Maracatu – Turning the Beat Around

Maracatu is a term common to two distinct performance genres found in Pernambuco state in northeastern Brazil: maracatu nação and maracatu rural.

Maracatu Nação

Maracatu nação (also known as maracatu de baque virado: “maracatu of the turned-around beat”) is an Afro-Brazilian performance genre. The term, often shortened simply to nação (“nation”, pl. nações), refers not only to the performance, but to the performing groups themselves.

Maracatu nação’s origins lie in the investiture ceremonies of the Reis do Congo (Kings of Congo), who were slaves that occupied leadership roles within the slave community. When slavery was abolished in Brazil in 1888, the institution of the Kings of Congo ceased to exist. Nonetheless, nações continued to choose symbolic leaders and evoke coronation ceremonies for those leaders. Although a maracatu performance is secular, traditional nações are grouped around Candomblé or Jurema (Afro-Brazilian religions) terreiros (bases) and the principles of Candomblé infuse their activities.

Traditional nações perform by parading with a drumming group of 80-100, a singer and chorus, and a coterie of dancers and stock characters including the king and queen. Dancers and stock characters dress and behave to imitate the Portuguese royal court of the Baroque period.

The performance also enacts pre-colonial African traditions, like parading the calunga, a doll representing tribal deities that is kept throughout the year in a special place in the Nação’s headquarters. The calungas, usually female, are traditionally made of either wax and wood or of cloth. They may have clothing made for them in a similar Baroque style to the costumes worn by the other members of the royal court. The calunga is sacred and carrying this spiritual figurehead of the group is a great responsibility for the female Dama de Paço’ (Lady-in-Waiting) of the cortège.

The musical ensemble consists of alfaia (a large wooden rope-tuned drum), gonguê (a metal cowbell), tarol (a shallow snare drum), caixa-de-guerra (another type of snare drum), abê (a gourd shaker enveloped in beads), and mineiro (a metal cylindrical shaker filled with metal shot or small dried seeds). Song form is call and response between a solo singer and (usually) a female chorus.

Today there are around 20 nações operating in the cities of Recife and Olinda. Although several have an unbroken line of activity going back to the 1800’s, most have been set up in recent decades. Well-known nações include Estrela Brilhante, Leão Coroado and Porto Rico. Each year they perform during the Carnival period in Recife and Olinda. Maracatu Nação Pernambuco, while not a traditional maracatu, was primarily responsible for introducing the genre to overseas audiences in the 1990s.

The genre has inspired the establishment of performing groups in a number of cities outside Brazil, including Toronto, New York, Cologne, Hamburg, Lyon, Stockholm, London, Edinburgh, Auckland, Brighton, Oakland and Manchester .

Maracatu Rural

A Maracatu Rural performer

A Maracatu Rural performer

Maracatu rural is also known as maracatu de baque solto, maracatu de orquestra, and maracatu de trombone. It is rooted in the Pernambucan interior and evolved in the early 20th century as a fusion of pre-existing forms of Carnival revelry. It is considered to be Afro-indigenous in origin. Its members, typically sugarcane workers, are involved with the native-influenced Catimbó religion. Maracatu rural has a high participation rate with dozens of groups operating all over the state.

Instruments for Brazilian Rythyms

Below are a few instruments widely used to make Brazilian rythyms in music.

Pandeiro – How to Shake It

The pandeiro is a type of hand frame drum commonly found in many types of Brazilian music.

Much like the distinctions between the ukelele and the cavaquinho, there are two important distinctions between a pandeiro and the common tambourine. The tension of the head on the pandeiro can be tuned, allowing the player a choice of high and low notes. Also, the platinelas (metal jingles) are crisper, drier and less sustained on pandeiros than on the tambourine. This provides clarity when swift, complex rhythms are played.

It is held in one hand, and struck on the head by the other hand to produce the sound. Typical pandeiro patterns are played by alternating the thumb, fingertips, heel, and palm of the hand.

A pandeiro can also be shaken to make sound, or one can run a finger along the head to create a “rasp” noise. The pandeiro is used in a number of Brazilian music forms, such as Samba, Choro, Coco and Capoeira music (see Capoeira songs).

