New Orleans is the birthplace of jazz. Jazz is
a kind of music with strong rhythms and much syncopation,
often improvised. Brass bands and piano players helped create this new sound.
Jazz has spread across the planet, an ambassador for Louisiana culture.
The blues is also a link to the past. This music
style is based on black folk music, especially on the chants of the black
workers on the plantations. Those rhythms were memories of their African
culture and made the slaves' lives and the work more bearable. The instruments
most associated with blues music are the guitar and the harmonica. Later, when
horns were added and the tempo changed, the new style was known as rhythm and blues.
The early
Cajuns often held dance parties at their rural homes. Entire families came, and
the young children were put on blanket pallets in the bedroom. They were told
to go to sleep, which in French is fais-do-do.
This became the name of these dance parties, and today the term fais-do-do refers to a Cajun dance.
Zydeco is the special type of music of
French-speaking African Americans of South Louisiana. It is much like
Cajun music; the song is sung in French and played on an accordion. An added
instrument, the rub-board is used for rhythm.
Country
music is part of the heritage of North Louisiana. In the days before
television, when people gathered for entertainment, musicians brought their
instruments. Their string bands usually usually included a guitar, a fiddle,
and a mandolin. This traditional southern country music developed into bluegrass music and then into modern country music.
This heritage continues with a state fiddling championship held each year at
Marthaville in Natchitoches
Parish.
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