- This is about the type of music; see Zouk (club) for the nightclubs in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur.
Zouk is a style of rhythmic music originating from the Caribbean islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique. It has its roots in Cadence music from Dominica, as popularised by Grammacks and Exile One. Zouk means 'party' in the local creole of French with English and African influences, all three of which contribute the sound. In Europe it is particularly popular in France, while on the African islands of Cape Verde they have developed their own type of Zouk.
Origins
Zouk was invented in the early to mid-
1980s when many different styles were fused, such as
Kompa,
balakadri, the
Dominica based
Cadence and
bal granmoun dances,
mazurka and
biguine, French and American pop, and
kadans,
gwo ka and other indigenous styles.
Kassav'
The leading band to emerge from this period was
Kassav', who gave the style a pan-Caribbean sound by taking elements from
Kompa,
reggae and
salsa, and became one of the most famous bands in the world. Kassav' was formed in
1979 by
Pierre-Edouard Décimus, a long-time professional musician who worked with
Freddy Marshall. Together, the two of them decided to take
carnival music and make it a more modern and polished style. Their first album,
Love and Ka Dance (
1980), established the sound of zouk. They continued to grow more popular, both as a group and with several members' solo careers, finally peaking in
1985 with
Yélélé, which featured the international hit "Zouk la sé sèl médickaman nou ni".
With this hit, zouk rapidly became the most widespread dance craze to hit Latin American in some time, and was wildly popular even as far afield as Europe and Asia. Zouk became known for wildly theatrical concerts featuring special effects spectacles, colorful costumes and outrageous antics.
Zouklove
A special style within the zouk is called zouklove, where the music is slower, and more dramatic. Zouklove has its origins in a slow tempo form of
Cadence sang by
Ophelia Marie of
Dominica. The music Zouklove resembles the
Kizomba music from
Angola.
Popular Zouk Love artists include Netherlands based Suzanna Lubrano and Gil Semedo, but also French West Indian artists like Edith Lefel, Nichols, or Haitian artists like Ayenn and Daan Junior, or African artist like Philipe Monteiro.
Zouk Lambada
See also: the decline of the lambada music and the rise of a new dance
Zouk is danced to in Brazil using a modified, slower, even more sensual but less vulgar version of the lambada. It could be considered one of the three main "non-ballroom-dancing" dances there. Unlike forró, which is led with the whole body, or salsa, which is led with the hands, "zouk", "zouk lambada" or lambazouk (created in Palma de Mallorca, Spain), is led by the glued-to-each-other hips of the partners. Thus, in a basic sideways movement, it is the hips that move first, followed by the rest of the body, and this is part of what makes the dance so "sensual". When practicing zouk in dance classes, teachers generally warn women to be very careful with their backs, as one of the most distinctive and comment movements is for the woman to lean her head far back, sometimes even below her waist, and whip her head and hair from one side to the other. If not done properly and with lack of luck, this could possibly lead to injury. It is interesting to note that in Brazil, popular belief states that Zouk music originates from French Polynesia.
The Dance Zouk
Zouk - that it means party - is a dance practised in the Caribbean, mainly in the islands of Guadalupe and Martinica. The example of
Merengue, is danced changing the weight basically in the heads of the musical times (what many professors of dance call time simply) and its choreography sufficiently simple and is little elaborated. There are 3 ways to dance to zouk music. The first is the Zouk Love French Caribbean way, the second is the Brazilian
Zouk Lambada style (a dance evolving from the Lambada). The third is
Angolan or
Cabo Verdean style, known as
Kizomba,(the music was developed directly from Zouk).
the zouk love style is also danced in various parts of French speaking Africa.
Other names for the music are Zouk love, Zouk, Cabo-Love, Cola-Zouk, Kizomba, Tarrachinha (a version of kizomba music & dance)ghetto zouk, Afro-zouk, Zouk RnB, Lambada Francesa, French Lambada,
External links
See also
Lambada
Zouk
Zouk | Zouk | Zouk | Zouk | Zouk | Zouk
Zouk related events in London
MrZouk: *