Some of the best-known pandeiro players today are Paulinho Da Costa, Airto Moreira, Marcos Suzano, and Carlinhos Pandeiro de Ouro.

Examples

In the video below, a percussion major at Northwestern University, give a great description of the pandeiro and how to play a basic beat.

If you are looking for a little more information while still focusing on the basics, Cassio Duarte has some tips for you.

Berimbau – Afro-Brazilian Rythyms

The berimbau is a single-string percussion instrument, a musical bow, from Brazil. The berimbau’s origins are not entirely clear, but there is not much doubt on its African origin, as no Indigenous Brazilian or European people use musical bows, and very similar instruments are played in the southern parts of Africa. The berimbau was eventually incorporated into the practice of the Afro-Brazilian martial art capoeira (which I will speak about in a later post), where it commands how the capoeiristas move in the roda (circle). The instrument is known for being the subject matter of a popular song by Brazilian guitarist Baden Powell, with lyrics by Vinicius de Moraes. Below is a short intro. to the aesthetic history of the berimbau.

Cuica – Strange Sound in the Samba

The Cuíca (pronounced KuWEE-kah) is a Brazilian friction drum often used in samba music. The tone it produces has a high-pitched squeaky timbre which is why it has been called a ‘laughing gourd’ and even the ‘lion’s roar’ due to its deeper sound.

The body of the cuíca is normally made of metal. It has a single head, normally made of animal skin. A thin bamboo stick is attached to the centre of, and perpendicular to, the drum head. To play the cuíca, the musician rubs the stick up and down with a wet cloth held in one mão (hand), using the thumb of the other hand to press down on the skin of the drum near the place where the stick is attached. The rubbing motion produces the sound and the pitch is increased or decreased by changing the pressure on the thumb.

The cuíca plays an important rhythmic role in samba music of all kinds. It is particularly notable as a fixture of Rio de Janeiro’s Carnival groups, which feature entire sections of cuíca players. It is so commonly used in radio-oriented samba music that in the absence of a cuíca player, Brazilian singers or other musicians imitate the sound of the cuíca with their voices.

Examples of the cuíca in popular non-Brazilian music include:

  • Paul Simon’s “Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard”
  • Beck’s “Tropicalia”
  • Barenaked Ladies’ “Enid”
  • Bob Marley’s “Could You Be Loved”
  • Jamiroquai’s “Music of the Mind”
  • Dido’s “Thank You”
  • Stevie Wonder’s “Bird Of Beauty”

I find it always interesting what wealth of intruiging information I am able to find by reading about things in their language of origin, in this case Portuguese. Upon reading the English Wikipedia article on the Cuíca, I found the above information, but by reading just a few sentences from the Portuguese Wikipedia article, I found this…

“A cuíca é um instrumento cujas origens são menos conhecidas do que os outros instrumentos afro-brasileiros. Ela foi trazida ao Brasil por escravos africanos Banto, mas ligações podem ser traçadas a outras partes do nordeste africano, assim como à península Ibérica. A cuíca era também chamada de “rugido de leão” ou de “tambor de fricção”. Em suas primeiras encarnações era usada por caçadores para atrair leões com os rugidos que o instrumento pode produzir.”

The cuíca is an intrument whose origins are less known than the other Afro-Brazilian instruments. It was brought to Brazil by African slaves from the Banto tribe, but connections can be traced back to other parts of Northeastern Africa, and even the Iberian Penninsula. The cuíca was also called “the roar of the lion” or “the friction drum”. In it’s first incarnations, it was used by hunters to attract lions with the sounds it can produce.

Cavaquinho – Cousin to the Ukelele

The cavaquinho or little cavaco (piece of firewood) is part of the small string European guitar family. It’s cousin to the ukelele (or “jumping flea” in Hawaiian), differing only by certain small modifications made when brought to Brazil from Hawaii. The ukelele in turn was brought to Hawaii from Portugal. The cavaquinho is mainly used in Samba music.