Western Music Finals Reviewer
Western Music Finals Reviewer
Western Music Finals Reviewer
FINALS REVIEWER
The music of Latin America is the product of three major influences – Indigenous, Spanish-Portuguese, and African.
Sometimes called Latin music.
It includes the countries that have had a colonial history from Spain and Portugal, divided into the following areas:
b. Central America – Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Panama
c. Carribean – Cuba, Dominican Republic, Guadeloupe, Haiti, Martinique, and Puerto Rico
d. Brazil
At the same time, because of the inter-racial cross breeding and migration, the above named countries were also
somewhat commonly populated by five major ancestral groups as follows:
c. European descendants mainly from Spain and Portugal but also including the French, Dutch, Italian, and British
Before the arrival of the Spanish, Portuguese, and other European colonizers, the natives were found to be using
local drum and percussion instruments such as the guiro, maracas, and turtle shells.
Quenas only are played during the dry season. Materials came from hollow tree trunks, animal skins, fruit shells, dry
seeds, cane and clay, hardwood trees, jaguar claws, animal and human bones, and specially-treated inflated eyes of
tigers.
The indigenous music of Latin America was largely functional in nature, being used for religious worship and
ceremonies.
The use of instruments as well as singing and dancing served to implore the Gods for good harvest, victory in
battles, guards against sickness and natural disasters, and of course provide recreation.
Short musical motives from descending melodic lines were a common feature, where tempo, rhythm, and tone
colors vary with the specific occasion or ritual.
Some of the Native American music includes courtship songs, dancing songs, and popular American or Canadian
tunes like Amazing Grace, Dixie, Jambalaya, and Sugar Time. Many songs celebrate themes like harvest, planting
season or other important times of year.
The African influence on Latin American music is most pronounced in its rich and varied rhythmic patterns
produced by the drums and various percussion instruments.
Complex layering of rhythmic patterns was a favorite device, where fast paced tempos add to the rhythmic density.
Vocal music was often deep chested while instrumental music greatly relied on resonant drums and sympathetic
buzzers to produce rich sounds and occasional loud volume levels to reflect their intensity.
4. Euro-Latin American Music
The different regions of Latin America adopted various characteristics from their European colonizers.
Melodies of the Renaissance period were used in Southern Chile and the Colombian Pacific coasts, while step-wise melodies
were preferred in the heavily Hispanic and Moorish-influenced areas of Venezuela and Colombia.
Other European influences were manifested in the texture of Euro-Latin American music, from unaccompanied vocal solos to
those accompanied by stringedinstruments.
Latin America has produced a number of musical genres and forms that had been influenced by European folk
music, African traditional music, and native sources.
Much of its popular music has in turn found its way to the many venues and locales of America, Europe, and
eventually the rest of the world.
Its danceable rhythms, passionate melodies, and exotic harmonies continue to enthrall music and dance enthusiasts
worldwide even as the forms themselves undergo constant modifications that are more relevant to the times. Some
of these Latin American popular music forms are tango, bossa nova, samba, son, and salsa.
a. Samba
The samba is a dance form of African origins around 1838 which evolved into an African- Brazilian invention in the
working class and slum districts of Rio de Janeiro.
Its lively rhythm, consisting of a meter but containing three steps each that create a feeling of a 3/4 meter instead, was meant
to be executed for singing, dancing, and parading in the carnival.
Samba has a number of variations, so that there is no clear-cut definition of a single samba form. Its most adventurous kind is
known as the batucada, referring at once to a large percussion ensemble of up to a hundred players, a jam session, or an
intensely polyrhythmic style of drumming.
b. Son
The son is a fusion of the popular music or canciones (songs)of Spain and the African rumba rhythms of Bantu
origin.
Originating in Cuba, it is usually played with the tres (guitar), bongos, maracas, and claves (two wooden sticks that
are hit together).
Although the son is seldom heard today, its most important legacy is its influence on present-day Latin American
music, particularly as the forerunner of salsa.
c. Salsa
The salsa is a social dance with marked influences from Cuba and Puerto Rico that started in New York in the mid 1970’s.
Its style contains elements from the swing dance and hustle as well as the complex Afro-Cuban and Afro-Carribean dance
forms of pachanga and guaguanco.
The execution of the salsa involves shifting the weight by stepping sideways, causing the hips to move while the upper body
remains level.
