Cuarteto music and dancing from Argentina : in search of the Tunga-Tunga in Córdoba
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Cuarteto music and dancing from Argentina : in search of the Tunga-Tunga in Córdoba
University Press of Florida, c2001
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Note
Bibliography: p. [307]-320
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This benchmark study fills a gap in our understanding of regional styles of Latin American and Caribbean music and also sheds light on popular music around the world. Cuarteto is the wildly popular working-class dance music associated today with thousands of inhabitants of Cordoba, Argentina. In this first study of the controversial, lucrative, and little-known musical genre, Jane Florine describes the musical and sociohistorical context surrounding cuarteto and demonstrates how innovation has produced stylistic change in the music. Focusing on six bands, especially the group led by Carlos Jimenez, one of the most famous cuarteto singers, she illuminates the role of the individual in the processes that drive musical evolution. Examining the consequences of decisions like what music to play, how to play it, and who makes those choices, Florine tracks power struggles that evolve over the life of a band. The book includes song lyrics, musical transcriptions, diagrams, and photographs, and it describes the underlying accompaniment pattern of cuarieto, the tunga-tunga, which has been in place since 1943.
It supplies theoretical background about musical change and provides information about typical cuarteto dance events and how to dance cuarteto. The account is personalized by Florine's account of her own adventures performing and recording with Jimenez's group.
by "Nielsen BookData"