Inka Jungle | Inca Trail Jungle Machupicchu | Jungle Tours
english versionversión en españolversion française
 
cusco
 
huaraz
 
cajamarca
 
tambopata
 
arequipa
 
trujillo chiclayo
 
iquitos, loreto
 
manu
 
selva
 
amazonas

Email:
info@travel-project.com
Phone: (511) 2765774
Cell: 995461722 / 997061990
Calle Cantuarias 140 of. 133 Miraflores
Lima - Perú

 

Premiere Movie Trailers

movie trailer

 
 
 

PERU’S FOLKLORE

 
 
 

FOLK ART

Peru boasts one of the largest varieties of arts and crafts on Earth, as can be seen from the growing network of exporters who each year exhibit the skill of Peruvian craftsmen in Europe, Asia and North America. The diversity, color, creativity and multiple functions of Peru's folk art has made it a fundamental activity not just for Peru's cultural identity, but also as a way of life for thousands of families and even entire communities, such as Sarhua and Quinua in Ayacucho.
 
Works of art, both big and small, spark admiration amongst Peruvians and foreigners alike, are steeped in centuries of history, imbued with pre-Hispanic shapes and symbols which have merged with others brought over by the Spaniards. Peru has forged a multiple and complex identity which is paradoxically one of the reasons why Peruvian arts and crafts are tending to shift towards naif art, lending their works a touch of innocence.

The excellence of Peruvian artisans can be seen in the harmony of the geometric designs in weavings, the minute portraits of peasant farming life on the carved gourds called mates burilados, the cultural mestizaje or blend in the colorful retablo boxed scenes. There are also the finely carved Huamanga stone sculptures, the complex Baroque nature of the wooden carvings, the beauty of gold and silver relics and the many forms that pottery has shaped the clay into pottery.
 
These works are just some of the cultural manifestations of a people who communicate mainly through art, using a language whose fundamental aspects are abundance, fertility and confidence in the future.

TRADITIONAL DRESS

In Peru's rural areas, the way people dress makes an important distinction, as a result of the blend of pre-Hispanic influences with the European clothing that the natives were forced to wear during the colonial era.
The traditional Inca anacu was transformed by the local women into the brightly-colored and multi-layered petticoats known as polleras. Depending on the region, a black skirt is decorated with a belt which can come in a variety of colors and is decorated with flowers in the northern Piura highlands or a brightly-hued woolen lliclla in Chiclayo, further south.
In the highlands above Lima, the skirt is decorated with red and black embroidered edging, while in Junin, as in Cajamarca and Cuzco, women no longer use black skirts. Underneath their skirts, the women use layers of petticoats made from cotton which can be embroidered with gold and silver threads, featuring superbly-crafted drawings along the edge.
The Peruvian poncho dates back to the seventeenth century and apparently is a variation on the unku used by men at the time. The heavy ponchos used in Cajamarca keep out the rain and are as long as those used in Puno, where they are died scarlet during festivals. In Cuzco, ponchos are short and feature elaborate geometric figures against a red background.

On the coast, ponchos were used by the plantation workers, and they were spun from cotton or vicuna fiber. In the jungle, both men and women from some tribes wear the cushma, a loose tunic stitched up on both sides and embellished with dyes and geometric figures typical of the region.
Traditional dress tends to be capped off by woolen or straw hats, sometimes in various colors. But in the coldest reaches of the Andes, the highlanders tend to wear the chullo, a woolen cap fitted with earflap decorated with geometric motifs.

Regional dances require different forms of dress, depending on the area.  Along the coast, exponents of the marinera dance replaces cotton with silk for their embroidered skirts. In the Andes, meanwhile, the danzantes de tijeras or scissors dancers decorate their fine outfits with small mirrors and embroider an image of their guardian deity on their backs.

PERUVIAN MUSIC

An outsider may think of Peruvian folk music in terms of the broad category of Andean music, common elements of which can be found from Colombia in the North to Chile in the South. That music is essentially Native American music from the altiplano, or highlands, characterized by instruments like the charango, the small guitar-like instrument that is often made of armadillo shells; the pan pipes; and the chajchas, or clusters of dried goat hooves. Andean music can be lively and danceable, as is the huayno, or have the soft sound of a lament, like that of the yaravi, but it always conveys the feel of the high mountains: of sparse, open spaces, few trees, thin air, and cool sunshine.