The arms and shoulders are also incorporated with the upper body position. In each, a moderate tempo is used while the
upper and lower bodies act in disjoint as described above.
Varied cultures developed in Latin America gave rise to different types of wind and percussion instruments.
Tlapitzali
a flute variety from the Aztec culture made of clay with decorations of abstract designs or images of their deities.
Teponaztli
Mexican slit drum hollowed out and carved from piece of hardwood.
Concha
wind instrument made from the shell of a large sea snail.
Rasp
hand percussion instrument whose sound is produced by scrapping a stick that has a series of indentations or
notches with another stick, creating rattling effects
Huehueti
upright tubular drum used by the Aztecs and other civilizations. It is made of opened at the bottom and standing on
three legs cut from base.
Whistles
Among the Incas of South America, two instrumental varieties we're common:
Ocarina
Zampoñas
Ocarina
ancient vessel flute made of clay or ceramic with four to twelve finger holes and a mouthpiece that projects from the
body.
Zamponas
The Andean highland also their own varieties of flutes that include the following:
Siku
Wooden Tarka
Quena
Charango
Siku
Originally from Aymaras of Peru and Bolivia. It is traditionally found all across the Andes.
Different types of bamboo are used to change the quality of the sound.
Wooden Tarka
Quena
Charango
Mariachi
Extremely popular band in Mexico whose original ensemble consisted of violins, guitars, a harp and an enormous
guitarron.
It's extremely passionate and romantic with its blended harmonies and a catchy rhythms. It's musicians are distinctly
dressed in wide-brimmed hats, jackets, and pants adorned with silver buttons.
-Merian Merana
1.Cumbia
Became popular dance with European and African instrumentation and characteristics
2.Tango
• African origin meaning “African Dance” or from the Spanish word “Taner” meaning to play an instrument.
• 1890 - foremost
• 1960 - More improvisation and movement were incorporated into the form
3. Cha cha
4. Rumba
Popular recreational dance of Afro-Cuban origin, normally used as a ballroom dance where a solo dancer or couple would be
in an embrace though slightly apart.
also used for concert music, as it appeared in the Second Piano Concerto of the French composer Darius Milhaud.
5. Bossa Nova
originated in 1958 as a movement effecting a radical change in the classic Cuban samba.
Vinicius de Moraes
Sitti Navarro
6. Reggae
Urban popular music and dance style that originated in Jamaica in the mid 1960’s
Contained Engilsh text coupled with Creole expressions that were not so familiar to the non-Jamaican.
Bob Marley
Best known proponent of reggae music, Jamaican singer-songwriter, musician, and guitarist
One Love, Three Little Birds; No Woman, No Cry; Redemption Song; and Stir It Up
7. Foxtrot
Gave rise to other dances such as the black bottom, Charleston and shimmy.
20th century social dance that originated after 1910 in the USA.
Charleston - Steps involve kicking the legs and swinging the arms
8. Paso Doble
(“double step”)
a theatrical Spanish dance used by the Spaniards in bullfights, where the music was played as the matador enters
(paseo) and during passes just before the kill (faena)
-Marinne Corpuz
Popular Music
- is music with wide appeal that is typically distributed to large audiences through the music industry.
- It stands in contrast to both art music and traditional or "folk" music
- The original application of the term is to music of the 1880s Tin Pan Alley period in the United States.
Song structure
Verse
Refrain/chorus
Bridge
In the 2000s, with songs and pieces available as digital sound files, it has become easier for music to spread from one country or
region to another.
Scholars have classified music as "popular" based on various factors, including whether a song or piece becomes known to listeners
mainly from hearing the music
its appeal to diverse listeners.
its treatment as a marketplace commodity in a capitalist contexts.
Sales of 'recordings' or sheet music are one measure
David Riesman - “the youth audiences of popular music fit into either a majority group or a subculture.”
"The most significant feature of the emergent popular music industry of the late 18th and early 19th centuries was the extent of its
focus on the commodity form of sheet music".
In addition to the influence of sheet music, another factor was the increasing availability during the late 18th and early 19th century of
public popular music performances in "pleasure gardens and dance halls, popular theatres and concert rooms"
One of the early popular music performers to attain widespread popularity was a Swedish opera singer Jenny Lind, who toured the US
in the mid-19th century.
The center of the music publishing industry in the US during the late 19th century was in New York's 'Tin Pan Alley' district.
