Black music is also called American-African music. This music is mainly distributed in the Caribbean and coastal areas of Brazil, Peru, Colombia, and Venezuela. In the primeval forests of Suriname, escaped black slaves and Haiti in the Caribbean have preserved relatively pure African music. Black music in the Bahia region of Brazil and countries such as Cuba and Trinidad Tobago is more influenced by Portuguese and Spanish culture. The characteristics of American-African music are that rhythm plays a leading role in the music, strong syncopation, often using multi-line rhythms, echo-style songs, uneven segment structure, the use of many European instruments, and a preference for percussion instruments. The steel drum music popular in the Caribbean is a black creation. This is a melodic percussion instrument made from gasoline barrels. This beautiful music from a gasoline drum shocked the world. Brazil's Samba, Lundu and Cuba's Rumba, the Caribbean's Calypso, Mambo, Cha Cha Cha, and Peru's Marinera, Don Deda and other dance music are all relatively typical American-African music and dance genres. .
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