Guitar - instrument
The Spanish guitar arrived in Cuba with the colonizers and became the seed of Cuban music, blending with African rhythms. From inspiring the tres to shaping son, conjuntos, and even modern timba, its influence runs through every note of Cubaâs musical history.
đž The Spanish Guitar in Cuban Music
Arrival & Roots
The Spanish guitar arrived in Cuba with the colonizers in the 16th century.
It blended with African percussion and rhythms, laying the foundation for Cubaâs mestizo sound.
Rural forms like the punto guajiro (peasant music) featured guitar as the melodic backbone.
Transformation into the Tres
Over time, the guitar inspired the creation of the tres (a smaller, double-course guitar-like instrument).
The tres became essential in son cubano, playing syncopated riffs (guajeos).
In sextetos and septetos, guitar and tres often coexisted, providing both harmony and rhythm.
From Son to Conjunto
As ensembles expanded into conjuntos, the guitarâs role shifted.
Piano often replaced it as the harmonic foundation, but the tres (and occasionally the guitar) remained as a rhythmic âcolor.â
The guitar started moving out of the dance band frontline and more into trova, bolero, and filin.
The Guitarâs Voice in Timba
Timba is powered by piano montunos, drums, and horns, but the guitar reappears as a texture, solo instrument, or nod to tradition.
Many timba musicians are also guitarists in trova/bolero settings.
This creates a hidden dialogue: the Spanish guitar is always âpresent,â even if you donât hear it in every arrangement.
Symbolism
The Spanish guitar in Cuba is more than just an instrument â itâs a cultural seed.
It connects rural peasants with urban musicians, tradition with modernity, Europe with Africa.
Even in the most modern timba, its DNA is there.
From Strings to Timbal: How the Spanish Guitar Shaped Cubaâs Sound
A Cuban popular dance music genre that emerged in the 1980sâ90s
- emerged in the 1980sâ90s
- influenced by songo, rumba, funk, blues, jazz, pop, rock and Afro-Cuban rhythms.
- Known for complex rhythm shifts, aggressive bass lines, and high energy that push dancers to improvise.
Lees meer >When son first hit Havana, the sexteto format (6 instruments, no brass) was the model: guitar, tres, bongĂł, claves, maracas, and bass. These groups were lighter, closer to the rural sound but polished for urban dance halls. Famous example: Sexteto Habanero.
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Cuban guitar-like instrument with 3 pairs of strings used in son and changĂŒĂ.
Lees meer >Origins
Inventor: Bartolomeo Cristofori (1655â1731), an Italian instrument maker in Florence.
Date: Around 1700, Cristofori built the first instrument he called a âgravicembalo col piano e forteâ â meaning harpsichord with soft and loud.
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- Son traditional
- Son urbano
- Son montuno
- Son moderno.
Lees meer >Africa
Afro-Cuban Dances by African Origin
| African Region / Ethnic Group |
Cuban Religions / Traditions |
Cuban Dances / Genres |
| Nigeria (Yoruba) |
SanterĂa (Regla de Ocha) |
Orisha dances (to Shango, YemayĂĄ, OchĂșn, ElegguĂĄ, etc.); staged folkloric Yoruba dances; influence on Rumba & Son movement |
| Nigeria (Igbo / Efik) |
Lesser-preserved lineages |
Ritual dances in some Afro-Cuban ceremonies, body isolations integrated into popular dance |
| CameroonâCongo (Bantu/Kongo) |
Palo Monte (Regla de Palo), Congo cabildos |
Palo dances, Makuta, Yuka; Congo-style dances; major influence on Rumba ( Columbia & GuaguancĂł) |
| Dahomey (Fon/Ewe, Benin area) |
ArarĂĄ religion ( Matanzas) |
ArarĂĄ ritual dances, with distinctive footwork and body undulations |
| CarabalĂ (Calabar, SE Nigeriaâ Cameroon border) |
AbakuĂĄ society |
Secret society dances (ekĂłn, plante), influence on male rumba styles |
| European (Spanish / French) |
Secular ballroom, Creole culture |
Contradanza, Habanera, DanzĂłn, Cha-cha-chĂĄ, Mambo, etc. |
| Mixed Creole (African + European) |
Popular Cuban music & dance |
Son, Rumba, Salsa, Casino (Cuban salsa), Timba |
A Cuban popular dance music genre that emerged in the 1980sâ90s
- emerged in the 1980sâ90s
- influenced by songo, rumba, funk, blues, jazz, pop, rock and Afro-Cuban rhythms.
