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For other uses, see Guajira.
Guajira is, first, a genre of Cuban song similar to the canción.1 It contains bucolic countryside lyrics, rhyming, similar to décima poetry. The music is a mixture of 3/4 and 6/8 rhythms. According to Sánchez de Fuentes, its first section is in a minor key, its second section in a major key.2 Secondly, it is now used mostly to describe slow dance music in 4/4 time, a fusion of the son and the guajira. Punto Guajiro (also called Punto Cubano), with its Andalucian origins, has been evolving in Cuba since the 1700s, is the country music from the Western and Central provinces of Cuba. This style began to become popular around the end of the 18th century. Lyrics were always in the form of a décima. The Punto is based on lyrics, rather than melody. The singers were known as poets, not singers; the lyrics are often improvised. Typically, the poets were accompanied by the bandurria or laud, claves and guiro. As the style evolved bongos, tres, machetes and other instruments were added. Styles
The guajira is a type of Cuban song situated in the canción family of musical genres, usually sung by a single musician accompanying himself on guitar (Orovio 1981:227). It is characterized by alternation of measures in 6/8 and 3/4, whose purpose is to create an effect similar to the música campesina of Cuba. The lyrics of the guajira typically extol the beauty of the Cuban countryside and the lifestyle of the guajiros (Alén 1994:64). The combination of the guajira with the rhythm of the son produced an offshoot called the "guajira-son." PopularityGuajira was refined and popularized by the Cuban singer-songwriter and guitarist Guillermo Portabales, whose elegant style has become known as guajira de salón. From the 1930s until his untimely death in a traffic accident in Puerto Rico in 1970, Portabales recorded and performed salon guajira throughout North and South America to tremendous popular acclaim. References
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