fbpx
Wikipedia

Sub-Saharan African music traditions

In many parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the use of music is not limited to entertainment: it serves a purpose to the local community and helps in the conduct of daily routines. Traditional African music supplies appropriate music and dance for work and for religious ceremonies of birth, naming, rites of passage, marriage and funerals.[1] The beats and sounds of the drum are used in communication as well as in cultural expression.[2]

Drumming and dancing at Dakawa, Morogoro, Tanzania

African dances are largely participatory: there are traditionally no barriers between dancers and onlookers except with regard to spiritual, religious and initiation dances. Even ritual dances often have a time when spectators participate.[3] Dances help people work, mature, praise or criticize members of the community, celebrate festivals and funerals, compete, recite history, proverbs and poetry and encounter gods.[4] They inculcate social patterns and values. Many dances are performed by only males or females.[5] Dances are often segregated by gender, reinforcing gender roles in children. Community structures such as kinship, age, and status are also often reinforced.[6] To share rhythm is to form a group consciousness, to entrain with one another,[7] to be part of the collective rhythm of life to which all are invited to contribute.[8]

African ethnic groups

Yoruba dancers and drummers, for instance, express communal desires, values, and collective creativity. The drumming represents an underlying linguistic text that guides the dancing performance, allowing linguistic meaning to be expressed non-verbally. The spontaneity of these performances should not be confused with an improvisation that emphasizes the individual ego. The drummer's primary duty is to preserve the community.[9] Master dancers and drummers are particular about the learning of the dance exactly as taught. Children must learn the dance exactly as taught without variation. Improvisation or a new variation comes only after mastering the dance, performing, and receiving the appreciation of spectators and the sanction of village elders.[10]

The music of the Luo, for another example, is functional, used for ceremonial, religious, political or incidental purposes, during funerals (Tero buru) to praise the departed, to console the bereaved, to keep people awake at night, to express pain and agony and during cleansing and chasing away of spirits, during beer parties (Dudu, ohangla dance), welcoming back the warriors from a war, during a wrestling match (Ramogi), during courtship, in rain making and during divination and healing. Work songs are performed both during communal work like building, weeding, etc. and individual work like pounding of cereals, winnowing.

Regions

 
Geo-political map of Africa divided for ethnomusicological purposes, after Merriam, 1959

Alan P. Merriam divided Africa into seven regions for ethnomusicological purposes, observing current political frontiers (see map), and this article follows this division as far as possible in surveying the music of ethnic groups in Africa.

Sahel and Sudan

  • The music of Sudan (turquoise on the map) indicates the difficulty of dividing music traditions according to state frontiers. The musicology of Sudan involves some 133 language communities.[11] that speak over 400 dialects,[12] Afro-Asian, Nilotic and Niger–Congo.

Sudan takes its name from that of the sub-Saharan savanna which makes, with the Nile, a great cross-roads of the region. South of the Sahara the Sahel forms a bio-geographic zone of transition between the desert and the Sudanian savannas, stretching between the Atlantic Ocean and the Red Sea. The Nilotic peoples prominent in southern Sudan, Uganda, Kenya, and northern Tanzania, include the Luo, Dinka, Nuer and Maasai.[13] Many of these have been included in the Eastern region.

 
The sahel (brown) and the Sudan (green)

The Senegambian Fula have migrated as far as Sudan at various times, often speaking Arabic as well as their own language. The Hausa people, who speak a language related to Ancient Egyptian and Biblical Hebrew, have moved in the opposite direction. Further west the Berber music of the Tuareg has penetrated to Sub-Saharan countries. These are included in the Western region, but the music of Sub-Saharan herders and nomads is heard from west to east.

Western, central, eastern and southern territories

 
Saharan trade routes circa 1400

These remaining four regions are most associated with Sub-Saharan African music: familiar African musical elements such as the use of cross-beat and vocal harmony may be found all over all four regions, as may be some instruments such as the iron bell. This is largely due to the expansion of the Niger–Congo-speaking people that began around 1500 BC: the last phases of expansion were 0–1000 AD.[15][16][17] Only a few scattered languages in this great area cannot readily be associated with the Niger–Congo language family. However two significant non-Bantu musical traditions, the Pygmy music of the Congo jungle and that of the bushmen of the Kalahari, do much to define the music of the central region and of the southern region respectively.

As a result of the migrations of Niger-Congo peoples (e.g., Bantu expansion), polyrhythmic culture (e.g., dance, music), which is generally associated with being a common trait among modern cultures of Africa, spread throughout Africa.[18] Due to the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, music of the African diaspora, many of whom descend from Niger-Congo peoples, has had considerable influence upon modern Western forms of popular culture (e.g., dance, music).[18]

West Africa

 
Gambian boy with bowed tin-can lute

The music of West Africa must be considered under two main headings: in its northernmost and westernmost parts, many of the above-mentioned transnational sub-Saharan ethnic influences are found among the Hausa, the Fulani, the Wolof people, the Mande speakers of Mali, Senegal and Mauritania, the Gur-speaking peoples of Mali, Burkina Faso and the northern halves of Ghana, Togo and Cote d'Ivoire, the Fula found throughout West Africa, and the Senufo speakers of Côte d'Ivoire and Mali.

The coastal regions are home to the Niger-Congo speakers; Kwa, Akan, the Gbe languages, spoken in Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Nigeria, the Yoruba and Igbo languages, spoken in Nigeria and the Benue–Congo languages of the east.

Inland and coastal languages are only distantly related. While the north, with its griot traditions, makes great use of stringed instruments and xylophones, the south relies much more upon drum sets and communal singing.

Northern

 
The Malian kora harp-lute is perhaps the most sophisticated of Africa's stringed instruments

Complex societies existed in the region from about 1500 BCE. The Ghana Empire[19] existed from before c. 830 until c. 1235 in what is now south-east Mauritania and western Mali. The Sosso people had their capital at Koumbi Saleh until Sundiata Keita defeated them at the Battle of Kirina (c. 1240) and began the Mali Empire, which spread its influence along the Niger River through numerous vassal kingdoms and provinces. The Gao Empire at the eastern Niger bend was powerful in the ninth century CE but later subordinated to Mali until its decline. In 1340 the Songhai people made Gao the capital of a new Songhai Empire.[20]

Funerary chant sung in Burkina Faso.
  • The Hausa people are one of the largest ethnic groups in Nigeria, Niger, Sudan and many West and Central African countries. They speak a Chadic language. There are two broad categories of traditional Hausa music; rural folk music and urban court music developed in the Hausa Kingdoms before the Fulani War. Their folk music has played an important part in Nigerian music, contributing elements such as the goje, a one-stringed fiddle.
  • The originally nomadic/pastoral Senegambian Fula people or Tukulor represent 40% of the population of Guinea and have spread to surrounding states and as far as Sudan in the east.[21] In the 19th century they overthrew the Hausa and established the Sokoto Caliphate. The Fula play a variety of traditional instruments including drums, the hoddu (xalam), a plucked skin-covered lute similar to a banjo, and riti or riiti (a one-string bowed instrument similar to a violin), in addition to their vocal music. They also use end-blown bamboo flutes. Their griots are known as gawlo.[22]
  • Mande music: the music of Mali is dominated by forms derived from the Mande Empire Their musicians, professional performers called jeliw (sing. jeli, French griot), have produced popular alongside traditional music. Mande languages include Mandinka, Soninke, Bambara, Bissa, Dioula, Kagoro, Bozo, Mende, Susu, Vai and Ligbi: there are populations in Burkina Faso, Mauritania, Senegal, The Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone and Liberia and, mainly in the northern inland regions, in the south coast states of Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, Benin and Nigeria.
  • Wolof music: the Wolof people, the largest ethnic group in Senegal, kin to the Fula, have contributed greatly to popular Senegalese music. The related Serer people are notable for polyphonic song.[23]
 
Jola man at Boucotte in Casamance (Sénégal) playing the akonting
  • In Senegal, The Gambia and Guinea-Bissau the Jola are notable for their stringed instrument the akonting, a precursor of the banjo while the Balanta people, the largest ethnic group of Guinea-Bissau, play a similar gourd lute instrument called a kusunde or kussundé,[24] with a short A/B drone string at the bottom, a top F string of middle length and a middle C string, the longest. Top string stopped gives G, middle string stopped is D.
  • Songhai music, as interpreted by Ali Farka Toure, has gathered international interest for a minor pentatonic lute-and-voice style that is markedly similar to American blues.
  • The Senufo or Senoufo, living in southern Mali and the extreme western corner of Burkina Faso to Katiola in Côte d'Ivoire with one group, the Nafana, in north-western Ghana. The Senufo are notable for funeral and poro music.[25]
 
A performance group from Burkina Faso based on the balafon
  • Among Gur-speaking peoples the Dagomba use the lunga talking drum and a bass drum with snares called a gungon, as well as the flute, gonje (goje) and bell.[26] as well as molo (xalam) lute music, also played by Gurunsi peoples such as the Frafra. Similar styles are practised by local Fulani, Hausa, Djerma, Busanga and Ligbi speaking people. Drummers in Dagbon are storytellers, historians, bards of family ancestry who perform at events called sambanlunga.[27]
  • The Gurunsi, the Lobi, the Wala and the related Dagaaba people of Ghana and Burkina Faso and are known for complex interlocking (double meter) patterns on the xylophone (gyil).
  • The Mossi people, whose Mossi Kingdoms in present-day Burkina Faso, withstood their Songhai and Mende neighbours before falling to the French, have a griot tradition. Also djambadon.[28] also brosca.

