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  2. Bouyon soca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouyon_soca

    Bouyon soca, sometimes referred to as Jump up soca, is a fusion genre that typically blends old bouyon rhythms from the '90s and soca music. Bouyon soca is a term coined by Dominican producers and musicians, who embrace both Soca from Trinidad and Bouyon music from Dominica and so find it natural to produce blends of both music genres.

  3. Music of Dominica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Dominica

    Bouyon soca, sometimes referred to as Jump up soca, is a fusion genre that typically blends old bouyon rhythms from the '90s and soca music. Bouyon soca is a term coined by non-Dominican producers and musicians, mainly from St Lucia, who embrace both Soca from Trinidad and Bouyon music from Dominica and so find it natural to produce blends of ...

  4. Bouyon music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouyon_music

    A modern offshoot of bouyon is bouyon-muffin.It combines elements of Jamaican raggamuffin music, hip hop, and dancehall.The most influential figure in the development of bouyon-muffin is "Skinny Banton" (now known as "Shadowflow") who from 1995 collaborated with the WCK band, using ragga influenced vocals to chant on top of bouyon rhythms.

  5. Freemake Audio Converter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freemake_Audio_Converter

    It can convert audio to MP3, WMA, WAV, FLAC, AAC, M4A, and OGG, and can prepare files for playback on various portable media players, such as Zune, Coby, SanDisc, Sansa, iRiver, Walkman, Archos, and GoGear. It can convert audio files into M4A and M4R files for iPad, iPhone, and iPod and automatically adds converted files to the iTunes library.

  6. Soca music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soca_music

    Bouyon soca, sometimes referred to as "jump up soca", is a fusion genre that typically blends old bouyon rhythms from the '90s and soca music. Bouyon soca is a term coined by non-Dominican producers and musicians, mainly from St Lucia, who embrace both Soca from Trinidad and Bouyon music from Dominica and so find it natural to produce blends of ...

  7. List of Caribbean music genres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Caribbean_music_genres

    Soca is a style of Caribbean music originating in Trinidad and Tobago. Soca originally combined the melodic lilting sound of calypso with insistent cadence | cadence-lypso percussion (which is often electronic in recent music), and Indian musical instruments—particularly the dholak, tabla and dhantal—as demonstrated in Shorty's classic ...

  8. Music of Saint Lucia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Saint_Lucia

    Bouyon soca typically blends old bouyon music rhythms from the 90s' and soca music. In recent years Bouyon soca has become popular in the island of Saint Lucia. Saint Lucian artist Ricky T released a song "Pressure boom" in 2007 which blended the two genres and became very popular throughout the English speaking Caribbean. This style of bouyon ...

  9. Music of Martinique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Martinique

    Bouyon (Boo-Yon) is a form of popular music of Dominica. Bouyon was developed in the 1980s by bands like WCK, combining elements of kadans (or cadence-lypso), lapo kabwit drumming, the folk style jing-ping, and a quick-paced electronic drum pattern. More recently, deejays with raggamuffin-style vocals have moved to the fore, updating the sound ...