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Showing posts with label jamaica music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jamaica music. Show all posts

Jamaica Music And Dance

Jamaica Music And  Dance

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Your Ad Here(Maypole) In Jamaican schools, the Maypole dance is kept alive because many of these schools enter Jamaica_music and dance in the yearly traditional dances competition held by The Jamaica Cultural Commission, the organization responsible to for the continuance of Jamaican cultural traditions
Traditionally the Maypole dance was a celebration in dance on the first of May to fertility and originated in Europe.
Colored ribbons are attached to a standing pole about 6-7 feet tall. Each ribbon is held by a dancer sometimes all female, sometimes a mixture of males and females. There can be as many as sixteen dancers. These dancers dance in an in-and-out pattern that results in the ribbons wrapping the pole forming weaves of various patterns. These could be a grand chain, basket weaves or candy stripes dependent on the skill of the dancers and their willingness to employ and experiment with their creative skill
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Sometimes the dance is done so that a part of the pole is wrapped and the rest of the ribbons are woven to form a spider-like web away off from the pole Later th dancers dance in an opposite direction which unwraps the ribbon This Jamaica dance is usually danced to the Mento music live or recorded. Of late reggae is also used to add the real Jamaican flare

Write something about a Jamaica experience or product while visiting the island and share in making this an Extraordinary Information Site About Jamaica. in the comment box
 
 
(quadrille)

The Jamaica festival held in august of each year is aimed at keeping alive the Jamaica traditions as it shows the case and boasts the Jamaica culture in dance and music.
The quadrille is one of Jamaica's cultural heritage passed on to Jamaica from the European plantocracy who settled on the island. The quadrille is traditionally a ballroom dance copied by the slaves from their masters.

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The square was set which was later referred to as the ballroom quadrille was performed mainly in towns by
the elite The long way set which is also called camp style and was performed mostly in the rural area. Both styles today include African elements. The dance contains five African features namely the
spectacular footwork, bent knee quality, Throwback, and use of hips. The music was played by Mento bands

.Jamaica music and dance Gumbay
 This dance is seen as an element of the cult of healing, from which it got its name. It is also performed < in the parish of St. Elizabeth and is a derivative of the Myal The maroons are also acquainted with this dance.. The dance incorporates a chain of long step vibration sideways movements, wheel and turns backward and forward tilts. bending, rolling somersaults, and climbing trees.
A Gumbay healing ceremony usually last way into the night. The square drum was the basic instrument that
supplied the music. This drum-specific feature was four legs like those of a stool and was beaten with two sticks.

Jamaica_music and dance Ethu
The Ethu is a traditional dance that is mostly performed in the parish Of Hanover. It is regarded as the social dance of Africa. The dance is done by lifting and dropping hands and shoulders. The instrument used for this music is a drum and the katta. The dance has two basic steps simple and compound duple. Ethu songs are short and built on four repetitive notes.

Jamaica Music

Jamaica music





Why not Listen to
Reggae music as you work
Download DVD and watch
them on your computer
When you visit the island check out the Jamaica music, such as our traditional, dances, like Kumina, mento, bruckings, pocomania, reggae, Bob Marley music, maypole, myal, quadrille, rock steady, ska, calypso. Sandy Bay Primary and Junior High School perform the pocomania dance for the Jamaica festival.


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The heritage of Jamaica's Music and dance is kept alive

Jamaica has a rich culture of music and dance. This culture is kept alive by the many cultural competitions held yearly by the Jamaica Cultural Development Commission.

Schools are encouraged to participate in the cultural activities and competitions held by this organization yearly. Speech, in the form of poetry and storytelling, drama, music, and dance form part of their yearly programs.

Jamaica has a rich archive in the form of the late cultural icon. Louise Bennett-Coverley’s work.
Many people and groups have been instrumental in keeping this rich culture alive in their research works such as Joyce Campbell, Olive Lewin, Rex Nettleford, Edward Seaga, Wilmot Dawes, and many others. The Jamaica information service has also documented a number of articles that relate to Jamaican culture.