The Gulf of Guinea

 
The musical ensemble of the chief of Abetifi (Kwahu people) c. 1890[29]
  • The Akan people include the Akwamu, Bono, Akyem, Fante, Ashanti,[30] who originated the Adowa and kete styles, the Baoulé whose polyphonic music introduced the gbébé rhythm to Ivory Coast,[25] the Nzema people who play the edengole. Akan peoples have complex court music including the atumpan and Ga kpanlogo style, a modernized traditional dance and music form, developed around 1960. Yacub Addy, Obo Addy, and Mustapha Tettey Addy are Ga drummers who have achieved international fame. A huge log xylophone is used in asonko music. The 10–14 string Ghanaian seprewa, midway between the kora and the African harp, is still played but often replaced by guitar. Other styles include; adaha, agbadza, akwete, ashiko and gombe as well as konkomba, mainline, osibisaba and sikyi. Instrumentation includes the aburukawa, apentemma, dawuro and torowa.
Complex polyphonic structures of Baoule singers intoned by Djourou harp.
  • Ewe music, the music of the Ewe people of Ghana, Togo and Benin, is primarily percussive with great metrical complexity. Ewe drumming ensembles produce dance music and have contributed popular styles such as agbadza and borborbor, a konkomba/highlife fusion of the 1950s.
  • The related Aja people are native to south-western Benin and south-eastern Togo. Aja living in Abomey mingled with the local tribe, thus creating the Fon or Dahomey ethnic group, now the largest in Benin. Tchinkoumé.[31]
  • Yoruba music is prominent in the music of Nigeria and in Afro-Latin and Caribbean musical styles. Ensembles using the talking drum play a type of music that is called dundun after the drum,[32] using various sizes of tension drum along with special band drums (ogido). The leader or oniyalu uses the drum to "talk" by imitating the tonality of Yoruba language. Yoruba music traditionally centred on folklore and spiritual/deity worship, utilising basic and natural instruments such as handclaps. Professional musicians were referred to by the derogatory term of Alagbe.
Complex polyrhythms performed by Igbo musicians in Nsukka, Nigeria.
  • Igbo music informs Highlife and Waka. The drum is the most important musical instrument for the Igbo people, used during celebrations, rites of passage, funerals, war, town meetings and other events, and the pot-drum or udu (means "pot") is their most common and popular drum:[33] a smaller variant is called the kim-kim.[34] Igbo Styles include egwu ota. Other instruments: obo – ufie – ogene,[35] a flat metal pan used as a bell.
  • Bassa people (Cameroon) originated assiko, a popular dance from the South of Cameroon.[36]
  • The Kasena use a hocket vocal style. Other styles are; jongo, len yoro. Instruments include; gullu, gungonga, korbala, kornia, sinyegule, wua and yong wui.[37]
  • A Bamileke[36] style is mangambe; Bamileke people use the gong.
  • The Beti-Pahuin[36] of Cameroon Style = bikutsi; Dance = bikutsi; Instrumentation = njang – rattle include Fang people[38] chorus and drum group; Instrumentation = mvet; Other = bebom-mvet. Music of São Tomé and Principe[39] Styles: danço-Congo – dêxa – socopé – ússua – xtléva; Instruments: cowbell – flute – rattle; Other: Tchiloli

The music of Cape Verde has long been influenced by Europe,[40] Instrumentation includes the accordion (gaita), the bowed rabeca, the violão guitar and the viola twelve string guitar as well as cavaquinho, cimboa and ferrinho. Styles include batuque, coladera, funaná, morna and tabanca.

Central Africa

 
The Central African musicological region and the River Congo upon a satellite photograph showing the African tropical rainforest and desert regions

The central region of African music is defined by the tropical rain-forests at the heart of the continent. However Chad, the northernmost state, has a considerable subtropical and desert northern region.

Northern traditions

The north of this region has Nilo-Saharans such as the Zande people. Early kingdoms were founded near Lake Chad: the Kanem Empire, ca. 600 BCE – 1380 CE[41] encompassed much of Chad, Fezzan, east Niger and north-east Nigeria, perhaps founded by the nomadic Zaghawa, then ruled by the Sayfawa dynasty. The Bornu Empire (1396–1893) was a continuation, the Kanembu founding a new state at Ngazargamu. These spoke the Kanuri languages spoken by some four million people in Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon, Libya and Sudan. They are noted for lute and drum music. The Kingdom of Baguirmi (1522–1897) and the Ouaddai Empire (1635–1912) were also centred near Lake Chad.

The Pygmy people

 
Distribution of Pygmies according to Cavalli-Sforza

Bantu traditions

  • Bemba people of Zambia. (or 'BaBemba' using the Ba- prefix to mean 'people of', and also called 'Awemba' or 'BaWemba' in the past) belong to a large group of peoples mainly in the Northern, Luapula and Copperbelt Provinces of Zambia who trace their origins to the Luba and Lunda states of the upper Congo basin, in what became Katanga Province in southern Congo-Kinshasa (DRC). There are over 30 Bemba clans, named after animals or natural organisms, such as the royal clan, "the people of the crocodile" (Bena Ng'andu) or the Bena Bowa (Mushroom Clan). The Bemba language (Chibemba) is related to the Bantu languages Kaonde (in Zambia and the DRC), Luba (in the DRC), Nsenga and Tonga (in Zambia), and Nyanja/Chewa (in Zambia and Malawi). It is mainly spoken in the Northern, Luapula and Copperbelt Provinces, and has become the most widely spoken African language in the country, although not always as a first language. Bemba numbered 250,000 in 1963 but a much larger population includes some 'eighteen different ethnic groups' who, together with the Bemba, form a closely related ethno-linguistic cluster of matrilineal-matrifocal agriculturalists known as the Bemba-speaking peoples of Zambia. Instrumentation = babatone – kalela[52]

East Africa

The East African musicological region, which includes the islands of the Indian Ocean, Madagascar, Réunion, Mauritius, Comor and the Seychelles, has been open to the influence of Arabian and Iranian music since the Shirazi Era. In the south of the region Swahili culture has adopted instruments such as the dumbek, oud and qanun – even the Indian tabla drums.[53] The kabosy, also called the mandoliny, a small guitar of Madagascar, like the Comorian gabusi, may take its name from the Arabian qanbūs. Taarab, a modern genre popular in Tanzania and Kenya, is said to take both its name and its style from Egyptian music as formerly cultivated in Zanzibar. Latterly there have been European influences also: the guitar is popular in Kenya, the contredanse, mazurka and polka are danced in the Seychelles.[54]

Northern traditions

  • The Luo peoples inhabit an area that stretches from Southern Sudan and Ethiopia through northern Uganda and eastern Congo (DRC), into western Kenya and Tanzania and include the Shilluk, Acholi, Lango and Joluo (Kenyan and Tanzanian Luo). Luo Benga music derives from the traditional music of the nyatiti lyre:[55] the Luo-speaking Acholi of northern Uganda use the adungu.[56] Rhythms are characterized by syncopation and acrusis. Melodies are lyrical, with vocal ornamentations, especially when the music carries an important message. Songs are call-and-response or solo performances such as chants, recitatives with irregular rhythms and phrases which carried serious messages. Luo dances such as the dudu were introduced by them. A unique characteristic is the introduction of another chant at the middle of a musical performance. The singing stops, the pitch of the musical instruments go down and the dance becomes less vigorous as an individual takes up the performance in self-praise. This is called pakruok. A unique kind of ululation, sigalagala, mainly done by women, marks the climax of the musical performance. Dance styles are elegant and graceful, involving the movement of one leg in the opposite direction to the waist or vigorous shaking of the shoulders, usually to the nyatiti. Adamson (1967) commented that Luos clad in their traditional costumes and ornaments deserve their reputation as the most picturesque people in Kenya. During most of their performances the Luo wore costumes; sisal skirts (owalo), beads (Ombulu / tigo) worn around the neck and waist and red or white clay used by the ladies. The men's costumes included kuodi or chieno, a skin worn from the shoulders or from the waist. Ligisa headgear, shield and spear, reed hats and clubs were made from locally available materials. Luo musical instruments range from percussion (drums, clappers, metal rings, ongeng'o or gara, shakers), nyatiti, a type of lyre; orutu, a type of fiddle), wind (tung' a horn, Asili, a flute, Abu-!, to a specific type of trumpet. In the benga style of music. the guitar (acoustic, later electric) replaced the nyatiti as the string instrument. Benga is played by musicians of many tribes and is no longer considered a purely Luo style.
  • The Music and dance of the Maasai people used no instruments in the past because as semi-nomadic Nilotic pastoralists instruments were considered too cumbersome to move. Traditional Maasai music is strictly polyphonic vocal music, a group chanting polyphonic rhythms while soloists take turns singing verses. The call and response that follows each verse is called namba. Performances are often competitive and divided by age and gender. The neighbouring Turkana people have maintained their ancient traditions, including call and response music, which is almost entirely vocal. A horn made from the kudu antelope is also played. The Samburu are related to the Maasai, and like them, play almost no instruments except simple pipes and a kind of guitar. There are also erotic songs sung by women praying for rain.
  • The Borana live near the Ethiopian border, and their music reflects Ethiopian, Somali and other traditions. They are known also for using the chamonge guitar,[57] which is made from a cooking pot strung with metal wires.

Bantu traditions

 
Ngbaka-speaking Gbanzili men of the rainforest play xylophones with calabash resonators, 1907.

