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Venezuela: Learning to Play the Cuatro on the Web 2.0

Categories: Latin America, Venezuela, Arts & Culture, Citizen Media, Education, Music
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Image of a cuatro by Flickr user LCoronelP (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

The cuatro is the principal icon of traditional Venezuelan music. It is often learned at an early age and accompanies the majority of songs that recount the country's folklore. The cuatro is present in almost all forms of musical expression, from the coastal drums to the calypso [2] music of the south. Traditional choirs are often joined by a cuatro, and cantors also base their songs on the instrument. A love for the cuatro has also reached citizen media: songs of the joropo [3] and gaita [4] styles of music are shared here, and its history, musicians and even how to play the instrument, are widely discussed.

The blog Recreateoficial [5] [es] relates part of its history:

Tiene sus orígenes muy remotos. Instrumentos similares aparecen en grabados Iraníes y Cretenses en forma ovoidal y cuadrado (…) El laúd árabe o thimphle, a través de las invasiones moras, llega a España a comienzos del siglo XVI con cuatro órdenes, donde fue adoptando una nueva forma menos ovalada y más parecida a la actual, en forma de «ocho» (…) El laúd llegó a las Islas Canarias, hasta transformarse en el timple . Este se exportaría a America y el Caribe con la Conquista de América, dando lugar, muchos años más tarde, a las versiónes conocidas hoy en día en sudamérica. El cuatro puertoriqueño, sin embargo, guarda más parecido con su antecesor el laúd que con el timple de Canarias.

It has very remote origins. Similar instruments appear in recordings from Iran and Crete in ovoid and square shapes (…) The four-stringed Arab lute or thimphle arrived in Spain at the start of the 16th century via the Moorish invasions. Here a new, less oval form was adapted, more similar to the current form of the “eight-stringed guitar” (…) The lute made its way to the Canary Islands, until it transformed into the timple. The timple would be exported to America and the Caribbean with the American Conquest, making many years later for the versions known today throughout South America. The Puerto Rican cuatro, however, maintains a closer resemblance to its ancestor, the lute, than the Canaries’ timple.

The blogs micuatro.com [6] [es] and tucuatro.com [7] [es] share chords and songs through scores, adaptations and examples.

YouTube has a place for fans as well, thanks to video accounts from those like CuatroCriollo [8] [es], who posts classes that make introductory courses easy:

Much like this user, many others also share what they have learned. Simply by entering “Venezuelan cuatro” into a keyword search, the results are endless. There are ample and generous possibilities to discover distinct types of music. The cuatro, vastly popular amongst Venezuelan bloggers, has numerous demonstrations available not only for enjoyment, but also for learning more about the art.