Marímbula: Dominica Republic musical instrument
The Marímbula is a plucked box musical instrument of the Caribbean island. The musical instrument should not be confused with the marimba....
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The Marímbula is a plucked
box musical instrument of the Caribbean island. The musical instrument should
not be confused with the marimba.
source: keymusic.com
The Marímbula is made
up of a wooden box that has a sound hole cut in the center of it. Across the
hole on the instrument, there are a number of metal strips that are attached at
one extreme to the resonating box. These metal strips are tuned to distinct
pitches and can be plucked to manufacture a bass line for the music. The
Marímbula is often classified as a part of the lamellophone family of musical
instruments. The musical instrument is primarily used in the Mexican son
jarocho music that is known as the marimbol, Cuban changüí and the Dominican
merengue tipico.
Having its roots in
the African musical instruments, the V originated in the region of oriente,
Cuba in the 19th century. Suddenly, the musical instrument spread
through the Caribbean, the Americas and the Africa, from the Liberia to the
Congo. By the 1930s, the Marímbula has made its way to Haiti, the Dominican
Republic, Jamaica, the Puerto Rico, other Caribbean islands, Mexico and as far
away as New York City. The people of Cuba called the musical instrument
Marímbula, and many other countries have adopted this name or some variant of
the name; marimba, malimba, manimba, marimbol. The musical instrument has a number
of other names like the marimbola as called by the Puerto Ricans, bass box,
calimba, rhumba box and box lamellophone.
African slaves of the
Caribbean produced musical instruments from any material that they could lay
their hands on. Early versions of the Marímbula
were produced from discarded wooden packing crates with the keys
produced of springy wood, bamboo, all kinds of discarded springs, etc. the
musician sits on the top of the box reaching down to pluck the keys of the
instrument while slapping the sides of the box like a drum. The evolution and
the playing patterns of the musical instrument are analogous to the cajon box
drum.
This musical
instrument was an important factor in the development of the Afro-Cuban music
as it was one of the basic musical instruments that were performed by changüí
musicians. Both changüí and son genres developed as a result of the mixture of
African and Spanish musical styles and instrumentation. As such changüí musicians still perform a
pair of tack-head bongos, Marímbula, a pair of maracas, guiro and tres to
accompany the chorus and the voice of the vocalist. This was one of the many
musical instrument that was imported from Americas to Africa that continue to
be performed to this present day, in many styles and forms, especially in the
countries of Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea, Nigeria and Ghana.
Designs of the
musical instrument differ greatly in terms of the material used for the
resonator, the number of keys and arrangements, the overall arrangement and
size of the musical instrument and the way it is being played. Unlike the
African lamellophones that are used to manufacture complex polyphony and
polyrhythms, the musical instrument mainly performs the role of a bass guitar
to give the rhythmic and harmonic support for a band, even when it can produce
a simple melody also.
The Marímbula became
a popular musical instrument in Jamaica, together with the guitars, the drums,
the maracas and the vocals in the churches, where it was referred to as the
church and clap, in night clubs where it is referred to as jazz jim and among
the different hotel performers that played mento music.
It is fairly easy to
learn how to perform the Marímbula, specifically for those who have little
knowledge of some other musical instrument, since no difficult technique is
involved.
Currently, the
musical instrument is regaining popularity among hip-hop artists, and players
of mbira.