Here is your best Jamaica culture guide
Jamaica music and dance Reggae music

Reggae music is said to be unique and original Jamaican and was born in the 1960s right after the short-lived ska and rock steady which are also Jamaica’s more recent traditional music and dance.
Reggae is said to have its birth in Western Kingston by the late superstar Bob Marley who put reggae music and Jamaica on the world stage.

Somewhat slower than the rock steady it has a characteristic heavy repeated bass. One of its most prominent features is it's offbeat,  unlike any other musical form. The lyrics gave messages from the poor and centered around political, economical, social, and religious oppression all intended for the powers that be to awaken their consciousness.


Buy Bob Marley Music and other products here Listen to and select reggae music
Jamaica music Mento



Mento is a traditional dance in Jamaica that is still played in some North coast hotels in Jamaica. It is said to come about somewhere in the time of the early slavery and Plantocracy system and remained dominant up to the 1950s.It came out of a mixture of British and African music.

Mento is a type of music that the slaves used to jeer their Owners. It also addresses their struggles, politics, society, environment, sexuality, and their hopes. Songs that were too sexually explicit were banned.

Mento music was found in every parish in Jamaica and was recognized just as how the calypso is recognized in Trinidad. The instruments that accompany mento dancing are usually the rumba box, fiddle, maracas, banjo, flute, guitar, and drums.

Jamaica music and dance Kumina

Kumina is one of Jamaica's traditional religious dances said to have its origin in the Congo.
It is believed to come with the slaves from Africa in the 1800s and has three basic characteristics singing, drumming, and dancing.

The drums are seen as the most essential instrument since they are used to control the spirits. The practitioners believe in the existence of three spirits, the powerful God, or the sky and air spirit, the earth spirit, and the ancestral spirit.

When they dance the dancers can reach such a state that they become inhabited by one of the spirits who help to solve problems they may encounter. The sky air spirit is the most powerful and one is said to have that spirit during a Kumina session if he seems to be leaping uncontrollably. He has to be guided by the other dancers to prevent him from getting hurt. If one dances very near to the ground he is said to be possessed by the ground spirit.

However, the Kumina dance is really to ask the ancestral spirit to abide. To give health, prosperity and protection. Kumina is danced to celebrate achievements such as births, and weddings. It is also danced at wakes for the dead to give speed and good passage to the other world.
Jamaica music and dance

Kumina is said to be used to cast evil spells and the dance is used to force the spirit to do the dancers bidding. At a Kumina session, the spirits are fed with white rice, curry goat, calaloo, and ground provision cooked without salt. Candles, fowl’s blood, coconut, rum water sugar, and cream soda all these aids to carry the spirits and also protect them from harm.

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Specials colors are worn for various occasions. black and white mourning, green and white for thanksgiving, Two of the most prominent ancestral spirits believed to be king in Africa are Famous and Comfe. Read more on jamaica-music and dance

Jonkunnu or Burru
Jonkunnu (John Canoe) is another of the traditional Jamaican dances of African origin. It is performed mainly at Christmas time. The dance features characters all males whose movements match their roles. These characters are Pitchy Patchy, Devil, Horsehead, Cowhead, Actor Boy, Belly Woman, Warrior, and Wild Indian.


Gerreh and Dinki-Mini
Both dances are of African origin of the wake tradition usually performed after the death of a person, and up until the ninth night after the death.


Bruckin' Party
This traditional dance was performed in the past mainly to celebrate the anniversary of Emancipation from slavery on the 1st of August, 1838.
This dance is mostly found only in the parish of Portland.


Ring Games
Traditional Ring Games were played not only by children but also by adults as they portrayed happenings in a community anf often mimic situations that are often taboo.



Revival
Revival is a religious ritual resulting from an Afro-European syncretism - the mixing of African and European cultures.It is regarded as a spiritual dance


Tambu
Tambu groups are found mainly in Trelawny. Tambu today is performed mainly for entertainment. There are some similarities of this dance to other Caribbean islands. Continue reading more on Jamaica music and dance