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Kiriba - A precursor to Changüi from Baracoa Cuba |
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Written by Jon Griffin
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Friday, 06 June 2008 15:31 |
Kiriba
By Jon Griffin
Description
Kiriba is a style of Son from a different area of Cuba. It mostly originated in the Baracoa
area, which is also where the Changüi was created. In fact where the
fusion of Kiriba and Nengon takes place is where Changüi is invented. And where Nengon evolved, it evolved into Son.
Like Nengón, the Kiriba's identifying feature is the constant
alternation of improvisational verses sung by a soloist and a chorus.
Generally Kiribá is played with tres, bongós, maracas, güiro, and
marímbula, (this ensemble is similar to the changüi). Nengón and Kiribá
are practiced in the mountain regions of Santiago de Cuba and
Guantánamo.
In my book "El Tres Cubano", I show in detail examples of the tres
parts in both Nengon and Kiriba. I also have examples of both played in
a modern ensemble context.
Instrumentation
Examples
Musical Examples
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 License. |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 06 June 2008 15:38 )
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