Cup game

For the board game Cups, see Cups (game).

The cup game is a children's clapping game that involves tapping and hitting a cup using a defined rhythm. The game can be played by many players seated around a table and is often played in large groups. Each player possesses a cup and in unison the players tap out the defined rhythm using their cups. It can be played competitively, where the rhythm speeds up in each "round", and a player making a mistake in the rhythm must drop out of the game, with a new "round" starting after each elimination, and game play continuing until only one player remains, with that player being the winner.

Cup game rhythm

The cup game begins with a cup placed upside down in front of each player. Assuming a right-handed player, the rhythm normally proceeds as follows:

Repeat the above sequence indefinitely. Some versions involve variations where the players exchange cups during the performance of the rhythm, or players slap hands with each other.[1]

Another cup game rhythm

In the Lulu and the Lampshades (and newer) performances, this is the right hand which slaps down flat onto the table.

Repeat the above sequence indefinitely.

In music

Christian singer Rich Mullins used the cup game to accompany his song "Screen Door" on his 1987 album Pictures in the Sky.[2] It was used by Palavra Cantada (Paulo Tatit & Sandra Peres) in 1998 with the song "Fome Come" from their album "Canções Curiosas".[3] In 2009 the band Lulu and the Lampshades used the game in their performance of the 1930 Carter Family song When I'm Gone as modified to suit the game by "Lulu" (Luisa Gerstein). Rapper P.O.S also uses the cup game in "Optimist (We Are Not for Them)" from his 2009 album Never Better. In 2011 the cup game was again used by Anna Burden to accompany the song "When I'm Gone" in a YouTube video that went viral. Anna Kendrick taught herself to copy Burden's video, and this was worked into her performance in the 2012 film Pitch Perfect, her version "Cups (When I'm Gone)" in turn becoming widely copied with a 2013 video after the single from the soundtrack rose on the national and international charts.[4]

History

There are older cup games as well, with rhythmic moving and passing of cups. Often there is a particular place in the rhythm where the passing is different, faster, or more difficult, and missing this pass puts a player "out", a new "round" beginning with each elimination, and the last player winning.

One such game is called "Acitrón de un fandango" (or various alternate spelling), and is said to originate in Mexico.[5]

References

  1. "The Cup Game". Zoom Games. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  2. "Screen Door". Here in America (DVD). 2003.
  3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9mccYgybzeU
  4. Robert Samuels (February 26, 2013). "'Cups,' the 'Pitch Perfect' patty-cake game that's gone viral in the schoolyard". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  5. In Henrietta Yurchenco, Latin American Children Game Songs. Folkways FC 7851, 1969. Available in The American Folk Song Collection, Kodaly Center, Holy Names University.

External links

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