释义 |
Definition of cumbia in English: cumbianounˈkʊmbɪəˈkəmbēə mass noun1A kind of dance music of Colombian origin, similar to salsa. 库姆比亚舞曲(起源于哥伦比亚的一种舞曲,与萨尔萨舞曲类似) a hot mix of cumbia, salsa, and merengue Example sentencesExamples - Their dance-able cumbia rhythm demonstrates the way in which her musical ‘entertainment’ conveys didactic and political messages.
- Named for the corn and yucca beer typically made by Andean Indians, chicha has come to represent a vibrant popular culture of tinny cumbia music, doleful lyrics, bright neon colors, and a peculiar street jargon.
- They have taken the technical demands and passion from the past and recast them with subtle chicano influences - the cumbia and conjunto music that they grew up listening to - so they sound fresh.
- This band mixes all kinds of sounds and genres, including cumbia, hip-hop, salsa, funk, and space-rock.
- On the coast, the style of music is the cumbia, played with flutes and drums.
- One style, the cumbia, is written in 2/4 time and performed with a button accordion, drums, maracas, and horns.
- Ecuadorans in the costa play a musical style closely related to the coastal Colombian cumbia style, with strong Afro-Caribbean influences.
- Colombian cumbia and salsa music are popular with young people in urban areas.
- Most tracks feature accordion, several bounce along on a jaunty Colombian cumbia rhythm, and others evoke the reggae and ska of UK two-tone bands.
- My mother's from Colombia, so I grew up waking up on Saturday mornings with my mom blaring cumbia merengue music, cleaning the house and skipping around.
- A typical cumbia is performed with a male singer (usually a high baritone or tenor) backed by a male chorus, drums (primarily kettledrum and bass drum), electric guitar and bass, and either a brass section or an accordion.
- I didn't know what to expect, so I'd brought funk music, dancehall, house, lots of Latin stuff - salsa, cumbia - disco and '80s stuff.
- From the first bars, the strength and vitality - a combination of killer voice and solid cumbia rhythm - are irresistible.
- The most popular musical form in El Salvador is the cumbia, a style that originated in Colombia.
- The entertainment includes a variety of musical styles: rock and roll, cumbia, acoustic folk, campesino folk, and a heavy metal band.
- The band used to run from cumbia to dub to hip hop and back again all within the space of a single song, but now the change-ups mostly happen between songs.
- Now he's handed me a pile of CDs of Argentine and Paraguayan cumbia bands.
- However, the entrance of a clear cumbia rhythmic pattern played by the guiro, as well as a new rhythmic emphasis provided by the congas in measure 9, reverses our rhythmic interpretation of the introductory passage.
- In this wonderful Cuban-Jamaican take on the genre, you will hear reggae, salsa, Brazilian ritualistic music, Klezmer-style sax, big band brass and little bits of cumbia and son rhythms too.
- This phrase arose among a group of New York City musicians during the late 1970s and early 1980s to explain some important, however unrecognized, similarities in salsa, cumbia, and jazz ensembles.
- 1.1count noun A dance performed to cumbia.
库姆比亚舞 Example sentencesExamples - Originally from Colombia, cumbia has traditionally been a sickly-sweet, anodyne affair for dancing couples.
- Some compared the quebradita dancing style to the Mexican equivalent of dirty dancing, others as a mixture of lambada, cumbia, salsa, flamenco, tango, and the Texas two-step.
- Since the late 1980s, the Colombian dance known as cumbia has grown in popularity.
- ‘I see you are a woman who knows how to dress herself,’ he purred as we danced a tasty cumbia.
Origin1940s: from Colombian Spanish, perhaps from Spanish cumbé. Definition of cumbia in US English: cumbianounˈkəmbēə 1A kind of dance music of Colombian origin, similar to salsa. 库姆比亚舞曲(起源于哥伦比亚的一种舞曲,与萨尔萨舞曲类似) a hot mix of cumbia, salsa, and merengue Example sentencesExamples - In this wonderful Cuban-Jamaican take on the genre, you will hear reggae, salsa, Brazilian ritualistic music, Klezmer-style sax, big band brass and little bits of cumbia and son rhythms too.
- Ecuadorans in the costa play a musical style closely related to the coastal Colombian cumbia style, with strong Afro-Caribbean influences.
- My mother's from Colombia, so I grew up waking up on Saturday mornings with my mom blaring cumbia merengue music, cleaning the house and skipping around.
- This phrase arose among a group of New York City musicians during the late 1970s and early 1980s to explain some important, however unrecognized, similarities in salsa, cumbia, and jazz ensembles.
- This band mixes all kinds of sounds and genres, including cumbia, hip-hop, salsa, funk, and space-rock.
- I didn't know what to expect, so I'd brought funk music, dancehall, house, lots of Latin stuff - salsa, cumbia - disco and '80s stuff.
- A typical cumbia is performed with a male singer (usually a high baritone or tenor) backed by a male chorus, drums (primarily kettledrum and bass drum), electric guitar and bass, and either a brass section or an accordion.
- Named for the corn and yucca beer typically made by Andean Indians, chicha has come to represent a vibrant popular culture of tinny cumbia music, doleful lyrics, bright neon colors, and a peculiar street jargon.
- Colombian cumbia and salsa music are popular with young people in urban areas.
- One style, the cumbia, is written in 2/4 time and performed with a button accordion, drums, maracas, and horns.
- The entertainment includes a variety of musical styles: rock and roll, cumbia, acoustic folk, campesino folk, and a heavy metal band.
- Their dance-able cumbia rhythm demonstrates the way in which her musical ‘entertainment’ conveys didactic and political messages.
- From the first bars, the strength and vitality - a combination of killer voice and solid cumbia rhythm - are irresistible.
- They have taken the technical demands and passion from the past and recast them with subtle chicano influences - the cumbia and conjunto music that they grew up listening to - so they sound fresh.
- The band used to run from cumbia to dub to hip hop and back again all within the space of a single song, but now the change-ups mostly happen between songs.
- Now he's handed me a pile of CDs of Argentine and Paraguayan cumbia bands.
- Most tracks feature accordion, several bounce along on a jaunty Colombian cumbia rhythm, and others evoke the reggae and ska of UK two-tone bands.
- On the coast, the style of music is the cumbia, played with flutes and drums.
- The most popular musical form in El Salvador is the cumbia, a style that originated in Colombia.
- However, the entrance of a clear cumbia rhythmic pattern played by the guiro, as well as a new rhythmic emphasis provided by the congas in measure 9, reverses our rhythmic interpretation of the introductory passage.
- 1.1 A dance performed to cumbia music.
库姆比亚舞 Example sentencesExamples - Some compared the quebradita dancing style to the Mexican equivalent of dirty dancing, others as a mixture of lambada, cumbia, salsa, flamenco, tango, and the Texas two-step.
- Since the late 1980s, the Colombian dance known as cumbia has grown in popularity.
- Originally from Colombia, cumbia has traditionally been a sickly-sweet, anodyne affair for dancing couples.
- ‘I see you are a woman who knows how to dress herself,’ he purred as we danced a tasty cumbia.
Origin1940s: from Colombian Spanish, perhaps from Spanish cumbé. |