Drums (ngoma, ng'oma or ingoma) are much used: particularly large ones have been developed among the court musicians of East African kings. The term ngoma is applied to rhythm and dance styles as well as the drums themselves.[53] as among the East Kenyan Akamba, the Buganda of Uganda,[58] and the Ngoni people of Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania and Zambia, who trace their origins to the Zulu people of kwaZulu-Natal in South Africa.[59] The term is also used by the Tutsi/Watusi and Hutu/Bahutu.[60] Bantu style drums, especially the sukuti drums, are played by the Luhya people[57] (also known as Avaluhya, Abaluhya or Luyia),[61] a Bantu people of Kenya,[62] being about 16% of Kenya's total population of 38.5 million, and in Uganda and Tanzania.[62] They number about 6.1 million people.[63] Abaluhya litungo.[64]

  • The Kikuyu are one of the largest and most urbanized communities in Kenya. At the Riuki cultural center in Nairobi traditional songs and dances are still performed by local women, including music for initiations, courting, weddings, hunting, and working. The Kikuyu, like their neighbours the Embu and the Meru are believed to have migrated from the Congo Basin. Meru people like the Chuka, who live near Mount Kenya, are known for polyrhythmic percussion music.
  • The Buganda are a large southern Ugandan population with well-documented musical traditions. The akadinda, a xylophone, as well as several types of drum, is used in the courtly music of the Kabaka or king. Much of the music is based on playing interlocking ostinato phrases in parallel octaves. Other instruments; engelabi, ennanga or (inanga, a harp), entenga. Dance – baksimba.
  • The music of Rwanda and Burundi is mainly that of the closely related Tutsi/Watusi and Hutu/Bahutu people. The Royal Drummers of Burundi perform music for ceremonies of birth, funeral and coronation of mwami (kings). Sacred drums (called karyenda) are made from hollowed tree trunks covered with animal skins. In addition to the central drum, Inkiranya, the Amashako drums provide a continuous beat and Ibishikiso drums follow the rhythm established by the Inkiranya. Dancers may carry ornamental spears and shields and lead the procession with their dance. Instrumentation; ikembe – inanga – iningiri – umuduri – ikondera – ihembe – urutaro. Dances: ikinimba – umushayayo – umuhamirizo – imparamba – inkaranka – igishakamba – ikinyemera[60]
  • Swahili culture: Styles gungu – kinanda – wedding music Dances chakacha – kumbwaya – vugo, Instrumentation kibangala – rika – taishokoto[53]
  • The ng'oma drumming of Gogo women of Tanzania and Mozambique, like that of the ngwayi dance of northeastern Zambia, uses "interlocking" or antiphonal rhythms that feature in many Eastern African instrumental styles such as the xylophone music of the Makonde dimbila, the Yao mangolongondo or the Shirima mangwilo, on which the opachera, the initial caller, is responded to by another player, the wakulela.[65]
  • The Chopi people of the coastal Inhambane Province are known for a unique kind of xylophone called mbila (pl: timbila) and the style of music played with it, which "is believed to be the most sophisticated method of composition yet found among preliterate peoples."[66] Ensembles consist of around ten xylophones of four sizes and accompany ceremonial dances with long compositions called ngomi which consist of an overture and ten movements of different tempos and styles. The ensemble leader serves as poet, composer, conductor, and performer, creating a text, improvising a melody partially based on the features of the Chopi's tone language, and composing a second countrapuntal line. The musicians of the ensemble partially improvise their parts according to style, instrumental idiom, and the leader's indications. The composer then consults with the choreographer of the ceremony and adjustments are made.[67] Chopi styles: timbala. Instruments: kalimba – mbila – timbila – valimba – xigovia – xipala-pala – xipendane – xitende – xizambe[68] Chopi languages include Tonga. Tonga dance = mganda[69]
  • The Kamba people are known for their complex percussion music and spectacular performances, dances that display athletic skills resemble those of the Tutsi and the Embu. Dances are usually accompanied by songs composed for the occasion and sung on a pentatonic scale. The Akamba also have work songs. Their music is divided into several groups based on age: Kilumi is a dance for mainly elderly women and men performed at healing and rain-making ceremonies, Mbeni for young and acrobatic girls and boys, Mbalya or Ngutha is a dance for young people who meet to entertain themselves after the day's chores are done, Kyaa for the old men and women.Kiveve, Kinze etc. In the Kilumi dance the drummer, usually female, plays sitting on a large mwase drum covered with goatskin at one end and open at the other. The drummer is also the lead singer. Mwali (pl: Myali) is a dance accompanying a song usually made to criticize anti-social behaviour: Mwilu is a circumcision dance.
  • The Gusii people use an enormous lute called the obokano and the ground bow,[57] made by digging a large hole in the ground, over which an animal skin is pegged. A small hole is cut into the skin and a single string placed across the hole.[dubious ]
  • The Mijikenda (literally "the nine tribes") are found on the coast of Tanzania, Kenya and Southern Somalia. They have a vibrant folk tradition perhaps due to less influence from Christian missionaries. Their music is mostly percussion-based and extremely complex. Taarab is a mixture of influences from Arabic, Indian and Mijikenda music found in the coastal regions of Kenya, Zanzibar, Pemba and the islands off East Africa.
  • Yao people (East Africa) dance = beni (music) – likwata[69]

The Indian Ocean

Southern Africa

  • Bushmen Also Basarwa, Khoe, Khwe, San, !Kung. The Khoisan (also spelled Khoesaan, Khoesan or Khoe-San) is a unifying name for two ethnic groups of Southern Africa who share physical and putative linguistic characteristics distinct from the Bantu majority of the region,[71] the foraging San and the pastoral Khoi. The San include the original inhabitants of Southern Africa before the southward Bantu migrations from Central and East Africa reached their region. Khoi pastoralists apparently arrived in Southern Africa shortly before the Bantu. Large Khoi-san populations remain in several arid areas in the region, notably in the Kalahari Desert. Styles= hocket[72]
Song of Lamentation from Mozambique

The Southern Bantu languages include all of the important Bantu languages of South Africa, Zimbabwe and Botswana, and several of southern Mozambique. They have several sub-groups;

Instruments

African dances

West

Gerewol.[79] Dan people masked dance.[25] Yoruba gelede.[32] Hausa asauwara[80] Ewe dances: agbadza – Gadzo.[81] Mande include the Mandinka, Maninka and Bamana Dances: bansango – didadi – dimba – sogominkum.[82] Dagomba dance: takai – damba – jera – simpa – bamaya – tora – geena. São Tomé and Principe dance: danço-Congo – puíta – ússua.[39] Cape Verde[40] Dance = batuque – coladera – funaná – morna – tabanca. Kasena Dances: jongo – nagila – pe zara – war dance.[37] Akan dances: adowa – osibisaba – sikyi. The Ashanti[37] Nzema people[25] dance: abissa – fanfare – grolo – sidder

