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・ Cadence (music)
・ Cadence (poetry)
・ Cadence Bank
・ Cadence Biomedical
・ Cadence braking
・ Cadence Design Systems
・ Cadence Design Systems, Inc. v. Avanti Corp
・ Cadence Industries
・ Cadence Jazz Records
・ Cadence Magazine
・ Cadence rampa
・ Cadence Records
・ Cadence SKILL
・ Cadence Spalding
・ Cadence Weapon
Cadence-lypso
・ Cadences obstinées
・ Cadency
・ Cadency labels of the British royal family
・ Cadenet
・ Cadenet (troubadour)
・ Cadent
・ Cadent house
・ Cadentown School
・ Cadenus and Vanessa
・ Cadenza
・ Cadenza (album)
・ Cadenza (choir)
・ Cadenza (disambiguation)
・ Cadeo


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Cadence-lypso : ウィキペディア英語版
Cadence-lypso

Cadence-lypso is a fusion of cadence rampa from Haiti and calypso from Trinidad and Tobago. Originated in the 1970s by the Dominican band Exile One on the island of Guadeloupe, it spread and became popular in the dance clubs of Dominica and the French Antilles.〔 Genres: Caribbean and Latin America.〕
Gordon Henderson is the leader and founder of Exile One, and the one who coined the term ''cadence-lypso''.〔〔 Performing the Caribbean Experience.〕
==History==
(詳細はDominica national life. Dominica musical landscape has seen many changes in the intervening period from 1950. In the forties and fifties, there were bands such as the Casimir Brothers of Roseau. The Swinging Stars emerged at the end of the fifties. Their music was a dance-oriented version of many kinds of Caribbean and Latin popular music.
By the beginning of the 1960s, calypso and Trinidadian steelpan became the most popular styles of music on Dominica, replacing traditional Carnival music like chanté mas and lapo kabwit, particularly in the capital Roseau. Many of the traditional carnival songs were performed in the new calypso beat. Calypsonians and calypso monarch competitions emerged and became extremely popular. It was in the 1960s that the trend towards drawing on original music, traditional music and songs of Dominica began. This was probably best exemplified by the music of the Gaylords and to a lesser extent, De Boys and Dem. Gaylords unleashed a string of hits such as "DouvanJou", "Ti Mako", songs in Kwéyòl as well as powerful nationalist songs in English, as "Lovely Dominica" and "Pray for the Blackman". These songs were performed to calypso rhythms and later the new reggae beat coming out of Jamaica.
Early recording stars from this era included Swinging Busters, The Gaylords, De Boys an Dem and Los Caballeros, while chorale groups also gained fans, especially Lajenne Etwal, Siflé Montan'y and the Dominica folk singers. These early popular musicians were aided by the spread of radio broadcasting, beginning with WIDBS and later Radio Dominica.〔(【引用サイトリンク】work=Division of Culture )〕 The emergence of radio, first WIDBS and later Radio Dominica helped to spread the music.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the influence of rock, soul and funk music from the United States was reflected in Dominican contemporary dance music. New groups originating from mainly the high school student population emerged. Groups such as Every Mother's Child, Woodenstool and Voltage Four specialized in rock and funk. The Latin-rock music of Carlos Santana and Afro-rock music of Osibisa became powerful influences on our younger bands, and were very popular in the dance halls.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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