- Known for complex rhythm shifts, aggressive bass lines, and high energy that push dancers to improvise.
Lees meer >Mambo
In Cuban music, especially in salsa and son,
the "mambo" section typically refers to a brassy, rhythmically intense instrumental break,
often featuring repetitive horn lines, call-and-response patterns, and building energy toward the climax of a song.
YemayĂĄ
YemayĂĄ â several specific toques for YemayĂĄ.
Rooted in Havanaâs bustling 1950s dance halls, Cuban Casino mixes tradition and flair in a partner dance style that spread worldwide.
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- Son traditional
- Son urbano
- Son montuno
- Son moderno.
Lees meer >National dance of Cuba, evolved from danza.
Lees meer >A Cuban dance and music style created in the early 1950s by Enrique JorrĂn, evolving from the danzĂłn-mambo tradition in charanga orchestras.
Lees meer >Cuban rumba is an Afro-Cuban music and dance genre characterized by complex rhythms, call-and-response vocals, and expressive, often flirtatious movements, rooted in African and Spanish traditions.
Lees meer >Rumba columbia is the fastest of the Cuban rumba styles (alongside yambĂș and guaguancĂł). Itâs a virtuosic solo danceâtraditionally male, now often danced by women tooâperformed to a triple-pulse feel (12/8, often felt as fast 6/8). Its hallmark is a playful, competitive dialogue between the dancer and the lead drum (quinto).
Lees meer >The dance involves a flirtatious "chase" between a male and female dancer, with the male attempting a symbolic pelvic thrust called the vacunao,
and the female using body movements to evade or accept it.
Lees meer >Palo
Palo
Palo is an Afro-Cuban religion with various denominations that developed among Central African slaves and their descendants, particularly those of Congo and Bantu origin.
The Spanish word palo (âstickâ) refers to the wooden sticks used in the construction of ritual altarsâcalled la Nganga, el caldero, or la prenda.
Denominations (âBranchesâ) of Palo
- Mayombe (or Mallombe)
- Monte
- Briyumba (or Brillumba)
- Kimbisa
Practitioners
Priests and initiates of Palo are called:
- Paleros
- Tatas (male priests)
- Yayas (female priests)
- Nganguleros
Core Beliefs
The Palo belief system rests on two foundational pillars:
- Honor of the spirits
- Belief in natural / earth powers
All natural objectsâespecially sticksâare understood to contain spiritual power, typically connected to the spirits themselves. This differs from SanterĂa and other Yoruba religions, whose orishas are more closely associated with human or anthropomorphic forms.
Distinctive Traits
- No deity-specific colors, clothing, or stylized dances (unlike SanterĂa).
- Ritual emphasis on natural objects and the nganga.
Music in Palo Rituals
Palo music typically begins with wooden percussion, followed by drums and metal tools.
Wooden instruments:
Drums:
- Ngoma (conga-style drums)
Metal instruments:
Higher Deities and Syncretism
Nkuyu
Also known as: Mukudji, Nkuyu, Mañunga, Lubaniba, Lucero, Lucero Mundo, Remolino, Cuarto Vientos, Kbuyu
- Deity of forests and roads; a guide and balancer
- Guardian of cemetery entrances
- Associated with the moon
- Syncretized with EleguĂĄ/Eshu (Yoruba) and the Holy Infant of Atocha
Kengue
Also known as: Mama Kengue, Yola, Tiembla Tierra, Pandilanga
- Sky Father and primordial creator
- Deity of knowledge and justice
- Equivalent to ObatalĂĄ (Yoruba)
- Syncretized with the Virgin of Mercy
Sarabanda
Also known as: Zarabanda, Rompe Monte
- Strong, forceful, willful deity
- Equivalent to OgĂșn (Yoruba)
- Associated with Saint Peter
El Christo Negro
- Black manifestation of Jesus Christ
- Considered all-powerful; all spirits bow to his authority
- Symbolically linked with black crows and black roosters
Mama Chola
- Goddess of fertility and love
- Equivalent to OshĂșn, the Yoruba orisha of beauty and love
Percussion Instruments
Instruments like conga, batĂĄ, and clave.
- Orisha of thunder, lightning, fire, drumming, kingship.
- Toques: ChachachĂĄ, AlujĂĄ, Obakoso.
- Strong, fiery, powerful rhythms â central to batĂĄ tradition.
Lees meer >The following dances have their origin in Matanzas:
- Rumba
- YambĂș
- GuaguancĂł
- DanzĂłn
- AbakuĂĄ
-
Arara
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Origin of:
Heritage of:
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