Southern

Notes

  1. ^ C. Stapleton and C. May, African All-stars, Paladin 1989, page 5.
  2. ^ " African music." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ African Dance. Kariamu Welsh, 2004, Chelsea House Publishers, page 35. ISBN 0791076415
  4. ^ Steppin' on the Blues by Jacqui Malone. University of Illinois Press. 1996. page 9. ISBN 0-252-02211-4
  5. ^ African Dance. Kariamu Welsh, 2004, Chelsea House Publishers, pages 19,21. ISBN 0791076415
  6. ^ Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience by Henry Louis Gates, Anthony Appiah 1999 Basic Civics Books page 556 ISBN 0-465-00071-1
  7. ^ Rhythm As A Tool For Healing and Health in The Aging process July 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Sebastian Bakare, The Drumbeat of Life, WCC Publications, Geneva, Switzerland. 1997.
  9. ^ . Department of Communication Studies, University of North Texas. Archived from the original on August 3, 2010.
  10. ^ Zimbabwe Dance. Kariamu Welsh Asante. Africa World Press, Inc. 2000, p. 60 ISBN 0-86543-492-1
  11. ^ Gordon, Raymond G. Jr. (ed.), Languages of Sudan February 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 15th ed., Dallas: SIL International, 2005
  12. ^ Bechtold, Peter R. (1991). "More Turbulence in Sudan — A New Politics This Time?" in Sudan: State and Society in Crisis, edited by John Voll. (Middle East Institute (Washington, D.C.) in association with the Indiana University Press (Bloomington, Indiana). p. 1. ISBN 978-0-253-36270-4.
  13. ^ "Nilotic", The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. February 17, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Ancient Historical Society Virtual Museum, 2010
  15. ^ The Chronological Evidence for the Introduction of Domestic Stock in Southern Africa March 25, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ A Brief History of Botswana December 28, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ On Bantu and Khoisan in (Southeastern) Zambia, (in German) October 16, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ a b Kubik, Gerhard (1994). Theory of African Music: I. Xylophone playing in southern Uganda. University of Chicago Press. p. 9. ISBN 9780226456911.
  19. ^ Lange (2004), Ancient kingdoms of West Africa, pp. 509–516, ISBN 978-3-89754-115-3
  20. ^ Haskins, p. 46
  21. ^ Guinea. The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency.
  22. ^ Hudson, Mark with Jenny Cathcart and Lucy Duran, "Senegambian Stars Are Here to Stay" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 617–633; Karolyi, p. 42
  23. ^ Hudson, Mark with Jenny Cathcart and Lucy Duran, "Senegambian Stars Are Here to Stay" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 617–633
  24. ^ de Klein, Guus, "The Backyard Beats of Gumbe" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 499–504
  25. ^ a b c d e Bensignor, François and Brooke Wentz, "Heart of the African Music Industry" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 472–476
  26. ^ Turino, p. 182; Collins, John, "Gold Coast: Highlife and Roots" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 488–498
  27. ^ Martin Staniland, The Lions of Dagbon, (1975), Christine Oppong, Growing up in Dagbon, (1973), David Locke, Drum Damba, quoted by Elana Cohen-Khani at "About the Dagomba – Dagomba Dance Drumming – Confluence". from the original on 2016-08-03. Retrieved 2013-01-14..
  28. ^ Bensignor, François, "Hidden Treasure" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 437–439
  29. ^ "Chief of Abertifi's orchestra March 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Friedrich August Louis Ramseyer, 1888–95, taken in Abetifi, Kwahu East District
  30. ^ ; Manuel, Popular Musics, pp. 90, 92, 182; Collins, John, "Gold Coast: Highlife and Roots" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 488–498; Koetting, James T., "Africa/Ghana" in Worlds of Music, pp. 67–105
  31. ^ a b Bensignor, François with Eric Audra, "Afro-Funksters" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 432–436
  32. ^ a b Turino, pp. 181–182; Bensignor, François with Eric Audra, and Ronnie Graham, "Afro-Funksters" and "From Hausa Music to Highlife" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 432–436,588–600; Karolyi, p. 43
  33. ^ Echezona, Wilberforce W. Music Educators Journal. Ibo Musical Instruments. Vol. 50, No. 5. (April – May 1964), pp. 23–27,130–131.
  34. ^ "Ames, David. African Arts. Kimkim: A Women's Musical Pot Vol. 11, No. 2. (January 1978), pp. 56–64,95–96."
  35. ^ Ronnie Graham, "From Hausa Music to Highlife" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 588–600
  36. ^ a b c Nkolo, Jean-Victor and Graeme Ewens, "Music of a Small Continent" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 440–447
  37. ^ a b c Koetting, James T., "Africa/Ghana" in Worlds of Music, pp. 67–105
  38. ^ Dominguez, Manuel, "Malabo Blues" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 477–479
  39. ^ a b Lima, Conceução and Caroline Shaw, "Island Music of Central Africa" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 613–616
  40. ^ a b Manuel, Popular Musics, p. 96; Máximo, Susana and David Peterson, "Music of Sweet Sorrow" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 448–457
  41. ^ Lange, Founding of Kanem March 27, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, 31–38.
  42. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-08-29.
  43. ^ . cp.settlement.org. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007.
  44. ^ Virtual Chad: A look beyond the statistics into the realities of life in Chad, Africa May 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ Tishkoff; et al. (2009), "The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans", Science, 324 (5930): 1035–1044, Bibcode:2009Sci...324.1035T, doi:10.1126/science.1172257, PMC 2947357, PMID 19407144 Also see Supplementary Data June 1, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  46. ^ World Bank accused of razing Congo forests May 13, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, The Guardian.
  47. ^ A. Price et al., Sensitive Detection of Chromosomal Segments of Distinct Ancestry in Admixed Populations
  48. ^ a b Forest peoples in the central African rain forest: focus on the pygmies October 25, 2016, at the Wayback Machine.
  49. ^ Turino, pp. 170–171; Abram, Dave, "Sounds from the African Rainforest" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 601–607; Karolyi, p. 24
  50. ^ African Rhythms (2003). Music by Aka Pygmies, performed by Aka Pygmies, György Ligeti and Steve Reich, performed by Pierre-Laurent Aimard. Teldec Classics: 8573 86584-2. Liner notes by Aimard, Ligeti, Reich, and Simha Arom and Stefan Schomann.
  51. ^ Nettl, Folk and Traditional Music, p. 142
  52. ^ a b c Ronnie Graham with Simon Kandela Tunkanya, "Evolution and Expression" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 702–705
  53. ^ a b c d Graebner, Werner, "Mtindo – Dance with Style" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 681–689
  54. ^ a b c Ewens, Graeme and Werner Graebner, "A Lightness of Touch" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 505–508
  55. ^ a b Turino, pp. 179, 182; Sandahl, Sten, "Exiles and Traditions" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 698–701
  56. ^ a b c Paterson, Doug, "The Life and Times of Kenyan Pop" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 509–522
  57. ^ Turino, pp. 179, 182; Sandahl, Sten, "Exiles and Traditions" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 698–701; Koetting, James T., "Africa/Ghana" in Worlds of Music, pp. 67–105; World Music Central April 14, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  58. ^ a b Lwanda, John, and Ronnie Graham with Simon Kandela Tunkanya, "Sounds Afroma!" and "Evolution and Expression" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 533–538,702–705
  59. ^ a b Jacquemin, Jean-Pierre, Jadot Sezirahigha and Richard Trillo, "Echoes from the Hills" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 608–612
  60. ^ Ember, Carol R.; Melvin Ember (2003). Encyclopedia of Sex and Gender. New York: Springer. p. 247. ISBN 978-0-306-47770-6.
  61. ^ a b The Luhya of Kenya January 21, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  62. ^ Health – Data April 18, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  63. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, "Interlocking | music". from the original on 2014-10-19. Retrieved 2011-05-28.
  64. ^ Theory of Music March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  65. ^ Nettl, Bruno (1956). Music in Primitive Culture. Harvard University Press. "Theory of Music". from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2011-11-01.
  66. ^ Paco, Celso, "A Luta Continua" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 579–584; Karolyi, p. 32; Koetting, James T., "Africa/Ghana" in Worlds of Music, pp. 67–105
  67. ^ a b c d e f Lwanda, John, "Sounds Afroma!" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 533–538
  68. ^ Manuel, Popular Musics, p. 112; Ewens, Graeme and Werner Graebner, "A Lightness of Touch" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 111–112, 505–508
  69. ^ Barnard, Alan (1992) Hunters and Herders of Southern Africa: A Comparative Ethnography of the Khoisan Peoples. New York; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992.
  70. ^ Karolyi, p. 24
  71. ^ a b c d e Allingham, Rob, "The Nation of Voice" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 638–657
  72. ^ Manuel, Popular Musics, p. 107
  73. ^ Turino, pp. 105, 162, 182–183; Kendall, Judy and Banning Eyre, "Jit, Mbira and Chimurenga" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 706–716
  74. ^ Karolyi, p. 45
  75. ^ a b Turino, p. 183
  76. ^ Turino, p. 183; Karolyi, p. 37
  77. ^ Bensignor, François, "Sounds of the Sahel" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 585–587
  78. ^ Turino, p. 184; Bensignor, François and Ronnie Graham, "Sounds of the Sahel" and "From Hausa Music to Highlife" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 585–587, 588–600
  79. ^ Turino, p. 178; Collins, John, "Gold Coast: Highlife and Roots" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 488–498
  80. ^ Turino, pp. 172–173; Bensignor, François, Guus de Klein, and Lucy Duran, "Hidden Treasure", "The Backyard Beats of Gumbe" and "West Africa's Musical Powerhouse" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 437–439, 499–504, 539–562; Manuel, Popular Musics, p. 95; World Music Central February 7, 2006, at the Wayback Machine

References

  • Broughton, Simon; Mark Ellingham, eds. (2000). Rough Guide to World Music (First ed.). London: Rough Guides. ISBN 978-1-85828-636-5.
  • Karolyi, Otto (1998). Traditional African & Oriental Music. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-023107-6.
  • Manuel, Peter (1988). Popular Musics of the Non-Western World. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-505342-5.
  • Philip V. Bohlman; Bruno Nettl; Charles Capwell; Thomas Turino; Isabel K. F. Wong (1997). Excursions in World Music (Second ed.). Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-230632-4.
  • Nettl, Bruno (1965). Folk and Traditional Music of the Western Continents. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
  • Fujie, Linda, James T. Koetting, David P. McAllester, David B. Reck, John M. Schechter, Mark Slobin and R. Anderson Sutton (1992). Jeff Todd Titan (ed.). Worlds of Music: An Introduction to the Music of the World's Peoples (Second ed.). New York: Schirmer Books. ISBN 978-0-02-872602-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • . World Music Central. Archived from the original on February 7, 2006. Retrieved April 3, 2006.