Player pianos could be used to record a skilled pianist's rendition of a piano piece
By the early 1900s, the big trends in popular music were the increasing popularity of vaudeville theaters and dance halls and a new
invention—the gramophone player.
Radio broadcasting of music, which began in the early 1920s, helped to spread popular songs to a huge audience
increased the ability of songwriters, singers and bandleaders to become nationally known
Another factor which helped to disseminate popular music was the introduction of "talking pictures"—sound films—in the
late 1920s, which also included music and songs.
In contrast to Western popular music, a genre of music that is popular outside of a Western nation, is categorized into World music.
The hybrid styles have also found a space within Western popular music through the expressions of their national culture.
Popular African music styles have stemmed from traditional entertainment genres, rather than evolving from music used with certain
traditional ceremonies like weddings, births, or funerals.
African popular music tends to stay within the roots of traditional African Popular Music.
A popular maskandi artist, Phuzekhemisi, had to lessen the political influence within his music to be ready for the public sphere.
Popular music in Indonesia can be categorized as hybrid forms of Western rock to genres that are originated in Indonesia and
indigenous in style.
Umm Kulthum - "We must respect ourselves and our art. The Indians have set a good example for us - they show great
respect for themselves and their arts. Wherever they are, they wear their native dress and their music is known throughout the
world. This is the right way."
1980s and 1990s - popular music has been seen as a problem for the Iranian government
1990 and 2004 - the youth overall preferred Western popular music
This was followed by the emergence of the instrumental groups known as the cumbachero (a local version of a Latin-American
band), which became well-known in fiestas and other social gatherings.
1950’s - 1960’s - newer genres as rock and roll and country music appealed to a younger generation of Filipino popular
artists.
1970s - Conscious efforts to develop that Filipino sound (Pinoy Sound) with the creation of Filipino rock music, dubbed
as Pinoy Rock, Filipino Jazz or Pinoy Jazz and Filipino pop ballad or the Manila Sound.
o Metro Manila Popular Music Festival (or Metro Pop), a song writing competition for amateurs and professionals,
became the buffer for the creation of new pop songs and the introduction of emerging artists and performers.
The effort to probe deeper into the search for a Filipino identity in popular music was attempted in the late 1980’s and the early 90’s
by a group of composers who banded together to form KATHA (write/create).
This effort gave rise to the move to create Brown Music, a kind of counterpart to the African-American “Black Music”.
-Dominna Aleth C. Entienza
Jazz
therapeutic outlet for human feelings, the Africans used music to recall their nostalgic past in their home country as well as to
voice out their sentiments on their desperate condition at that time.
New Orlean, Louisiana - Jazz Capital of the World
‘Birth’ Of Jazz
Louis became one of the greatest jazz trumpeters and singers of all time
Ragtime
marching mode” made by John Philip Sousa where the effect is generated by an internally syncopated melodic line pitted
against a rhythmically straightforward
o bass line.
regular meters and clear phrases, with an alternation of low bass or bass octaves and chords.
Scott Joplin
Scott played guitar, cornet, and piano.
1893—performed at World’s Columbian Exhibition in Chicago
Maple Leaf Rag, Solace, and The Entertainer
King and Father of Ragtime
A standard big band 17-piece instrumentation like percussion, brass, and woodwind instruments:
Five saxophones (most often two altos, two tenors, and one baritone), four trumpets, four trombones (often including one bass
trombone), and a four-piece rhythm section (composed of drums, acoustic bass or electric bass, piano and guitar).
Bebop or bop is a musical style of modern jazz which is characterized by a fast tempo, instrumental virtuosity, and improvisation that
emerged during World War II. The speed of the harmony, melody, and rhythm resulted in a heavy performance where the instrumental
sound became more tense and free.
Bebop or Bop
Dizzy Gillespie
A synonym for “jazz fusion,” jazz rock is a mix of funk and R&B (“rhythm and blues”) rhythms, where the music used
amplification and electronic effects, complex time signatures, and extended instrumental compositions with lengthy
improvisations in the jazz style.
Popular singer/songwriters
Joni Mitchell
Ballads
o The ballad originated as an expressive folksong in narrative verse with text dealing typically about love
o The word is derived both from the medieval French “chanson balladee” and “ballade” which refers to a dancing
song.
