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Soca Reggae Festival July 10th, 11th and 12th, 2009 at Old Market Square, Downtown Winnipeg |
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Caribbean Music
What is Soca Music? Soca is a modern form of calypso with an up-tempo beat. Soca music originated as a fusion of calypso with Indian rhythms, thus combining the musical traditions to the two major ethnic groups of Trinidad and Tobago. Innovative Montserrat singer Arrow did much to popularize soca internationally with his 1983 number one soca classic Hot Hot Hot. Soca has continued to grow and evolve giving rise to offshoots such as ragga soca and the increasingly popular chutney soca. Today soca is the definitive indigenous musical form associated with the Eastern Caribbean. Thanks, Lord Shorty. What is Reggae Music? The roots of modern Jamaican music can be found in the sound systems of the 1950’s. Reggae music is a Jamaican style of music that has roots in African music and rhythm and blues, or early rock and roll. Reggae songs are usually about social issues, politics and the Rastafarian religion, an African religion that many Jamaicans follow. An early form of reggae was ska music. Ska is a faster, upbeat style of music that was influenced by the New Orleans rhythm and blues music heard on U.S. radio stations in Jamaica. Reggae music characteristics include offbeat syncopation, upstroke guitar strums and chanting lyrics. Bob Marley and the Wailers became a well-known reggae group in the 1970s. They helped to spread reggae music internationally. What is Steelband Music? The steeldrum (pan) is the national musical instrument of Trinidad and Tobago developed in the late 1930's. The pan is the only original non-electronic musical instrument invented in the twentieth century. Today the pan is very much part of the carnival mosaic from Panorama, Pan on the Road to Bomb Tune competitions for the best playing steelband (panside) with respect to it tune selection. The three basic types of pan are tenor pans that play melody, rhythm pans that play harmony, and bass pans. A steelband can play a wide range of music which include, soca, calypso, classical, rock, reggae, jazz, pop, latin and rhythm and blues. Soca Reggae Festival Music Review
Carribean Beat in the Exchange |
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Soca Reggae Festival Committee - PO Box 585 Winnipeg, MB. R3C 1A3 Copyright © 2009 SRF. |