The
music of the Cook Islands is characterised by heavy drums and ukuleles. Men perform the
hura, which is the equivalent of the Hawaiian
hula, locking their feet on the ground and keeping their shoulders steady. Drums form part of an ensemble. Performing groups include the Cook Islands National Arts Theatre, Arorangi Dance Troupe, Betela Dance Troupe, Akirata Folk Dance Troupe, and Te Ivi Maori Cultural Dance Troupe. Raro Records is the main specialist in music retail on the islands. . Dances are performed at multicultural festivals. One of the popular traditional dances of the Cook Islands is the Maori
Ura, a sacred ritual usually performed by a female who moves her body to tell a story, accompanied by intense drumming by at least 5 drummers. Moving the hips, legs and hands give off different gestures to the audience to tell a tale, typically related to the natural landscape such as the ocean and birds and flowers, but also feelings of love and sadness. The ura dance has three distinct components; the ura pa'u (drum dances), korero (legends) and kaparima (action songs). To perform the ura, women typically wear a
pareu and a
kikau (grass) skirt, with flowers and shell headbands and necklaces known as
ei. Men during the dance are said to "vigorously flap their knees in a semi-crouched position while holding their upper bodies steady", and they typically wear
kikau skirts and headbands. The drumming group, an integral part of the Ura, typically consists of a lead drummer (
pate taki), support lead (
pate takirua), a double player (
tokere or
pate akaoro) playing wooden gongs, and two other players playing skin drums (''pa'u
and mango''). Travel writer David Stanley asserts that the finest performances of the Ura are put on in
Rarotonga. A sexually charged variant of the ura dance is known at the
ura piani in which both men and women are involved in telling the story. Other variations include the
ura rore (stilt dance),
ura tairiri (fan dance),
ura korare (spear dance), and
ura rama (torch dance). Aside from the Ura dance and its components such as the korero and kaparima, there are several other genres of music and dance in the Cook Islands including dance dramas (peu tupuna), religious pageants (nuku), formal chants (pe'e), celebratory chants ('ute), and polyphonic choral music ('imene tapu). Like the ura, these are also often accompanied by drums. ==Art==