saharan, african, music, traditions, this, article, section, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, transliterated, languages, phonetic, transcriptions, with, appropriate, code, wikipedia, multilingual, support, templates, a. This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why June 2020 In many parts of sub Saharan Africa the use of music is not limited to entertainment it serves a purpose to the local community and helps in the conduct of daily routines Traditional African music supplies appropriate music and dance for work and for religious ceremonies of birth naming rites of passage marriage and funerals 1 The beats and sounds of the drum are used in communication as well as in cultural expression 2 Drumming and dancing at Dakawa Morogoro Tanzania African dances are largely participatory there are traditionally no barriers between dancers and onlookers except with regard to spiritual religious and initiation dances Even ritual dances often have a time when spectators participate 3 Dances help people work mature praise or criticize members of the community celebrate festivals and funerals compete recite history proverbs and poetry and encounter gods 4 They inculcate social patterns and values Many dances are performed by only males or females 5 Dances are often segregated by gender reinforcing gender roles in children Community structures such as kinship age and status are also often reinforced 6 To share rhythm is to form a group consciousness to entrain with one another 7 to be part of the collective rhythm of life to which all are invited to contribute 8 African ethnic groups Yoruba dancers and drummers for instance express communal desires values and collective creativity The drumming represents an underlying linguistic text that guides the dancing performance allowing linguistic meaning to be expressed non verbally The spontaneity of these performances should not be confused with an improvisation that emphasizes the individual ego The drummer s primary duty is to preserve the community 9 Master dancers and drummers are particular about the learning of the dance exactly as taught Children must learn the dance exactly as taught without variation Improvisation or a new variation comes only after mastering the dance performing and receiving the appreciation of spectators and the sanction of village elders 10 The music of the Luo for another example is functional used for ceremonial religious political or incidental purposes during funerals Tero buru to praise the departed to console the bereaved to keep people awake at night to express pain and agony and during cleansing and chasing away of spirits during beer parties Dudu ohangla dance welcoming back the warriors from a war during a wrestling match Ramogi during courtship in rain making and during divination and healing Work songs are performed both during communal work like building weeding etc and individual work like pounding of cereals winnowing Contents 1 Regions 1 1 Sahel and Sudan 1 2 Western central eastern and southern territories 2 West Africa 2 1 Northern 2 2 The Gulf of Guinea 3 Central Africa 3 1 Northern traditions 3 2 The Pygmy people 3 3 Bantu traditions 4 East Africa 4 1 Northern traditions 4 2 Bantu traditions 4 3 The Indian Ocean 5 Southern Africa 6 Instruments 7 African dances 7 1 West 7 2 Southern 8 Notes 9 ReferencesRegions Edit Geo political map of Africa divided for ethnomusicological purposes after Merriam 1959 Alan P Merriam divided Africa into seven regions for ethnomusicological purposes observing current political frontiers see map and this article follows this division as far as possible in surveying the music of ethnic groups in Africa Music of the northern region of Africa red on the map including that of the Horn of Africa dark green on the map is mostly treated separately under Middle Eastern and North African music traditions West African music yellow on the map includes the music of Senegal and the Gambia of Guinea and Guinea Bissau Sierra Leone and Liberia of the inland plains of Mali Niger and Burkina Faso and also the coastal nations of Cote d Ivoire Ghana Togo Benin Nigeria Cameroon Gabon and the Republic of the Congo as well as the islands of Cape Verde Sao Tome and Principe Central African Music dark blue on the map includes the music of Chad the Central African Republic the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Zambia The Eastern region light green on the map includes the music of Uganda Kenya Rwanda Burundi Tanzania Malawi Mozambique and Zimbabwe as well as the islands of Madagascar the Seychelles Reunion Mauritius and Comoros The eastern region has received south Asian and even Austronesian influences via the Indian Ocean The Southern region brown on the map includes the music of South Africa Lesotho Eswatini Botswana Namibia and Angola Sahel and Sudan Edit The music of Sudan turquoise on the map indicates the difficulty of dividing music traditions according to state frontiers The musicology of Sudan involves some 133 language communities 11 that speak over 400 dialects 12 Afro Asian Nilotic and Niger Congo Sudan takes its name from that of the sub Saharan savanna which makes with the Nile a great cross roads of the region South of the Sahara the Sahel forms a bio geographic zone of transition between the desert and the Sudanian savannas stretching between the Atlantic Ocean and the Red Sea The Nilotic peoples prominent in southern Sudan Uganda Kenya and northern Tanzania include the Luo Dinka Nuer and Maasai 13 Many of these have been included in the Eastern region The sahel brown and the Sudan green The Dinka are a mainly agro pastoral people inhabiting the Bahr el Ghazal region of the Nile basin Jonglei and parts of southern Kordufan and Upper Nile regions They number around 1 5 million about 10 of the population 14 of Sudan The Arabian rebab has found a home among the Nuba peoples The Senegambian Fula have migrated as far as Sudan at various times often speaking Arabic as well as their own language The Hausa people who speak a language related to Ancient Egyptian and Biblical Hebrew have moved in the opposite direction Further west the Berber music of the Tuareg has penetrated to Sub Saharan countries These are included in the Western region but the music of Sub Saharan herders and nomads is heard from west to east Western central eastern and southern territories Edit Saharan trade routes circa 1400 These remaining four regions are most associated with Sub Saharan African music familiar African musical elements such as the use of cross beat and vocal harmony may be found all over all four regions as may be some instruments such as the iron bell This is largely due to the expansion of the Niger Congo speaking people that began around 1500 BC the last phases of expansion were 0 1000 AD 15 16 17 Only a few scattered languages in this great area cannot readily be associated with the Niger Congo language family However two significant non Bantu musical traditions the Pygmy music of the Congo jungle and that of the bushmen of the Kalahari do much to define the music of the central region and of the southern region respectively As a result of the migrations of Niger Congo peoples e g Bantu expansion polyrhythmic culture e g dance music which is generally associated with being a common trait among modern cultures of Africa spread throughout Africa 18 Due to the Trans Atlantic slave trade music of the African diaspora many of whom descend from Niger Congo peoples has had considerable influence upon modern Western forms of popular culture e g dance music 18 West Africa Edit Gambian boy with bowed tin can lute The music of West Africa must be considered under two main headings in its northernmost and westernmost parts many of the above mentioned transnational sub Saharan ethnic influences are found among the Hausa the Fulani the Wolof people the Mande speakers of Mali Senegal and Mauritania the Gur speaking peoples of Mali Burkina Faso and the northern halves of Ghana Togo and Cote d Ivoire the Fula found throughout West Africa and the Senufo speakers of Cote d Ivoire and Mali The coastal regions are home to the Niger Congo speakers Kwa Akan the Gbe languages spoken in Ghana Togo Benin and Nigeria the Yoruba and Igbo languages spoken in Nigeria and the Benue Congo languages of the east Inland and coastal languages are only distantly related While the north with its griot traditions makes great use of stringed instruments and xylophones the south relies much more upon drum sets and communal singing Northern Edit The Malian kora harp lute is perhaps the most sophisticated of Africa s stringed instruments Complex societies existed in the region from about 1500 BCE The Ghana Empire 19 existed from before c 830 until c 1235 in what is now south east Mauritania and western Mali The Sosso people had their capital at Koumbi Saleh until Sundiata Keita defeated them at the Battle of Kirina c 1240 and began the Mali Empire which spread its influence along the Niger River through numerous vassal kingdoms and provinces The Gao Empire at the eastern Niger bend was powerful in the ninth century CE but later subordinated to Mali until its decline In 1340 the Songhai people made Gao the capital of a new Songhai Empire 20 source source Funerary chant sung in Burkina Faso The Hausa people are one of the largest ethnic groups in Nigeria Niger Sudan and many West and Central African countries They speak a Chadic language There are two broad categories of traditional Hausa music rural folk music and urban court music developed in the Hausa Kingdoms before the Fulani War Their folk music has played an important part in Nigerian music contributing elements such as the goje a one stringed fiddle The originally nomadic pastoral Senegambian Fula people or Tukulor represent 40 of the population of Guinea and have spread to surrounding states and as far as Sudan in the east 21 In the 19th century they overthrew the Hausa and established the Sokoto Caliphate The Fula play a variety of traditional instruments including drums the hoddu xalam a plucked skin covered lute similar to a banjo and riti or riiti a one string bowed instrument similar to a violin in addition to their vocal music They also use end blown bamboo flutes Their griots are known as gawlo 22 Mande music the music of Mali is dominated by forms derived from the Mande Empire Their musicians professional performers called jeliw sing jeli French griot have produced popular alongside traditional music Mande languages include Mandinka Soninke Bambara Bissa Dioula Kagoro Bozo Mende Susu Vai and Ligbi there are populations in Burkina Faso Mauritania Senegal The Gambia Guinea Guinea Bissau Sierra Leone and Liberia and mainly in the northern inland regions in the south coast states of Cote d Ivoire Ghana Togo Benin and Nigeria Wolof music the Wolof people the largest ethnic group in Senegal kin to the Fula have contributed greatly to popular Senegalese music The related Serer people are notable for polyphonic song 23 Jola man at Boucotte in Casamance Senegal playing the akonting In Senegal The Gambia and Guinea Bissau the Jola are notable for their stringed instrument the akonting a precursor of the banjo while the Balanta people the largest ethnic group of Guinea Bissau play a similar gourd lute instrument called a kusunde or kussunde 24 with a short A B drone string at the bottom a top F string of middle length and a middle C string the longest Top string stopped gives G middle string stopped is D Songhai music as interpreted by Ali Farka Toure has gathered international interest for a minor pentatonic lute and voice style that is markedly similar to American blues The Senufo or Senoufo living in southern Mali and the extreme western corner of Burkina Faso to Katiola in Cote d Ivoire with one group the Nafana in north western Ghana The Senufo are notable for funeral and poro music 25 A performance group from Burkina Faso