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Everything You Need To Know About African Music
African traditional music instruments
include:
Djembes.
Water drums.
Bougarabous, Ngoma drums (or
engoma drums) in West Africa.
Several varieties of Ngoma drums
in Central and Southern Africa.
The other percussion instruments
offered include the Kosika (kashaka),
rain sticks, bells, and wood sticks.
Different varieties of drums, flutes, and
strung and wind instruments can also
be found in Africa.
One of the most general aspects of
Sub-Saharan music is polyrhythms,
which is also one of its most
distinguishing characteristics. To be
able to play numerous rhythms at the
same time, various instruments have
been created expressly for this
purpose.
Some instruments, such as the Mbira,
Kalimba, Kora, Ngoni, and Dousn’gouni,
arrange notes, not in a single linear
sequence from bass to treble but
instead in two different rank arrays,
making it easier to play cross-rhythms.
American devices of the twentieth
century show that this theory is still
relevant. Gravi-kora and gravikord are
examples of new modern
manifestations of this principle.
History
It’s no secret that African music has
undergone some crucial alterations.
The music of Africa today may be very
different from the music of Africa in
the past. Furthermore, there has never
been a time when African music was
exclusively linked with a single ethnic
group. The unique voice of the
musician and his or her style and
originality have always been important
in the music business.
Other material sources include
archaeological and other artifacts,
pictorial sources such as petroglyphs
and rock drawings and written
accounts of African travels, field notes
written in African or European
languages, musical notations, and
photographs videotapes that can be
used for the study of African music
history.
According to historical documents, the
musical traditions of Sub-Saharan
Africa formerly spread as far north as
North Africa. Climate changes in the
Sahara between 8000 and 3000 BC
allowed savanna vegetation and
wildlife to extend into the southern and
central regions of the Sahara and its
mountains.
When humans settled in the Sahara,
they began to spread along rivers and
tiny lakes, bringing Neolithic, or New
Stone Age, cultures with a so-called
aquatic lifestyle. If you are a Nigerian,
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A slow breakdown of aquatic cultures
occurred between 5000 and 3000 BC
when the wet period’s pinnacle had
passed. Due to global warming, the
damp climate became increasingly
restricted to diminishing lakes and
rivers and the upper Nile region. In the
Lake Chad region and the Nile
wetlands, remnants of the old
civilization can still be found.
Rock paintings from the “Green
Sahara” region are a treasure trove of
iconographic material, including some
of the first internal sources on African
music. An anthropologist who studied
Algeria’s Tassili n’Ajjer plateau in 1956
discovered a flourishing dancing
culture that is still there today.
Based
on stylistic factors, this painting has
been dated to the Neolithic hunter
period in the Sahara (c. 6000–4000
BC), making it one of the earliest
examples of music and dancing in
Africa. Several African civilizations’
body ornamentation and movement
style are represented in their traditional
dance traditions.
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