Blues Ballads
o It is a fusion of Anglo- American and Afro-American styles from the 19th century that deals with the anti-heroes
resisting authority.
Pop Standard and Jazz Ballads
o This is a blues style built from a single verse of 16 bars ending on the dominant or half-cadence, followed by a
refrain/chorus part of 16 or 32 bars in AABA form.
o The B section acts as the bridge, and the piece normally ends with a brief coda
George Gershwin
o The Man I Love
Erving Berlin
o Always
Duke Ellington
o In a Sentimental Mood
Don McLean’s
o “American Pie.”
Standard
In music, the term “standard” is used to denote the most popular and enduring songs
- Its style is mostly in a slow or moderate tempo with a relaxed mood. It also features highly singable
melodies within the range and technical capacity of the everyday listener.
Frank Sinatra
“Ol Blue Eyes,” “Chairman of the Board,” or “The Voice”
He was a successful singer, actor, producer, director, and conductor
My Way and Strangers in the Night
Matt Monro
Rock and Roll
was a hugely popular song form in the United States during the late 1940’s to the 1950’s.
It combined Afro-American forms such as the blues, jump blues, jazz, and gospel music with the Western swing and country
music.
It derived its name from the mot of a sonhip on the ocean, “rock and roll.”
The greatest exponent of the rock and roll style
Heartbreak Hotel and Blue Suede Shoes were complemented by his good looks
Elvis Presley
The Beatles
“the most commercially successful band in the history of popular music
I Saw Her Standing There, Get Back, While My Guitar Gently Weeps, Rock and Roll Music, and Ticket to Ride.
John Lennon
founder member of the rock band The Beatles
Imagine, Mind Games, Power to the People, Dream, Nobody Told Me, Watching the Wheels, Woman, Whatever Gets You
Through the Night, and Instant Karma.
2008, Rolling Stone Magazine ranked him the “fifth-greatest singer of all time.”
60 gold discs and sales of over 100 million albums and 100 million singles of his work with the Beatles and as a solo artist
Hey Jude; Fool on the Hill; I’ll Follow the Sun; I Will; I Saw Her Standing There; All My Loving.
Disco
French word “discotheque” which means a library for phonograph records.
Disco music pertained to rock music that was more danceable, thus leading to the establishment of venues for public dancing
also called discos.
Donna Summer
“A Queen of Disco”
The disco style had a soaring and reverberating sound rhythmically controlled by a steady beat (usually meter) for ease of
dancing, and accompanied by strings, horns, electric guitars, and electric pianos or synthesizers
ABBA
Earth, Wind and Fire
Pop Music
Popular music literally means “music of the populace,” similar to traditional folk music of the past.
Entertainment of large numbers of people, whether on radio or in live performances.
Parallel with the disco era, other pop music superstars continued to emerge
Alternative Music
Alternative music was an underground independent form of music that arose in the 1980’s.
It became widely popular in the 1990’s as a way to defy “mainstream” rock music.
it was known for its unconventional practices such as distorted guitar sounds, oppressive lyrics, and defiant attitudes.
It was also characterized by high energy levels that bred new styles such as new wave, punk rock, post-punk, indie rock,
gothic rock, jangle pop, noise pop, C86, Madchester, Industrial Rock, and Shoegazing.
-Kycee Cortez
TRADITIONAL COMPOSERS:
In early 1900s, he taught music at Ateneo de Manila and Centro Escolar de Senoritas.
1930, Founded the Buencamino Music Academy.
1938, He founded the Conservatory of Music. Wherein he also handled music lesson at the Liceo de Manila.
1940's when he started working as a musical director
Francisco Buencamino died on 16th of October 1952.
“Ang Larawan” 1943 - most acclaimed work.
“Marcela 1904”, “Si Tio Celo 1904”, “Yayang 1905” are some of his sarswela.
“En el bello Oriente” 1909 as one of his ealiest composition.
“Ang Una kong pag-ibig” his popular kundiman.
“Outstanding Composer”
His most famous works “Sa Ugoy ng Duyan”, a lullaby melody sung by his mother.
He was declared National Artist for Music in 1991
He passed away on March 31, 2002
Lucrecia Kasilag
was born in San Fernando, La Union on August 31, 1918.
compositional style demonstrated a fusion of Eastern and Western styles in using instruments, melody, harmony, and
rhythm.
She is particularly known for incorporating indigenous Filipino instruments into orchestral productions.
