Caribbean music is an umbrella term for the interconnected popular and traditional styles that emerged across the islands and coastal rim of the Caribbean basin. It blends West and Central African rhythmic sensibilities and call-and-response singing with European (Iberian, French, British) dance forms, harmonies, and instrumentation introduced during the colonial era.
Hallmark traits include polyrhythmic percussion, syncopation, and clave-based timelines (2–3 or 3–2), as well as the interplay of tumbao bass lines, guajeo/tres riffs, and horn stabs. Typical instruments and timbres range from hand drums (congas, bongos), timbales, maracas and güiro, to steelpan, brass sections, cuatro and tres, guitar skank, and electric bass. Lyrics move fluidly among English, Spanish, French/Antillean Creoles, and Dutch dialects, addressing themes of love, celebration, humor, sharp social commentary, and identity.
As a transnational sound shaped by migration, carnival traditions, and diasporic exchange, Caribbean music birthed globally influential genres including son, rumba, merengue, compas, calypso, ska, reggae, dancehall, zouk, soca, salsa, bachata, and reggaeton.