Themusic of the former Netherlands Antilles is a mixture of native, African and European elements, and is closely connected with trends from neighboring countries such asVenezuela andColombia and islands such asPuerto Rico,Cuba,Santo Domingo,Haiti,Martinique,Trinidad,Dominica, andGuadeloupe. The formerNetherlands Antilles islands ofCuraçao andAruba are known for their typicalwaltzes,danzas,mazurkas and a kind of music calledtumba, which is named after theconga drums that accompany it.
The remaining islands are much smaller than Aruba,Bonaire, and Curaçao. They areSint Eustatius,Sint Maarten andSaba. Sint Eustatius has little nightlife, with only one nightclub (thezouk Largo Height Disco)[1] as of 1996. The inhabitants, "Statians", hold impromptu street dances called "road blocks", using booming car stereos. Saba has a number of dances at various restaurants, including a wide variety ofhip hop,calypso,soca,kompa,zouk,bouyon,reggae andmerengue. Sint Maarten has a well-knownCarnival tradition featuring music and dance, held in mid-April and culminating in the traditional burning ofKing Moui-Moui, as well as a number of nightclubs and casinos featuring music; popular "spots" where locals go to dance include Boo Boo Jam and Lago Height, both located on the northern (French) part of Sint Maarten; the most popular recent casino band isKing Bo-Bo, known as the "King of Calypso".[2]
Colonial past provided the foundation for the Netherlands Antilles' musical identity. Spain conquered the islands in the 16th Century and brought Catholicism and the Iberian languages with them to the Caribbean. With the establishment of the Dutch West India Company in the 17th Century on the islands, European Colonization and Ethnic Capitalism created a stratified society, with the European and Sephardic Jewish elites dominating trade and culture, while the larger population, descended from Africans, was placed in bondage by force and subjected to harsh conditions of labour. For example, Curaçao became a major slave-transfer center (but not a plantation economy), with 500,000 enslaved Africans being transferred through the islands from the 17th to the 19th Century, however there were only a few thousand of those on the island at any given time.[3]
The Papiamentu (Papiamento) language is one of the key results of creolization in this region. Papiamentu , based on both Spanish and Portuguese, has Dutch, African and Indigenous roots and was the primary spoken language of the people of Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao. It has historically served as the primary language of Afro-Caribbean peoples and provided a way to express oral tradition, folklore and eventually pop music. While under Dutch rule, the language was the second preferred language behind Dutch, and formal recognition did not come until the last few decades. Dutch colonialism offered a leg up to local people, including their language. Despite this dominance, Papiamentu has endured and is now used as a way for Caribbean people to express their culture and resist. Most of the traditional Caribbean music, including carnival songs and festival speeches, is composed in Papiamentu; thus setting it apart from that of music produced by European countries.[4]
European musical customs were brought by colonizers and missionaries to the Caribbean. By the twentieth-century, people from many different backgrounds, but mainly educated Creoles (mixed people), were composing waltzes, polkas, mazurkas, danzas, and other European-style salon dances. Curaçao especially developed a refined classical music tradition. Among those composers was Jan Gerard Palm (1831-1906), who is often referred to as the musical "patriarch" of Curaçao; he and his contemporaries combined many Western elements with Caribbean influences in numerous works for piano and string ensembles. Those works were often the backdrop at various social gatherings or plantation salon events, not solely as copies of European works, but because they were recognized to have gone through a process of "creolization" through the usage of lively European harmonic structures mixed with syncopated rhythms and phrases derived from the African and local aesthetic. The "Creole waltz" in Curaçao is a localized adaptation of the genre of music. Therefore, the emergent musical identity of the islands' bourgeois and upper classes derives from the combination of both the aesthetic interest found in the Old World and the creative diversity of the New World. Many of the genres commonly composed in the Caribbean, such as the above-mentioned waltzes, marches, and even religious (i.e. church or synagogue) music have been preserved as part of the broader cultural history of the Netherlands Antilles.[5]
In Aruba, Calypso reveals the island's eccentric and linguistic unification. Aruban Calypso music, specifically during Carnival, expresses liberty and equality which brings people together to create a shared sense of unity. Using Papiamento, the creole language of the island, musicians share stories, humor, and community pride that celebrates Aruban culture. Researchers highlight that the use of Papiamento in performance enhance cultural meaning making it easier for local people to understand. Calypso has been able to function as a space where their language is embraced and cherished.[6]
Music is very closely connected to the Aruban culture, and plays a major role in holidays, carnivals and informal celebrations. Carnival music originated in Trinidad in the late 18th century, and combines romantic themes, calypso-inspired tunes, and drums fromtumba. Other Aruban celebrations that are based around music include Dera Gai, Dande, Gaita and Aguinaldo.
Aruban Calypso is a tool that is used to tell a story. Through storytelling, humor, and satire it functions as a medium to convey social experiences, social and political issues, and island pride. Performances during Carnival explore political and social issues, while fostering shared cultural meanings that strengthen community bonds. This combination of entertainment and significant narrative strengthens the, "One Happy Island" image while also preserving Calypso as the primary framework for local expression and storytelling.[7]
The island of Bonaire is known for an array of dances, including theBari andSimadan. Importedpolka,carioca,rumba,merengue,danza,joropo,jazzwaltz andmazurka are also popular. TheBaile di Sinta is a popular fertility dance, performed around amaypole. Traditional Africanwork songs on Bonaire evolved over time into ritual songs with complex dances, instrumentation and polyphony.[8]
The Bari, performed during the festival of the same name, as well as at other times, is led by a single singer who improvises lyrics commenting on local events and figures (such a singer is similar to acalypsonian). Confusingly, the Bari dance, which is performed during the Bari festival, is accompanied by abongo-like drum called a Bari. The first part of the dance features men competing in a stylized,ritual dance for women, followed by a part where the couples dance, though they don't touch (it is similar to tumba).[8]
After thesorghum harvest in February through April, theSimadan festival is held to celebrate, with thewapa, a rhythmic, shuffling dance, accompanying the celebration. Simadan's traditional songs include threecall-and-response forms, theDan Simadan,Belua andRemailo. These use instruments including the bari,wiri,karko,quarta,guitar,triangle andclapping.[8]