based on the balafon Among Gur speaking peoples the Dagomba use the lunga talking drum and a bass drum with snares called a gungon as well as the flute gonje goje and bell 26 as well as molo xalam lute music also played by Gurunsi peoples such as the Frafra Similar styles are practised by local Fulani Hausa Djerma Busanga and Ligbi speaking people Drummers in Dagbon are storytellers historians bards of family ancestry who perform at events called sambanlunga 27 The Gurunsi the Lobi the Wala and the related Dagaaba people of Ghana and Burkina Faso and are known for complex interlocking double meter patterns on the xylophone gyil The Mossi people whose Mossi Kingdoms in present day Burkina Faso withstood their Songhai and Mende neighbours before falling to the French have a griot tradition Also djambadon 28 also brosca The Gulf of Guinea Edit The musical ensemble of the chief of Abetifi Kwahu people c 1890 29 The Akan people include the Akwamu Bono Akyem Fante Ashanti 30 who originated the Adowa and kete styles the Baoule whose polyphonic music introduced the gbebe rhythm to Ivory Coast 25 the Nzema people who play the edengole Akan peoples have complex court music including the atumpan and Ga kpanlogo style a modernized traditional dance and music form developed around 1960 Yacub Addy Obo Addy and Mustapha Tettey Addy are Ga drummers who have achieved international fame A huge log xylophone is used in asonko music The 10 14 string Ghanaian seprewa midway between the kora and the African harp is still played but often replaced by guitar Other styles include adaha agbadza akwete ashiko and gombe as well as konkomba mainline osibisaba and sikyi Instrumentation includes the aburukawa apentemma dawuro and torowa source source source Complex polyphonic structures of Baoule singers intoned by Djourou harp Ewe music the music of the Ewe people of Ghana Togo and Benin is primarily percussive with great metrical complexity Ewe drumming ensembles produce dance music and have contributed popular styles such as agbadza and borborbor a konkomba highlife fusion of the 1950s The related Aja people are native to south western Benin and south eastern Togo Aja living in Abomey mingled with the local tribe thus creating the Fon or Dahomey ethnic group now the largest in Benin Tchinkoume 31 Yoruba music is prominent in the music of Nigeria and in Afro Latin and Caribbean musical styles Ensembles using the talking drum play a type of music that is called dundun after the drum 32 using various sizes of tension drum along with special band drums ogido The leader or oniyalu uses the drum to talk by imitating the tonality of Yoruba language Yoruba music traditionally centred on folklore and spiritual deity worship utilising basic and natural instruments such as handclaps Professional musicians were referred to by the derogatory term of Alagbe source source Complex polyrhythms performed by Igbo musicians in Nsukka Nigeria Igbo music informs Highlife and Waka The drum is the most important musical instrument for the Igbo people used during celebrations rites of passage funerals war town meetings and other events and the pot drum or udu means pot is their most common and popular drum 33 a smaller variant is called the kim kim 34 Igbo Styles include egwu ota Other instruments obo ufie ogene 35 a flat metal pan used as a bell Bassa people Cameroon originated assiko a popular dance from the South of Cameroon 36 The Kasena use a hocket vocal style Other styles are jongo len yoro Instruments include gullu gungonga korbala kornia sinyegule wua and yong wui 37 A Bamileke 36 style is mangambe Bamileke people use the gong The Beti Pahuin 36 of Cameroon Style bikutsi Dance bikutsi Instrumentation njang rattle include Fang people 38 chorus and drum group Instrumentation mvet Other bebom mvet Music of Sao Tome and Principe 39 Styles danco Congo dexa socope ussua xtleva Instruments cowbell flute rattle Other TchiloliThe music of Cape Verde has long been influenced by Europe 40 Instrumentation includes the accordion gaita the bowed rabeca the violao guitar and the viola twelve string guitar as well as cavaquinho cimboa and ferrinho Styles include batuque coladera funana morna and tabanca Central Africa Edit The Central African musicological region and the River Congo upon a satellite photograph showing the African tropical rainforest and desert regions The central region of African music is defined by the tropical rain forests at the heart of the continent However Chad the northernmost state has a considerable subtropical and desert northern region Northern traditions Edit The north of this region has Nilo Saharans such as the Zande people Early kingdoms were founded near Lake Chad the Kanem Empire ca 600 BCE 1380 CE 41 encompassed much of Chad Fezzan east Niger and north east Nigeria perhaps founded by the nomadic Zaghawa then ruled by the Sayfawa dynasty The Bornu Empire 1396 1893 was a continuation the Kanembu founding a new state at Ngazargamu These spoke the Kanuri languages spoken by some four million people in Nigeria Niger Chad Cameroon Libya and Sudan They are noted for lute and drum music The Kingdom of Baguirmi 1522 1897 and the Ouaddai Empire 1635 1912 were also centred near Lake Chad The Toubou who live mainly in the north of Chad around the Tibesti mountains and also in Libya Niger and Sudan are semi nomadic herders Nilo Saharan speakers mostly Muslim numbering roughly 350 000 Their folk music revolves around men s string instruments like the keleli and women s vocal music 42 The Central Sudanic Baguirmi language has 44 761 speakers As of 1993 update and is associated with the kingdom of Baguirmi They are known for drum and zither music and a folk dance in which a mock battle is conducted between dancers wielding large pestles 43 The Sara people are a linguistically related ethnic group the largest in Chad making up to 30 of its population and 10 of the Central African Republic Descendants of the Sao civilisation they use the balafon whistle harp and kodjo drums The Zande people live in the north east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo south western Sudan and the south eastern Central African Republic Their number is estimated by various sources at between 1 and 4 million Horns and trumpets such as the long royal trumpet a tin horn known as waza or kakaki are used in coronations and other upper class ceremonies throughout both Chad and Sudan 44 Other traditional Chadian instruments include the hu hu string instrument with calabash resonators maracas The griot tradition uses the kinde a five string bow harp The Pygmy people Edit Distribution of Pygmies according to Cavalli Sforza Main article Pygmy music The Pygmy peoples have high levels of genetic diversity 45 yet are extremely divergent from all other human populations suggesting they have an ancient indigenous lineage the most ancient divergence after the Southern African Bushmen It is estimated that there are between 250 000 and 600 000 Pygmies living in the Congo rainforest 46 Most Pygmy communities dwell in tropical forests 47 with populations in Rwanda Burundi Uganda the Democratic Republic of the Congo the Central African Republic Cameroon Equatorial Guinea Gabon the Republic of Congo Angola Botswana Namibia and Zambia 48 As partial hunter gatherers living partially but not exclusively on the wild products of their environment they trade with neighbouring farmers to acquire cultivated foods and other material items 48 There are several Pygmy groups the best known being the Mbenga Aka and Baka of the western Congo basin the Mbuti Efe etc of the Ituri Rainforest and the Twa of the Great Lakes Pygmy music Includes the Aka Baka Mambuti Mbuti and Efe styles hindewhu hocket likanos liquindi lullaby yelli Instrumentation flute ieta limbindi molimo ngombi trumpet whistle Other boona elima jengi molimo 49 The African Pygmies are particularly known for their usually vocal music typically characterised by dense contrapuntal communal improvisation 50 Music permeates daily life and there are songs for entertainment as well as specific events and activities Bashi 51 Instrumentation lulanga Bantu traditions Edit Bemba people of Zambia or BaBemba using the Ba prefix to mean people of and also called Awemba or BaWemba in the past belong to a large group of peoples mainly in the Northern Luapula and Copperbelt Provinces of Zambia who trace their origins to the Luba and Lunda states of the upper Congo basin in what became Katanga Province in southern Congo Kinshasa DRC There are over 30 Bemba clans named after animals or natural organisms such as the royal clan the people of the crocodile Bena Ng andu or the Bena Bowa Mushroom Clan The Bemba language Chibemba is related to the Bantu languages Kaonde in Zambia and the DRC Luba in the DRC Nsenga and Tonga in Zambia and Nyanja Chewa in Zambia and Malawi It is mainly spoken in the Northern Luapula and Copperbelt Provinces and has become the most widely spoken African language in the country although not always as a first language Bemba numbered 250 000 in 1963 but a much larger population includes some eighteen different ethnic groups who together with the Bemba form a closely related ethno linguistic cluster of matrilineal matrifocal agriculturalists known as the Bemba speaking peoples of Zambia Instrumentation babatone kalela 52 East Africa EditThe East African musicological region which includes the islands of the Indian Ocean Madagascar Reunion Mauritius Comor and the Seychelles has been open to the influence of Arabian and Iranian music since the Shirazi Era In the south of the region Swahili culture has adopted instruments such as the dumbek oud and qanun even the Indian tabla drums 53 The kabosy also called the mandoliny a small guitar of Madagascar like the Comorian gabusi may take its name from the Arabian qanbus Taarab a modern genre popular in Tanzania and Kenya is said to take both its name and its style from Egyptian music as formerly cultivated in Zanzibar Latterly there have been European influences also the guitar is popular in Kenya the contredanse mazurka and polka are danced in the Seychelles 54 Northern traditions Edit The Luo peoples inhabit an area that stretches from Southern Sudan and Ethiopia through northern Uganda and eastern Congo DRC into western Kenya and Tanzania and include the Shilluk Acholi Lango and Joluo Kenyan and Tanzanian Luo Luo Benga music derives from the traditional music of the nyatiti lyre 55 the Luo speaking Acholi of northern Uganda use the adungu 56 Rhythms are characterized by syncopation and acrusis Melodies are lyrical with vocal ornamentations especially when the music carries an important message Songs are call and response or solo performances such as chants recitatives with irregular rhythms and phrases which carried serious messages Luo dances such as the dudu were introduced by them A unique characteristic is the introduction of another chant at the middle of a musical performance The singing stops the pitch of the musical instruments go down and the dance becomes less vigorous as an individual takes up the performance in self praise This is called pakruok A unique kind of ululation sigalagala mainly done by women marks the climax of the musical performance Dance styles are elegant and graceful involving the movement of one leg in the opposite direction to the waist or vigorous shaking of the shoulders usually to the nyatiti Adamson 1967 commented that Luos clad in their traditional costumes and ornaments deserve their reputation as the most picturesque people in Kenya During most of their performances the Luo wore costumes sisal skirts owalo beads Ombulu tigo worn around the neck and waist and red or white clay used by the ladies The men s costumes included kuodi or chieno a skin worn from the shoulders or from the waist Ligisa headgear shield and spear reed hats and clubs were made from locally available materials Luo musical instruments range