She went to Manila to pursue a degree in Music at the Philippine Women’s University.
Toccata for Percussion and Winds (1959), composed for indigenous Muslim instruments and Western instruments.
The Legend of the Sarimanok (1963), composed for chamber orchestra and Philippine ethnic instruments.
Ramon P. Santos
born in Pasig on February 25, 1941.
He completed his Bachelor of Music degree at the College of Music, University of the Philippines.
Santos compositional style features chromaticism, music seria, and electronic components, combined with indigenous
Philippine music elements.
His works include Ding Ding Nga Diyawa, Nabasag na Banga at Iba’t iba pang Pinag-ugpong-ugpong na Pananalita
sa Wikang Pilipino para sa Labing Anim na Tinig, and L’BAD.
He was conferred the title of National Artist for Music in 2014.
He had done extensive research on the gamelan music of Java as well as the traditional music of the Ibaloi, Maranao,
Mansaka, Bontoc, Yakan, and Boholano tribes in the Philippines.
His versatility as a pianist, composer, arranger, theorist, and teacher is widely recognized in the local musical scene.
He has composed operas like Aba!, Sto. Nino, La Naval, and Lord Takayama Ukon.
A hymn in honor of St. Lorenzo Ruiz, and the official hymn of the 1996 National Eucharistic Congress.
Jerry Dadap
November 5, 1935 in Hinunangan, Southern Leyte.
The first Filipino composer to conduct his own works at the Carnegie Recital Hall in New York City.
He earned his Bachelor’s Degree in Music, major in Composition at the Conservatory of Music, University of the
Philippines (UP) in 1964.
The Passionate and the Wild (1960)
Mangamuyo I (1976) anD Mangamuyo II (1977)
Andres Bonifacio, Ang Dakilang Anak Pawis, Ang Pag-ibig ng Diyos
His major works as composer-conductor were performed at the concert “LAHI” that featured works by local major
composers.
Francisco F. Feliciano
National Artist for Music
Avant- grande composer and conductor for band and chorus.
February 19, 1942 in Morong, Rizal
His first exposure to music was with the Morriz Band, a brass ensemble established and owned by his father,
Maximiano Feliciano.
His first exposure to music was with the Morriz Band, a brass ensemble established and owned by his father,
Maximiano Feliciano
He started his music career in the high school band where he had played the cymbals and the clarinet.
Feliciano composed hundreds of liturgical pieces, mass settings, hymns, and songs for worship.
Josefino Toledo
is a recognized figure in the Asian contemporary art music scene.
He received his Master of Music degree from the Cleveland Institute of Music, USA.
Toledo is a Music Professor at the College of Music, University of the Philippines (UP).
Toledo is a Music Professor at the College of Music, University of the Philippines (UP).
He is the founding music director of the Metro Manila Community Orchestra.
He also wrote music for the orchestra such as Prelude and Toccata (1973), Fragments (1976), Life of Wartime Filipino
Hero Jose Abad Santos, and the ballet Yerma (1982).
Jonas Baes
born in Los Baños, Laguna in 1961
He enrolled at the College of Music, Universityof the Philippines (UP) in 1977 as a student of Ramon P. Santos.While
at UP
He researched on the music of the Iraya-Mangyan people of Mindoro.
Baes is known for writing music utilizing unorthodox musical instruments such as bean- pod rattles, leaves, iron-nail
chimes, and various Asian instruments such as bamboo scrapers, bamboo flutes, and vocal music usingAsian vocal
techniques.
IBO-IBON (birdwoman)
SALAYSAY, for solo voice
SONG COMPOSERS
“ A MIXTURE OF THE SOULFUL KUNDIMAN STYLE AND THE LIVELY STRAINS OF THE COUNTRYSIDE”
Was born in Sampalok, Manila
He attended the Conservatory of Music at University of the Philippines and Ateneo de Manila at Intramuros
He took private music lessons from Caetano Jacobe, Pedro Floriaga ans Nicanor Abelardo
Some of his works are the ff:
Ligaya ko, Pandanggo ni Neneng, Dungawin mo Hirang, Bakya mo Neneng, Caprichosa, Sa Libis ng Nayon, kataka-taka,,
Labandera ko, Lakambini, Kamia, Ikaw ang Buhay ko, Kay lungkot nitong Hatinggabi and Mutya niyaring Puso.`