Music
As soon as you arrive in Belize, you will realize that music is a key element of Belizean life.
Belizeans enjoy Caribbean and Latin beats as well as contemporary American recordings but are equally proud of their own creations. For many Belizean, music is a part of the national identity, a way of connecting with ancestors while preserving traditional and cultural practices. You will hear an assortment of sounds on the radio, at a party or street-side barbeque stand, during a live performance at a club or café, or the rhythmic drums at a Garifuna wake.
Belizeans do not only listen to music, they have to move to it — everywhere and anywhere. It is not uncommon to see people dancing in the street outside a shop where music is blasting or to emphasize a conversation point with a little dance.
Virtually every celebration involves some sort of “traditional music” In September there are lively marches and carnival music from flat bed trucks in parades to celebrate the Battle of St. George’s Caye and Independence. At Christmas, North American Christmas carols in English and Spanish, blare alongside the lively Kriol,
“Good mawnin, miss lady and how are you dis mawnin…”
As you travel throughout Belize, the musical soundtrack in each destination’s will vary. Let your body move to the “Brukdown” — a distinctive, original Belizean Kriol musical genre using percussion instruments such as the accordion and “jawbone” of a cow; "Punta Rock” — an infusion of traditional Garifuna rhythms accampanied by the electric guitar; or travel north and south and listen to the Mestizo and Maya play melodious Marimba music with an age-old wooden percussion instrument.
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