for guitar. Beginning in the 1960s, art music in Latin America

  became increasingly more innovative with composers experimenting with serial

  music, indeterminacy, and electronic music composition.

  Popular music is often seen as the music of the people and, as a result, it is some-

  times dismissed by critics as lowbrow or common. As the focus of this encyclope-

  dia, the definition of popular music, though potentially debatable, is an important

  one to establish. Despite contextual variation, popular music is mass-disseminated

  music of the post-industrial age. Beginning in the 19th century, popular music de-

  veloped at a time of profound change due to modernization, industrialization, and

  urbanization. The musical processes that accompanied these societal developments

  shared distinct characteristics different from that of the art and folk music systems

  and together these characteristics evolved into what became known as popular

  music. One of the most important of these characteristics was the creation of a sys-

  tem of indirect patronage whereby popular music became dependant on not only a

 

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