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While the style has adapted to the times and new influences,
at its core it has remained much the same for a century or
more. Eventually, the tumbantala was replaced by the
marimbula, a wooden, boxlike instrument of African origin
that served as a sound chamber for four steel bars, tuned to
a tonic scale and plucked to provide bass notes. By the
early twentieth century, the upright double bass, used in
European classical music and jazz, began to be employed in
son groups. The string bass joined an ensemble that has
traditionally included Spanish guitar, the tres (a smaller
Cuban guitar), maracas, and bongo drums. Later, conga drums
and the guiro, a gourd with deep serrations cut into its
surface and played with a stick scraper, were added to the
growing instrumentation. "If you give a traditional son
group four trumpets and a piano, you would have a salsa
group without changing anything," notes Solorzano.
"Son is our most original music," says one of Santiago's
best young musicians, bassist Alexis Rojas Montero. He sums
up why he believes this fundamental Cuban style continues to
capture the interest of an increasingly diverse global
audience. Today, fans of the music range from residents of
small towns in the land of its birth, bastions of the son
tradition, to a vast international audience that has become
jaded by the increasingly vulgar tone of popular music and
thirsts for more elemental styles. "It has a minimal amount
of influences," he continues. "It's easy to listen and dance
to. It's tranquil. And, perhaps most important, it has
pleasure and heart."
Mark Holston writes about
political, social, economic, and cultural issues in Latin
America for Americas, Hispanic, Seis Continentes, and other
international publications. The assistance of
Inter-Continental Hotels in making this report possible is
acknowledged. |