Grade 6, Unit 4,
Lesson 8
There is much more to the Caribbean
than beautiful beaches, snorkeling, and lying in the
sun. The hundreds of music styles sprinkled throughout
the islands are a real treat worth exploring.
The Caribbean is an area found around and within the
Caribbean Sea between Central and South American. Some
countries found in the Caribbean are Cuba, Puerto Rico,
Jamaica, Martinique, Antigua, Barbados, the Virgin Islands,
Trinidad and Tobago, Costa Rica, Venezuela, and Suriname.
In terms of culture, the different islands and countries
of the region share some things in common, but because
of different histories they each have their own unique
flavor.
The first people to inhabit the Caribbean were Native
Americans called the Carib and the Arawak. The Spanish
arrived after 1492 when Columbus first sailed through
the Caribbean. Other Europeans eventually came to live
in these areas from Spain, France, England, and Holland.
Europeans also brought millions of enslaved Africans
to the islands to work plantations that grew sugar cane,
coffee, and other products for export. Syncopated rhythms,
call-and-response musical forms, ostinatos, drums and
other African-inspired instruments, as well as the strong
connection between music and dance can be found in many
Caribbean styles. Salsa from Puerto Rico, merengue from
the Dominican Republic, calypso from Trinidad, zouk
in Martinique, cumbia from Columbia, and reggae from
Jamaica are only a few examples with these characteristics.
Click here
to listen to the güiro, an instrument often used in
Caribbean folk music.
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