True samba is from Rio de Janeiro and some styles are samba enredo, pagode. People outside Brazil tend to call all Brazilian music samba though. Other styles that foreigners call samba include Maracatu, samba reggae, and samba funk.
"Portuguese". The song is from a German dance group called Bellini, that make samba remixes over salsa bases.
Some traditional instruments are guitars, violins, horns, and bass. Mariachis are Mexican bands that play the traditional instruments. The Samba originated from a Afro- Brazillian couples dance and the Bossa nova evolved from the Samba but it has less precussion. Most of the instruments used in latin American music is based on percussion e.g the surdo which is known as the heart of the samba.
Samba drums come from Brazil. Congas do not come from Brazil and are not samba drums. Samba drums include surdos, caixas, repiniques, chocalhos, ganzas, repiniques, agogos, pandeiros and cuicas. You can find out more about all of these by clicking on the related link below.
The names of the most common samba drums are: Surdo, caixa, repinique, tamborim, chocalho, ganza, cuica, agogo, pandeiro. If you want to find out more about them (and to see pics) then follow the link below.
True samba is from Rio de Janeiro and some styles are samba enredo, pagode. People outside Brazil tend to call all Brazilian music samba though. Other styles that foreigners call samba include Maracatu, samba reggae, and samba funk.
samba and salsa
cha cha, salsa, samba
samba is more bouncy
no its just a coincidence
Salsa, merengue, samba, tango, and many others.
Sort of.
"Portuguese". The song is from a German dance group called Bellini, that make samba remixes over salsa bases.
salsa, samba, tango, and some others that I can't remember. Hey Brazilians can remember everything!
Its samba and salsa they usually use the bongos and guitar and sing in spanish or papaimentu
Salsa, mambo (Cuba), tango (Argentina), samba, lambada (Brazil).
Common samba chord progressions in Brazilian music often include the use of major and minor chords, with a focus on the I, IV, and V chords. These progressions create a lively and rhythmic feel that is characteristic of samba music.