The word
champeta originally denoted a short, curved, monkey-killing knife of the same name used in the region at work, in the kitchen, and as an offensive weapon. The word is first known to have been used as a cultural identifier in the 1920s. Socio-cultural researchers and sociologists have established that at some time before the 1920s the term started to be applied to residents of the more outlying districts of Cartagena, who tended to be poorer and of African descent. The term was applied by the economic elite with the intention of disparaging this surviving culture, with associations of vulgarity, poverty and blackness. Thus
champeta refers to a culture whose history is marked by slavery and mistreatment. At the start of the 1970s, champeta culture became better-known in Colombia due to the development of a set of complex dances set to the rhythms of
salsa and
jíbaro and later
reggae, as well as progressively more foreign or novel dance genres as providers competed for , records other groups did not have in their library. This music was played at full volume through big loudspeakers known locally as (from the English word
pick-up) by troupes of the same name. These early dances were called "therapy" for their relaxing nature, a distraction from the economic problems of the country. Around 1981, "creole therapy" emerged as a musical genre to be performed and sung. Among its sources of inspiration was recorded music brought into the port of Cartagena from Africa and from other African settlements. Its first composers were people of African descent from
Cartagena and Palenque de San Basilio, later joined by songwriters and entrepreneurs from
Barranquilla and other parts of Colombia. It consisted in a fusion of African rhythms (
soukous,
highlife,
mbaqanga,
juju) with those from the
Antilles (
ragga,
compás haitiano, also influenced by music of Indigenous and Afro-Colombian origins (
bullerengue,
mapalé,
zambapalo and chalupa). This style of music came to be known as "Colombian therapy" and finally took on the name of the champeta culture. During the 1990s champeta underwent further changes in its musical and other content, with the introduction of digital techniques and (interruptions counter to the rhythm). Despite its social origins, champeta came to be as much appreciated as rejected by the social elite. In 2000 Champeta music had a breakthrough in the Colombian Caribbean region's market with John Sayas "El sayayín" leading the movement. ==Cultural aspects==