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Compas (konpa) | |
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Stylistic origins | Méringue |
Cultural origins | Mid-1950s, Haiti |
Typical instruments | Conga, drums, guitars, keyboard, horn section, synthesizers, bass, cowbell, |
Derivative forms | Cadence rampa, zouk, cadence-lypso, coladeira, kizomba |
Fusion genres | |
Soca, reggaeton, kuduro, champeta | |
Regional scenes | |
Haiti, French West Indies, Dominica, Trinidad and Tobago, Canada, France, Africa, Panama, Cape Verde, South America, North America, Portugal, Angola, Brazil |
Music of Haiti | ||||
General topics | ||||
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Related articles | ||||
Genres | ||||
Media and performance | ||||
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Nationalistic and patriotic songs | ||||
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Regional music | ||||
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Compas (also known as konpa or kompa) is a modern méringue musical genre in Haiti with European and African roots. that people have been dancing and singing since the 1800s. The genre was popularized following the 1955 creation of the ban Conjunto International by Nemours Jean-Baptiste. Compas is the main music of many countries such as Dominica and the French Antilles, etc. Whether it is incorrectly called zouk where French Antilles artists of Martinique and Guadeloupe have taken it or compas in places where Haitian artists have toured, this méringue style is very influential in the Caribbean, Africa, Cape Verde, Portugal, France, part of Canada, South and North America.
Etymology and characteristics
Compas is short for compas direct in French. In Creole, it is spelled as konpa dirèk or simply konpa. The popular botched spelling of kompa, results from a phonetic misunderstanding between French to Haitian Creole, as there is no m in front of a b or p and therefore an n is used instead.
The word “compás” in Spanish means “beat” or “rhythm,” and one of the most distinctive characteristics of compas is the consistent pulsating beat tanbou, a trait common to many styles of Caribbean music. Compas direct, literally means direct beat.
History
Nemours Jean-Baptiste presented his “Ensemble Aux Calebasses” in 1955 (named after the club “Aux Calebasses” located at Carrefour, a western neighborhood of Port-au-Prince; Haiti's capital where the band used to perform on weekends). Compas popularity took off likely due to the genre's ability to improvise and hold the rhythm section steady. Jean-Baptiste incorporated a lot of brass and easily recognized rhythms. Compas is sung in Creole, English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, etc. Nemours' popularity grew in and out of the country. Its clean horn section was remarkable and the band featured méringue tunes that gained instant popularity. For example, in Martinique, several music groups: Ensemble Abricot (bienvenue, festival compas), les djoubap's (Isabelle), combo jazz (electronique compas, pa gadem sou cote), Georges Plonquitte (vini dance compas direct), etc. have all within a year conquered the public with the many tunes or compositions of Nemours. Later Nemours became a favorite of Dominican president, Joaquín Balaguer who often contracted the band. This is why hits like "ti Carole", "Chagrin d'amour" featured by known Dominican stars Luis Miguel and others are also sung in Spanish.
In the late 50s Nemours and the Sicot Brothers from Haiti would frequently tour the Caribbean, especially Curaceo, Aruba, St Lucia, Dominica and mostly the French Islands of Martinique & Guadeloupe to spread the seed of the méringue-cadence or compas. Webert Sicot, the originator of cadence recorded three LPs albums with French Antilles producers: two with "Celini disques" in Guadeloupe and one with "Balthazar" in Martinique. Haitian compas or cadence bands were asked to integrate Antillean musicians. Consequently, the leading "Les Guais troubadours", with influential singer "Louis Lahens" along other bands, played a very important role in the schooling of Antilleans to the méringue compas or kadans music style. Almost all existing Haitian compas bands have toured these Islands that have since adopted the music and the dance of the méringue.
Dance style
The dance-style that accompanied konpa dirèk in the 1950s, was a two step dance called kare (square). As a méringue, a ballroom dance, compas is danced in pair. Sometimes partners dance holding each other tightly and romantically; in this case often most of the moves are made at the hips.
Notable compas artists
- Nemours Jean-Baptiste
- Ensemble Webert Sicot
- D.P. Express
- Exile One
- Grammacks
- Kassav'
- La Perfecta
- Les Difficiles de Pétionville
- Les Frères Déjean
- Les Gypsies de Pétionville
- Les Leopards
- Les Loups Noirs
- Les Scorpio
- Les Shleu Shleu*
- Magnum Band
- Scorpio Universel
- Skah-Shah#1
- T-Vice
- Tabou Combo
See also
References
- ^ Hall, Michael R. (2012). Historical Dictionary of Haiti. p. 69. ISBN 9780810878105. Retrieved 2 December 2014.
- ...The meringue-apparently a close relative, if not a descendant of the carabineer-had emerged as Haiti's predominant secular dancep73...the carabineer, which in both salon and rustic folk forms, acquired the status of a national dance in the early 1800, even though it was frequently condemned by the Eurocentric elitep72-73.Peter Manuel, Musics of the Non-Western World, University Press 1988,
- Manuel, Peter (2006). Caribbean Currents: Caribbean Music from Rumba to Reggae (2nd edition). Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 1-59213-463-7.
- Gage Averill (1997). Caribbean Current: A day for the hunter. A day for the prey. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press.
- Peter Manuel, Musics of the Non-Western World, University Press 1988, p72-74
- "Haitian Creole-English Dictionary with Basic English-Haitian Creole Appendix" (PDF). Retrieved 6 March 2014.
- Stone, Michael. "FRoots Review" (PDF). p. 55. Retrieved 2 December 2014.
- All Music Guide, compas direct
- Haiti, Guadeloupe, Cabo Verde and others
- Dominique Janvier, introduction on Nemour' album cover 1980, long vie to Nemours
- Tambour Battant p85
- All Music Guide 1994, compas direct
- A Day for the Hunter, a Day for the Prey: Popular Music and Power in Haiti. Retrieved 20 March 2014.
- Peter Manuel, Popular Musics of the Non-Western World, Oxford University Press 1988: (Nemours Jean-Bapstiste adapted the méringue to mambo-style big band instrumentation and rhythmic patterns, coining the term compas direct for his innovation. For his part, Webert Sicot is credited with popularizing the rubric cadence for his similarly modernized meringue)