Capoeira Angola: Fluid, dance like movements done close to
the ground. With shifty rythmic movements, combined with the look
of playfulness or vulnerability an adversary is brought to defeat.
The basic technique through which the Capoeira Angola player develops
the game is the Ginga, a shifty side to side movement. At the
heart of the art is the music lead by the Berimbau, a steel stringed
bow instrument with a gourd resonator.
When Capoeira
Angola is played the Berimbau signals the beginning and the end
of each game, and governs the style and speed of the play. The
Berimbau is usually joinedby
the Pandeiro (Tambourine), the Agogo (African bell), and the Atabaque
(a conga-like drum).
One of many
cultural weapons used to break the chains of enslavement in Brazil.
Music was played during Capoeira sessions to teach the rhythmic
heart of the art and to mask its power. In front of the enslavers
it looked like playfulness, acrobatic dancing, and joking around.
Eventually the enslavers realized its power and outlawed Capoeira
Angola.
Death was
the penalty paid if you were caught during the slavery years.
For almost 400 years Capoeira Angola was taught and practiced
in secret. Only in the 1930's did this African martial art become
legal to teach and practice.
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from :panix.com/~tishotto/capoeira
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