from percussion drums clappers metal rings ongeng o or gara shakers nyatiti a type of lyre orutu a type of fiddle wind tung a horn Asili a flute Abu to a specific type of trumpet In the benga style of music the guitar acoustic later electric replaced the nyatiti as the string instrument Benga is played by musicians of many tribes and is no longer considered a purely Luo style The Music and dance of the Maasai people used no instruments in the past because as semi nomadic Nilotic pastoralists instruments were considered too cumbersome to move Traditional Maasai music is strictly polyphonic vocal music a group chanting polyphonic rhythms while soloists take turns singing verses The call and response that follows each verse is called namba Performances are often competitive and divided by age and gender The neighbouring Turkana people have maintained their ancient traditions including call and response music which is almost entirely vocal A horn made from the kudu antelope is also played The Samburu are related to the Maasai and like them play almost no instruments except simple pipes and a kind of guitar There are also erotic songs sung by women praying for rain The Borana live near the Ethiopian border and their music reflects Ethiopian Somali and other traditions They are known also for using the chamonge guitar 57 which is made from a cooking pot strung with metal wires Bantu traditions Edit Ngbaka speaking Gbanzili men of the rainforest play xylophones with calabash resonators 1907 Drums ngoma ng oma or ingoma are much used particularly large ones have been developed among the court musicians of East African kings The term ngoma is applied to rhythm and dance styles as well as the drums themselves 53 as among the East Kenyan Akamba the Buganda of Uganda 58 and the Ngoni people of Malawi Mozambique Tanzania and Zambia who trace their origins to the Zulu people of kwaZulu Natal in South Africa 59 The term is also used by the Tutsi Watusi and Hutu Bahutu 60 Bantu style drums especially the sukuti drums are played by the Luhya people 57 also known as Avaluhya Abaluhya or Luyia 61 a Bantu people of Kenya 62 being about 16 of Kenya s total population of 38 5 million and in Uganda and Tanzania 62 They number about 6 1 million people 63 Abaluhya litungo 64 The Kikuyu are one of the largest and most urbanized communities in Kenya At the Riuki cultural center in Nairobi traditional songs and dances are still performed by local women including music for initiations courting weddings hunting and working The Kikuyu like their neighbours the Embu and the Meru are believed to have migrated from the Congo Basin Meru people like the Chuka who live near Mount Kenya are known for polyrhythmic percussion music The Buganda are a large southern Ugandan population with well documented musical traditions The akadinda a xylophone as well as several types of drum is used in the courtly music of the Kabaka or king Much of the music is based on playing interlocking ostinato phrases in parallel octaves Other instruments engelabi ennanga or inanga a harp entenga Dance baksimba The music of Rwanda and Burundi is mainly that of the closely related Tutsi Watusi and Hutu Bahutu people The Royal Drummers of Burundi perform music for ceremonies of birth funeral and coronation of mwami kings Sacred drums called karyenda are made from hollowed tree trunks covered with animal skins In addition to the central drum Inkiranya the Amashako drums provide a continuous beat and Ibishikiso drums follow the rhythm established by the Inkiranya Dancers may carry ornamental spears and shields and lead the procession with their dance Instrumentation ikembe inanga iningiri umuduri ikondera ihembe urutaro Dances ikinimba umushayayo umuhamirizo imparamba inkaranka igishakamba ikinyemera 60 Swahili culture Styles gungu kinanda wedding music Dances chakacha kumbwaya vugo Instrumentation kibangala rika taishokoto 53 The ng oma drumming of Gogo women of Tanzania and Mozambique like that of the ngwayi dance of northeastern Zambia uses interlocking or antiphonal rhythms that feature in many Eastern African instrumental styles such as the xylophone music of the Makonde dimbila the Yao mangolongondo or the Shirima mangwilo on which the opachera the initial caller is responded to by another player the wakulela 65 The Chopi people of the coastal Inhambane Province are known for a unique kind of xylophone called mbila pl timbila and the style of music played with it which is believed to be the most sophisticated method of composition yet found among preliterate peoples 66 Ensembles consist of around ten xylophones of four sizes and accompany ceremonial dances with long compositions called ngomi which consist of an overture and ten movements of different tempos and styles The ensemble leader serves as poet composer conductor and performer creating a text improvising a melody partially based on the features of the Chopi s tone language and composing a second countrapuntal line The musicians of the ensemble partially improvise their parts according to style instrumental idiom and the leader s indications The composer then consults with the choreographer of the ceremony and adjustments are made 67 Chopi styles timbala Instruments kalimba mbila timbila valimba xigovia xipala pala xipendane xitende xizambe 68 Chopi languages include Tonga Tonga dance mganda 69 The Kamba people are known for their complex percussion music and spectacular performances dances that display athletic skills resemble those of the Tutsi and the Embu Dances are usually accompanied by songs composed for the occasion and sung on a pentatonic scale The Akamba also have work songs Their music is divided into several groups based on age Kilumi is a dance for mainly elderly women and men performed at healing and rain making ceremonies Mbeni for young and acrobatic girls and boys Mbalya or Ngutha is a dance for young people who meet to entertain themselves after the day s chores are done Kyaa for the old men and women Kiveve Kinze etc In the Kilumi dance the drummer usually female plays sitting on a large mwase drum covered with goatskin at one end and open at the other The drummer is also the lead singer Mwali pl Myali is a dance accompanying a song usually made to criticize anti social behaviour Mwilu is a circumcision dance The Gusii people use an enormous lute called the obokano and the ground bow 57 made by digging a large hole in the ground over which an animal skin is pegged A small hole is cut into the skin and a single string placed across the hole dubious discuss The Mijikenda literally the nine tribes are found on the coast of Tanzania Kenya and Southern Somalia They have a vibrant folk tradition perhaps due to less influence from Christian missionaries Their music is mostly percussion based and extremely complex Taarab is a mixture of influences from Arabic Indian and Mijikenda music found in the coastal regions of Kenya Zanzibar Pemba and the islands off East Africa Yao people East Africa dance beni music likwata 69 The Indian Ocean Edit The Bajuni people live primarily in the Lamu islands and also in Mombasa and Kilifi The Bajuni women s work song Mashindano Ni Matezo is very well known Madagascar and the Mascarene Islands which include Reunion Mauritius and Rodrigues are noted for the dance music style sega 70 Mascarene also maloya music maloya ritual Instrumentation kayamb maravanne ravanne tambour Madagascar also vakodrazana style dance basese salegy sigaoma tsapika watsa watsa Instrumentation jejy voatavo kabosy lokanga marovany sodina valiha Famadihana ritual hiragasy theater Seychellois dance contonbley 54 Southern Africa EditBushmen Also Basarwa Khoe Khwe San Kung The Khoisan also spelled Khoesaan Khoesan or Khoe San is a unifying name for two ethnic groups of Southern Africa who share physical and putative linguistic characteristics distinct from the Bantu majority of the region 71 the foraging San and the pastoral Khoi The San include the original inhabitants of Southern Africa before the southward Bantu migrations from Central and East Africa reached their region Khoi pastoralists apparently arrived in Southern Africa shortly before the Bantu Large Khoi san populations remain in several arid areas in the region notably in the Kalahari Desert Styles hocket 72 source source Song of Lamentation from Mozambique The Southern Bantu languages include all of the important Bantu languages of South Africa Zimbabwe and Botswana and several of southern Mozambique They have several sub groups Nguni languages include Xhosa Zulu and Northern Ndebele Zulu music has contributed the Mbaqanga style to African popular music as well as the polyphonic vocal styles called mbube and isicathamiya Also izihlabo maskanda Instruments guitar Other ukubonga 73 Xhosa music made an international impression in the jazz world through Miriam Makeba and others for example Mike Oldfield s Amarok includes some Xhosa tunes and vocal lyrics Instruments uhadi 74 Ndbele Instrumentation guitar Other bira ceremony 73 Tekela languages Swati Phuthi Southern Ndebele Sotho music style mohabelo 73 Sotho Birwa Northern Sotho Pedi Southern Sotho Sotho Lozi Sotho Tswana languages Tswana Tswapong Kgalagadi Shona music also Tsonga Instruments hosho kalimba matepe mbira ngoma drums njari panpipe Other bira ceremony kushaura kutsinhira 75 Shona languages include Shona proper Dema Kalanga Manyika Ndau Nambya Tawara Tewe Tswa Ronga languages Ronga Tswa Gwamba Tsonga Venda The Ovambo people number roughly 1 500 000 and consist of a number of kindred groups that inhabit Ovamboland in northern Namibia forming about half of that state s population as well as the southernmost Angolan province Shambo a traditional dance music blended Ovambo music previously popularised by folk guitarist Kwela Kangwe Keenyala Boetie Simon Lexington and Meme Nanghili na Shima with a dominant guitar rhythm guitar percussion and a heavy talking bassline The Herero with about 240 000 members mostly in Namibia the remainder living in Botswana and Angola speak a similar language as do the Himba people Herero people oviritje also known as konsert has become popular in Namibia The Damara are genetically Bantu but speak the click language of the bushmen Ma gaisa or Damara Punch is a popular dance music genre that derives from their traditional music Pedi 73 styles harepa Instrumentation harepaInstruments EditAburukuwa Atoke Brekete used especially by the Gorovodu a vodun order of the Anlo and Ewe people Axatse a rattle or idiophone Fontomfrom the royal talking drum of the Bono people Kaganu a narrow drum or membranophone Kidi a drum about two feet tall Kora instrument a 21 string double harp lute Kloboto Kpanlogo Prempensua large thumb piano Totodzi Seprewa 6 10 stringed harp of the Akan and Fante peoples of south and central Ghana used in an old genre of praise music Sogo the largest of the supporting drums used to play in Atsia Lobi xylophone 25 Goun kakagbo hongan 31 Calabash A dried calabash bowl turned upside down and hit with the fist and fingers wearing rings Used as accompaniment to melodic instruments Flutes Goonji Gonjey Goge Traditional one stringed fiddle played by a majority of other sahelian groups in West Africa Gungon Bass snare drum of the Lunsi ensemble Of northern origin it is played throughout Ghana by various groups known by southern groups as brekete Related to the Dunun drums of other West African peoples Gyil large resonant Xylophones related to the Balafon Mbira small pentatonic thumb piano Koloko Varieties of Sahelian lute Varieties include the one stringed Kolgo Koliko of Gur speaking groups the two stringed Molo of the Zabarma and Fulani minorities or the two stringed Gurumi of the Hausa Lunna Kalangu Varieties of Hourglass shaped Talking drums Musical bow known as Jinjeram in Gurunsi or Jinjeli in Mossi Dagomba languages Shekere Whistles Horns Lemba people Instrumentation mbira 76 Yombe people Instrumentation