Music of Africa-Mapeh
Music of Africa-Mapeh
Music of Africa-Mapeh
Apala (Akpala)
- is a musical genre from Nigeria in the Yoruba tribal style
- used to wake up the worshippers after fasting during the
Muslim holy feast of Ramadan
Axe
- a popular musical genre from Salvador, Bahia, and Brazil
- it fuses the Afro-Caribbean styles of the marcha, reggae,
and calypso
Jit
- is a hard and fast percussive Zimbabwean dance music
- played on drums with guitar accompaniment
- influenced by mibra-based guitar styles
Jive
- a popular form of South African music
- features lively and uninhibited variation of the jitterbug (a
form of swing dance )
Juju
- a popular music style from Nigeria
- relies on the traditional Yoruba rhythms
- the instruments in Juju are more Western in origin
- A:
o Drum kit
o Keyboard
o Pedal steel guitar
o and Accordion
are used along with the traditional dun-dun (talking drum or
squeeze drum).
Kwassa Kwassa
- is a dance style begun in Zaire in the late 1980’s
- popularized by Kanda Bongo Man
- the hips move back and forth while the arms move
following the hips in this dance style
Marabi
- is a South African three-chord township music of the 1930s-
1960s which evolved into African Jazz
- Possessing a keyboard style combining American jazz,
ragtime and blues with African roots
- is characterized by simple chords in varying vamping
patterns and repetitive harmony over an extended period of
time to allow the dancers more time on the dance floor
LATIN AMERICAN MUSIC INFLUENCED BY
AFRICAN MUSIC
Reggae
- a Jamaican sound dominated by bass guitar and drums
- refers to a particular music style that was strongly
influenced by traditional mento and calypso music, as well
as American jazz, and rhythm and blues
- The most recognizable musical elements of reggae are its
offbeat rhythm and staccato chords.
Salsa
- is Cuban, Puerto Rican, and Colombian dance music
- comprises various musical genres including the Cuban son
montuno, guaracha, chachacha, mambo and bolero
Samba
- the basic underlying rhythm that typifies most Brazilian
music
- lively and rhythmical dance and music with three steps to
every bar, making the Samba feel like a timed dance
- There is a set of dances—rather than a single dance—that
define the Samba dancing scene in Brazil
- no one dance can be claimed with certainty as the “original”
Samba style
Soca
- a modern Trinidadian and Tobago pop music combining
“soul” and “calypso” music
Were
- Muslim music performed often as a wake-up call for early
breakfast and prayers during Ramadan celebrations
- Relying on pre-arranged music, it fuses the African and
European music styles with particular usage of the natural
harmonic series
Zouk
- is fast, carnival-like hythmic music, from the Creole slang
word for ‘party,’
- originating in the Carribean Islands of Guadaloupe and
Martinique and popularized in the 1980’s
- has a pulsating beat supplied by the :
o gwo ka and tambour bele drums
Noted Performers :
1. Ray Charles 8. Erykah Badu
2. James Brown 9. Eric Clapton
3. Cab Calloway 10. Steve Winwood
4. Aretha Franklin 11. Charlie Musselwhite
5. John Lee Hooker 12. Blues Traveler
6. B.B. King 13. Jimmie Vaughan
7. Bo Diddley 14. Jeff Baxter
Soul
- was a popular music genre of the 1950’s and 1960’s
- originated in the United States
- combines elements of African-American gospel music,
rhythm and blues, and often jazz
- The catchy rhythms are accompanied by handclaps and
extemporaneous body moves which are among its important
features
- Other characteristics include “call and response” between
the soloist and the chorus, and an especially tense and
powerful vocal sound
Spiritual
- normally associated with a deeply religious person, refers
here to a Negro spiritual, a song form by African migrants
to America who became enslaved by its white communities
- musical form became their outlet to vent their loneliness and
anger, and is a result of the interaction of music and religion
from Africa with that of America
- texts are mainly religious, sometimes taken from psalms of
Biblical passages, while the music utilizes deep bass voice
- The vocal inflections, Negro accents, and dramatic dynamic
changes add to the musical interest and effectiveness of the
performance.
A
frican music includes all the major instrumental genres of
western music, including strings, winds, and percussion, along
with a tremendous variety of specific African musical instruments for
solo or ensemble playing.
A. Idiophones
These are percussion instruments that are either struck with
a mallet or against one another.
B. Membranophones
C. Lamellaphone
E. Aerophones
Aerophones are instruments which are produced initially by
trapped vibrating air columns or which enclose a body of
vibrating air. Flutes in various sizes and shapes, horns,
panpipes, whistle types, gourd and shell megaphones, oboe,
clarinet, animal horn and wooden trumpets fall under this
category.
1. Flutes - Flutes are widely used throughout Africa and
either vertical or side-blown. They are usually
fashioned from a single tube closed at one end and
blown like a bottle.
Panpipes consist of cane pipes of different lengths tied
in a row or in a bundle held together by wax or cord,
and generally closed at the bottom. They are blown
across the top, each providing a different note.
2. Horns - Horns and trumpets, found almost everywhere
in Africa, are commonly made from elephant tusks and
animal horns. With their varied attractive shapes, these
instruments are end-blown or side-blown and range in
size from the small signal whistle of the southern cattle
herders to the large ivory horns of the tribal chiefs of
the interior. One trumpet variety, the wooden trumpet,
may be simple or artistically carved, sometimes
resembling a crocodile’s head.