Classroom lesson 路 Music馃嚮馃嚜 Venezuela

Gaita - the music of Christmas

The cheerful rhythms that fill Venezuelan homes every December

A group of Venezuelan musicians playing gaita with drums and maracas

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Gaita is a Venezuelan music style that comes from the city of Maracaibo in the north-west of the country. Every November and December, gaita songs play almost everywhere - in shops, in homes, on the radio. To many Venezuelans, the first time you hear gaita each year is the moment you know that Christmas is coming.

Tell me more

Gaita uses a special drum called the 'tambora' for its deep beat, plus the cuatro guitar, maracas, and a curved scraper called the 'charrasca' that adds a fast 'shhhh-shhhh-shhhh' rhythm on top. Singers often sing in groups, swapping lines back and forth.

The lyrics of gaita songs can be about almost anything - family, the city of Maracaibo, school, the weather, even funny news stories. Many songs are joyful, some are about missing people who have moved far away, and a lot are about celebrating Christmas with family.

Schools in Venezuela hold gaita performances in December. Whole classes dress up in colourful matching outfits, learn songs and clap-along rhythms, and perform together. The instruments are simple enough that children can learn one in a few weeks.

Because lots of Venezuelans now live in other countries, gaita has travelled too. Venezuelan families around the world play gaita at their Christmas parties as a way of remembering home, even when home is far away.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Some songs only feel right at certain times of year. Why might a song belong to a season?
  2. 02Lots of gaita songs are about family or home. Why might music help people feel close to people far away?
  3. 03What is one piece of music your family plays at a special time of year?
Try this

Classroom activity

Class 'gaita band'. With shakers (rice in a small bottle), tapping sticks (or pencils) and clapping hands, learn a simple 4-beat rhythm: BOOM - tap - shake - clap. Add a chant on top: 'It's December, it's December!' How does your class sound? Add or remove instruments and listen to the difference.