panpipe 77 Shangaan Instrument guitar 73 Venda Instruments ngoma drums panpipe 78 Comorian msondo ndzendze 54 Zaramo dance instrument msondo also ngoma 53 Lango okeme 56 Busoga panpipe 77 African dances EditWest Edit Gerewol 79 Dan people masked dance 25 Yoruba gelede 32 Hausa asauwara 80 Ewe dances agbadza Gadzo 81 Mande include the Mandinka Maninka and Bamana Dances bansango didadi dimba sogominkum 82 Dagomba dance takai damba jera simpa bamaya tora geena Sao Tome and Principe dance danco Congo puita ussua 39 Cape Verde 40 Dance batuque coladera funana morna tabanca Kasena Dances jongo nagila pe zara war dance 37 Akan dances adowa osibisaba sikyi The Ashanti 37 Nzema people 25 dance abissa fanfare grolo sidder Southern Edit Chewa people Dance gule wa mkulu nyau 59 Lomwe dance tchopa 69 Luvale dance manchancha 52 Nyanja dance chitsukulumwe gule wa mkulu likhuba 69 Tumbuka dance vimbuza 69 Kaondedance kachacha 52 Henga dance vimbuza 69 Notes Edit C Stapleton and C May African All stars Paladin 1989 page 5 African music Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Encyclopaedia Britannica Online permanent dead link African Dance Kariamu Welsh 2004 Chelsea House Publishers page 35 ISBN 0791076415 Steppin on the Blues by Jacqui Malone University of Illinois Press 1996 page 9 ISBN 0 252 02211 4 African Dance Kariamu Welsh 2004 Chelsea House Publishers pages 19 21 ISBN 0791076415 Africana The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience by Henry Louis Gates Anthony Appiah 1999 Basic Civics Books page 556 ISBN 0 465 00071 1 Rhythm As A Tool For Healing and Health in The Aging process Archived July 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine Sebastian Bakare The Drumbeat of Life WCC Publications Geneva Switzerland 1997 Topic Three Department of Communication Studies University of North Texas Archived from the original on August 3 2010 Zimbabwe Dance Kariamu Welsh Asante Africa World Press Inc 2000 p 60 ISBN 0 86543 492 1 Gordon Raymond G Jr ed Languages of Sudan Archived February 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine Ethnologue Languages of the World 15th ed Dallas SIL International 2005 Bechtold Peter R 1991 More Turbulence in Sudan A New Politics This Time in Sudan State and Society in Crisis edited by John Voll Middle East Institute Washington D C in association with the Indiana University Press Bloomington Indiana p 1 ISBN 978 0 253 36270 4 Nilotic The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language Fourth Edition Archived February 17 2009 at the Wayback Machine Ancient Historical Society Virtual Museum 2010 The Chronological Evidence for the Introduction of Domestic Stock in Southern Africa Archived March 25 2009 at the Wayback Machine A Brief History of Botswana Archived December 28 2009 at the Wayback Machine On Bantu and Khoisan in Southeastern Zambia in German Archived October 16 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b Kubik Gerhard 1994 Theory of African Music I Xylophone playing in southern Uganda University of Chicago Press p 9 ISBN 9780226456911 Lange 2004 Ancient kingdoms of West Africa pp 509 516 ISBN 978 3 89754 115 3 Haskins p 46 Guinea The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Hudson Mark with Jenny Cathcart and Lucy Duran Senegambian Stars Are Here to Stay in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 617 633 Karolyi p 42 Hudson Mark with Jenny Cathcart and Lucy Duran Senegambian Stars Are Here to Stay in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 617 633 de Klein Guus The Backyard Beats of Gumbe in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 499 504 a b c d e Bensignor Francois and Brooke Wentz Heart of the African Music Industry in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 472 476 Turino p 182 Collins John Gold Coast Highlife and Roots in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 488 498 Martin Staniland The Lions of Dagbon 1975 Christine Oppong Growing up in Dagbon 1973 David Locke Drum Damba quoted by Elana Cohen Khani at About the Dagomba Dagomba Dance Drumming Confluence Archived from the original on 2016 08 03 Retrieved 2013 01 14 Bensignor Francois Hidden Treasure in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 437 439 Chief of Abertifi s orchestra Archived March 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine Friedrich August Louis Ramseyer 1888 95 taken in Abetifi Kwahu East District Manuel Popular Musics pp 90 92 182 Collins John Gold Coast Highlife and Roots in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 488 498 Koetting James T Africa Ghana in Worlds of Music pp 67 105 a b Bensignor Francois with Eric Audra Afro Funksters in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 432 436 a b Turino pp 181 182 Bensignor Francois with Eric Audra and Ronnie Graham Afro Funksters and From Hausa Music to Highlife in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 432 436 588 600 Karolyi p 43 Echezona Wilberforce W Music Educators Journal Ibo Musical Instruments Vol 50 No 5 April May 1964 pp 23 27 130 131 Ames David African Arts Kimkim A Women s Musical Pot Vol 11 No 2 January 1978 pp 56 64 95 96 Ronnie Graham From Hausa Music to Highlife in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 588 600 a b c Nkolo Jean Victor and Graeme Ewens Music of a Small Continent in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 440 447 a b c Koetting James T Africa Ghana in Worlds of Music pp 67 105 Dominguez Manuel Malabo Blues in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 477 479 a b Lima Conceucao and Caroline Shaw Island Music of Central Africa in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 613 616 a b Manuel Popular Musics p 96 Maximo Susana and David Peterson Music of Sweet Sorrow in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 448 457 Lange Founding of Kanem Archived March 27 2016 at the Wayback Machine 31 38 Traditional Music of the Republic of Chad Sound Clip MSN Encarta Archived from the original on 2009 08 29 Chad Arts and Literature cp settlement org Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Virtual Chad A look beyond the statistics into the realities of life in Chad Africa Archived May 5 2016 at the Wayback Machine Tishkoff et al 2009 The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans Science 324 5930 1035 1044 Bibcode 2009Sci 324 1035T doi 10 1126 science 1172257 PMC 2947357 PMID 19407144 Also see Supplementary Data Archived June 1 2009 at the Wayback Machine World Bank accused of razing Congo forests Archived May 13 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian A Price et al Sensitive Detection of Chromosomal Segments of Distinct Ancestry in Admixed Populations a b Forest peoples in the central African rain forest focus on the pygmies Archived October 25 2016 at the Wayback Machine Turino pp 170 171 Abram Dave Sounds from the African Rainforest in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 601 607 Karolyi p 24 African Rhythms 2003 Music by Aka Pygmies performed by Aka Pygmies Gyorgy Ligeti and Steve Reich performed by Pierre Laurent Aimard Teldec Classics 8573 86584 2 Liner notes by Aimard Ligeti Reich and Simha Arom and Stefan Schomann Nettl Folk and Traditional Music p 142 a b c Ronnie Graham with Simon Kandela Tunkanya Evolution and Expression in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 702 705 a b c d Graebner Werner Mtindo Dance with Style in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 681 689 a b c Ewens Graeme and Werner Graebner A Lightness of Touch in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 505 508 Manuel Popular Musics pg 101 a b Turino pp 179 182 Sandahl Sten Exiles and Traditions in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 698 701 a b c Paterson Doug The Life and Times of Kenyan Pop in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 509 522 Turino pp 179 182 Sandahl Sten Exiles and Traditions in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 698 701 Koetting James T Africa Ghana in Worlds of Music pp 67 105 World Music Central Archived April 14 2006 at the Wayback Machine a b Lwanda John and Ronnie Graham with Simon Kandela Tunkanya Sounds Afroma and Evolution and Expression in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 533 538 702 705 a b Jacquemin Jean Pierre Jadot Sezirahigha and Richard Trillo Echoes from the Hills in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 608 612 Ember Carol R Melvin Ember 2003 Encyclopedia of Sex and Gender New York Springer p 247 ISBN 978 0 306 47770 6 a b The Luhya of Kenya Archived January 21 2016 at the Wayback Machine Health Data Archived April 18 2010 at the Wayback Machine Manuel Popular Musics p 101 Encyclopaedia Britannica Interlocking music Archived from the original on 2014 10 19 Retrieved 2011 05 28 Theory of Music Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine Nettl Bruno 1956 Music in Primitive Culture Harvard University Press Theory of Music Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2011 11 01 Paco Celso A Luta Continua in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 579 584 Karolyi p 32 Koetting James T Africa Ghana in Worlds of Music pp 67 105 a b c d e f Lwanda John Sounds Afroma in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 533 538 Manuel Popular Musics p 112 Ewens Graeme and Werner Graebner A Lightness of Touch in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 111 112 505 508 Barnard Alan 1992 Hunters and Herders of Southern Africa A Comparative Ethnography of the Khoisan Peoples New York Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1992 Karolyi p 24 a b c d e Allingham Rob The Nation of Voice in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 638 657 Manuel Popular Musics p 107 Turino pp 105 162 182 183 Kendall Judy and Banning Eyre Jit Mbira and Chimurenga in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 706 716 Karolyi p 45 a b Turino p 183 Turino p 183 Karolyi p 37 Bensignor Francois Sounds of the Sahel in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 585 587 Turino p 184 Bensignor Francois and Ronnie Graham Sounds of the Sahel and From Hausa Music to Highlife in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 585 587 588 600 Turino p 178 Collins John Gold Coast Highlife and Roots in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 488 498 Turino pp 172 173 Bensignor Francois Guus de Klein and Lucy Duran Hidden Treasure The Backyard Beats of Gumbe and West Africa s Musical Powerhouse in the Rough Guide to World Music pp 437 439 499 504 539 562 Manuel Popular Musics p 95 World Music Central Archived February 7 2006 at the Wayback MachineReferences EditBroughton Simon Mark Ellingham eds 2000 Rough Guide to World Music First ed London Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 85828 636 5 Karolyi Otto 1998 Traditional African amp Oriental Music Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 023107 6 Manuel Peter 1988 Popular Musics of the Non Western World New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 505342 5 Philip V Bohlman Bruno Nettl Charles Capwell Thomas Turino Isabel K F Wong 1997 Excursions in World Music Second ed Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 230632 4 Nettl Bruno 1965 Folk and Traditional Music of the Western Continents Englewood Cliffs New Jersey Prentice Hall Fujie Linda James T Koetting David P McAllester David B Reck John M Schechter Mark Slobin and R Anderson Sutton 1992 Jeff Todd Titan ed Worlds of Music An Introduction to the Music of the World s Peoples Second ed New York Schirmer Books ISBN 978 0 02 872602 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link International Dance Glossary World Music Central Archived from the original on February 7 2006 Retrieved April 3 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sub Saharan African music traditions amp oldid 1140259033, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.