The Contredanse
Although it is true that the Spanish and African roots and                     contributions were the main background elements of our music,                     it is also true that some foreign influences, alien to these                     roots, exerted a considerable power capable of transforming                     or modifying, in certain cases, the interaction of those                     first elements leaving an evident imprint of their presence.
This                     is what happened after the immigration flow of French and                     Haitians with French habits, at a time in which certain musical                     elements of Cuban character were being defined. That                     is how Cuba received the gavota, the passepied and                     the French contredanse. The French contredanse was rapidly                     accepted, then passed through an adaptation process and finally                     became a style of purely Cuban characters.
During the 19 th                     Century, the contredanse developed its own defined profile                     and, besides, was included in the musical production of almost                     every Cuban composer of the time. Apart                     from being a court dance, it also became a musical genre                     with two clear-cut sections: the first one a calmly, more                     lyrical section and the second one a more active section                     with marked Creole typical rhythms.
With Manuel Saumell (1817-1870),                     the contredanse lost its purpose of propitiating the dance                     and became a concert work.   Thus,                     it was the first Creole genre within the concert music. Therefore,                     Saumell initiated a nationalistic movement within this music                     field, not because he created a genre per se, but because                     he transferred its national elements to the concert hall.
Generally                     speaking, the Cuban contredanse influenced to a great extent                     in the further projection of the Cuban music and has remained                     as the matrix for many genuinely national projections.