Culoepuya
The culo'e puya drums, also known as culoepuya, culo e puya, or culepuya, are a battery of small drums originally from Venezuela, with a Kongo lineage. They are used in an ensemble also known as redondo drums, after the dance motion and the circle which forms around the dancers during performance.
Organology
The culo'e puya battery comprises three drums made of lightweight wood from the tree known locally as lano or ceiba de lana. Both ends have skin heads, which are joined with tensors made of rope. The drums are roughly 1.5 m in length and between 10 and 15 cm in diameter.The inside of the drum is carved in the shape of an hourglass, instead of a cylinder.
There are three different diameters, each corresponding to a distinct "voice" or pattern. The different diameters are known as:
- Prima - The smallest. Also called hembra or quitimba or quichimba.
- Cruzao - The middle diameter drum. The name means "hybrid" or "crossed".
- Pujao - The largest diameter. Also called macho. The word pujao is a vernacular misspelling of the past participle of the verb pujar, which means to struggle, to push, or to moan as a result of extreme effort.
Playing technique
- Open stroke with bare hand.
- Closed stroke with bare hand's fingertips.
- Bass stroke with the heel of the bare hand.
- Open stroke with stick on drum head.
- Closed stroke with stick on drum head.
- Side stick.
Rhythms
The basic pattern is usually notated in 6/8 time| or Time signature| time signatures. Each town in Barlovento has a unique way of interpreting the basic pattern and adds its own local variation, but in general, the prima carries the base of the rhythm and it is played on the upbeats, while the pujao improvises and the cruzao marks the downbeats. This contrasts with the role of the conga drums in the Cuban rumba, where the smallest drum is the soloist.
The pujao improvisations are centered on a set pattern, but they can achieve an impressive degree of variety when the percussionist is able to tune the drum while performing. This maneuver is considerably difficult, and it is based on the bass stroke to tune the drum down and a series of side hits to the edge of the drum head with the heel of the bare hand to tune the drum back up.
The Barlovento towns of Curiepe, Tacarigüita, La Boca and Mendoza still maintain the tradition of the Culo'e Puya, but their sound and unique rhythm has influenced the rest of the native forms of Venezuelan music.
Commercial recordings featuring the culo'e puya
- The American jazz composer Henry Threadgill featured two culo'e puya players on his 1993 album Too Much Sugar for a Dime.
- Cuban pianist Omar Sosa included the sound of culo'e puyas in his release entitled Sentir.
Listening
Video
- of a quartet in a studio playing a song accompanied by culo'e puya drums and maraca.
- of Barlovento youths playing and singing with cule'e puya accompaniment.
- of Grupo Mina, a modern Jazz group incorporating culo'e puya rhythms and song in their music.
- Free download Culoepuya for group music Tambor Urbano
Category:South American percussion instruments
Category:Drums
Category:Membranophones