Browse Items (64 total)

  • Tags: cultural tradition

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Nanette Hernandez, cofounder and member of Segunda Quimbamba, performing at the Perth Amboy Ferry Slip as part of the Perth Amboy Artworks summer music series.

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In bomba, the lead drum and lead drummer mark the movements made by the dancer, called "piquetes" or "picoteos".

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In teaching youth the fundamentals of bomba, from the drum to the dance to the songs, Segunda Quimbamba helps to keep the tradition alive and pass it along to future generations.

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Performing with Segunda Quimbamba at the Perth Amboy Ferry Slip.

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Bombera playing the "barril de bomba" and singing chorus with Segunda Quimbamba.

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Plenera playing a pandero and singing a plena with Segunda Quimbamba.

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Segunda Quimbamba performing at the Perth Amboy Ferry Slip on September 14, 2019. Segunda Quimbamba is a Jersey City-based percussion and dance ensemble that performs authentic Bomba and Plena, musical traditions from the island of Puerto Rico.…

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Artisans selling hand crafted vejigante masks at the 5th Encuentro de Tambores in Juncos, Puerto Rico.

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Group of women playing barilles de bomba at the 5th Encuentro de Tambores in Puerto Rico. Drumming is often associated with male musicians, especially on a performance basis, but this is changing in modern society, as seen at this "Meeting of the…

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Jariksa Valle Feliciano, a member of the group representing the town of Aguada at the 5th Encuentro de Tambores.

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The cuá is an instrument that accompanies the barriles de bomba. The cuá is actually the sticks used to play on either a barrel or chunk of bamboo and helps keep the basic rhythm of the bomba strains.

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A member of the group representing Aguada in the 5th Encuentro de Tambores takes time to teach Raíces co-founder and ensemble member Nicole Wines the pattern he plays to accompany the bomba strains. Each town and group has their own variations of…

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Singers and lead drummers of the bomba group representing the town of Aguada at the 5th Encuentro de Tambores in Juncos, Puerto Rico posing for a photograph before they begin to play.

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Singers representing the town of Aguada at the 5th Encuentro de Tambores in Juncos, Puerto Rico.

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Bomba drummers playing with the group representing the town of Aguada at the 5th Encuentro de Tambores in Juncos, Puerto Rico.

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Drummers and audience at the 5th Encuentro de Tambores in Juncos, Puerto Rico.

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Drummers playing bomba at the 5th Encuentro de Tambores, completely surrounded by crowds and cameras.

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Drummer playing cuá with the group representing the town of Aguada at the 5th Encuentro de Tambores.

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Drummer playing the primo, or lead drum, which interprets the moves of the dancer in sound.

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Bomba dancer at 5th Encuentro de Tambores dancing before the drum.
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