Like other Andean countries, however, Peru includes also a hot, humid part to the East, in the Amazon basin, and coastlands to the West, where port cities became centers of trade and the point of entry for Africans who were brought to work in the Spanish colonies. The descendants of the Africans still form a significant part of the population, and, not surprisingly, have left the imprint of their traditions on the music and dance of Peru.

The term “Afro-Peruvian music” refers to a variety of styles, some of which represent a more-or-less direct line of descent from the original African music, and some of which have emerged in more recent years as both reconstruction and projection, echoing social changes in the country and the world. Incorporating Spanish and Native American influences, Afro-Peruvian music has become broadly popular in the country, and particularly in the coastal areas.

Africans began to arrive in Peru in the 16th century. By the 1540’s, they were encouraged by the Catholic Church to organize in cofradias, or religious associations, which served to preserve both specific national cultures and African culture more generally. Christmas celebrations provided another opportunity for the Africans to maintain aspects of their culture in a way that was acceptable to the dominant society, and to mix at the same time with indigenous people. In addition, many black Peruvians who learned to play European instruments and music during colonial times did so with their own interpretation, furthering the emergence of new, local, musical genres.

Thus, beginning in the 1700’s, the penalivio (easing the pain) developed as a satire on the conditions of slavery. As in other countries colonized by the Spanish, there were pregones (street-vendor calls), and songs related to work and to feast days. The more notable of the traditional forms is the festejo, or celebration, characterized by short phrases with sudden pauses and call-and response combinations. The festejo can be the basis for dance competitions for men, who show off their abilities in the zapateado criollo. The musical accompaniment is usually simple, with a guitar and hand clapping, and in modern times the cajon, which replaces earlier bass instruments such as the botijas and hollow-log drums.

The lando has come to be much better known outside Peru, thanks to performers such as Susana Baca and Eva Ayllon. The lando is slower and gentler than Caribbean rhythms such as those from Cuba, Domini-can Republic, and Haiti, but no less danceable, due no doubt to its complex syncopation, polyrhythms, and cross-accents. Play-ed on guitar and cajon, as well as bass and percussion, and with choruses that respond to and alternate with the singer, the lando is a unique, irresistible Peruvian creation.

Also well known, the marinera is often the subject of dance competitions for all ages, to be performed by couples in typical costume that becomes a sort of patriotic uniform. It is not unusual to see such competitions even on late-night TV in the U.S., as part of shows filmed in Peru or even produced within the U.S. In some ways it resembles the Chilean cueca, and indeed it is descended from the earlier zamacueca, the Chilean version of which was widely popular in nineteenth-century Peru, prior to the War of the Pacific. With Chile having taken Peruvian territory, however, the zamacueca changed its name to marinera, in honor of the sailors who had fought in the war, and distanced itself from the original. It is played with two guitars and cajon, accompanied by hand clapping.

The vals criollo derives, of course, from the Viennese waltz, but feels quite different. The lush, romantic character of the Viennese waltz is absent in the vals criollo, notwithstanding the themes of love frequently found in the latter. The vals criollo has a drier, more restrained, sound, and keeps a certain distance from its subject. Songs such as What Does One More Failure Matter (Un fracaso mas, que importa)? with lyrics like “yet another failure is but a drop of water in the ocean for me,” would not likely find a counterpart accompanying a Viennese waltz. Good vals criollo musicians know how to phrase lyrics and play the songs with slightly off-beat accents, as if pulling back and pushing on the regular meter. While the vals criollo is not by origin an Afro-Peruvian music, musicians like singer Lucha Reyes and the ensemble Los Morochucos placed black performers among the leading interpreters of the genre. The addition of the cajon to the traditional instrumentation of two guitars served also to give the vals an Afro-Peruvian dimension.

Various other styles, at times parallel to those found in other former Spanish colonies, at times more uniquely Peruvian, from polkas to tonderos, are part of or have served to define Afro-Peruvian music.

 
Peru Travel
Couchsurfing Peru
 
 
 
Book Hostels Online Now
 
 
 
Advises for travel to peru | Inka Jungle Tours
Travel Project ©
Travel to Peru | Inka Jungle | Inka Trail | Cusco City Tour | News Peru | Movie Trailer
Colca Canyon | Manu Jungle | Huaraz Trekking | Iquitos Jungle Forrest | Inka Jungle | Pasajes Aereos
Archaeology Peru | Nature Peru | Gastronomy Peru | Lima City Tour | Inka Trail | Couchsurfing | Contact | Links travel to peru