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Music of the African diaspora

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Music of the African diasporais a sound created, produced, or inspired byblack people,includingAfrican music traditionsandAfrican popular musicas well as themusic genresof theAfrican diaspora,including someCaribbean music,Latin music,Brazilian musicandAfrican-American music.

Music of the African diaspora was mostly refined and developed during the period of slavery. Slaves did not have easy access to instruments, so vocal work took on new significance. Through chants andwork songspeople of African descent preserved elements of their African heritage while inventing new genres of music. The culmination of this great sublimation of musical energy into vocal work can be seen in genres as disparate asGospel MusicandHip-Hop.The music of the African diaspora makes frequent use ofostinato,a motif or phrase which is persistently repeated at the same pitch. The repeating idea may be a rhythmic pattern, part of a tune, or a complete melody. Thebanjois a direct descendant of theAkontingcreated by theJola people,found inSenegal,GambiaandGuinea-Bissauin West Africa. Hence, the melodic traditions of the African diaspora are probably most alive inBluesandJazz.

Background

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Many genres of music originate from communities that have visible roots in Africa. InNorth America,it was a way that the early slaves could express themselves and communicate when they were being forcibly relocated and when there were restrictions on what cultural activities they could pursue. The sorrows of song were the only freedom slaves had working on cotton fields, and overall through labor tactics. This burden of slavery became a gateway for other genres of music such as the blues for example. Black music does not just encompass sounds of the U.S. black experience but also a global black experience that stretches from Africa to Americas.[1]

The term for many coming from places of "black" origin can be perceived in a derogatory manner by cultures who see the term as a blurring of lines which ignores the true roots of certain peoples and their specific traditions. To refer to musical genres with strong African-American influence, such aship hop music,is very limited in scope and is not adopted by academic institutions as a true category of music. The individual aspects and collectively of black music is surrounded by the culture in itself as well as experience. Black music is centered around a story and origin. Many artist start song with the things they experience first hand.[2]Musical blackness was a way of communicating and a way to express themselves especially during hard times such as slavery. Their songs were used to give guidance to one another and tell stories. The varieties of sounds and expressions used in the music helped stress their emotions.[3]

Black music began to reflect urban environments through amplified sounds, social concerns, and cultural pride expressed through music. It combined blues, jazz, boogie-woogie and gospel taking the form of fast paced dance music with highly energized guitar work appealing to young audiences across racial divides.[4]

Genres

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Genres includespiritual,[5]gospel,rumba,blues,[6]bomba,country,rock and roll,rock,jazz,pop,salsa,R&B,samba,calypso,soca,soul,disco,kwaito,funk,ska,reggae,[7]dub reggae,house,Detroit techno,amapiano,hip hop,pop,gqom,afrobeat,bluegrass,and others.

Middle East

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Caribbean

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Cuba and Latin music in the Caribbean

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The roots of mostCubanmusic forms lie in thecabildos,a form of social club among African slaves brought to the island. TraditionalAfro-Cubanstyles, includeson,BatáandyukaandRumba.The Cubancontradanza,which became also known as theHabanera,the first written music to be rhythmically based on an African rhythm pattern, gained international fame in the 19th century. The habanera "El Arreglito" composed by the Spanish musicianSebastian Yradier,was adapted to become one of the most famous arias inGeorges Bizet's 1875 operaCarmen,"L'amour est un oiseau rebelled".

Dominican Republic

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Bachatais a popular guitar music that originated in theDominican Republic.Having strong African and Spanish influences, it is therefore also considered to bemusic of Latin America.The subjects of bachata are often romantic with tales of heartbreak and sadness. The original term used to name the genre was amargue ( "bitterness", "bitter music", or "blues music" ), until the more neutral term bachata became popular.

Haiti and Francophone music in the Caribbean

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Haitianmusic is familiar to people in the English-speaking world asMéringue.It developed during the early decades of the 19th century. When jazz became popular worldwide,mini-jazz(mini-djazinHaitian Creole) was created as Haiti's local variety.Kadans,Haitian Creolefor cadence, followed the mini-jazz era. Kadans had an influence on the development ofZoukin the French-speaking Antilles of the Caribbean. Haiti's most well-known modern music genre iscompasmusic. It was first popularized in the 1950s byNemours Jean-Baptiste.

Zouk music

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Zoukis a style of music originating inGuadeloupeandMartiniqueduring the 1980s,It has many influences, from Haitian,calypso,beguineandcompas.

The conventional zouk sound has a slow tempo, and it is sung inAntillean Creole,although it also has varieties that have developed in francophone Africa. It is popular throughout the French-speaking world, includingFranceandQuebec.

Former British West Indies and the Lesser Antilles

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Jamaica

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Early forms ofAfro-Caribbeanmusic inJamaicawasJunkanoo(a type offolk musicnow more closely associated withThe Bahamas). Mento is a style of Jamaican music that predates and has greatly influenced ska, which was also fused with African traditions, American jazz and blues. Subsequent styles besides ska include,rocksteadyandraggamuffin.(Mical 1995) Along with the rise of ska came the popularity of deejays who began talking stylistically over the rhythms of popular songs at sound systems, known as Toasting. This would later give birth to dancehall and pioneer rapping that later emerged in New York. Reggae stems from early Ska and Rocksteady, but also has its own style of Jamaican authenticity.

In Jamaica, African diasporic music is made to portray resistance through music in order to strengthen the communal bond and identity for groups that share collective memories of oppression, suffering, etc.[8]

Lesser Antilles

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As is the case throughout the Caribbean,Lesser Antilleanmusical cultures are largely based on the music ofAfrican slavesbrought by European traders and colonizers. TheAfrican musicalelements are a hybrid of instruments and styles from numerousWest Africantribes, while the European slaveholders added their own musics into the mix, as did immigrants from India.

Trinidad & Tobago

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InTrinidad and Tobago,whosecalypsostyle is an especially potent part of the music of the other former British colonies, which also share traditions like theBig Drumdance. Trinidadian folk calypso is found throughout the area, as are African-Caribbean religious music styles like theShangomusic of Trinidad.[9]Calypso's early rise was closely connected with the adoption of Carnival byTrinidadianslaves, includingcamboulaydrumming and the music masquerade processions.[9]In the 1970s, a calypso variant calledsocaarose, characterized by a focus on dance rhythms rather than lyricism. Soca has since spread across the Caribbean and abroad.[9]

Steel drums are a distinctivelyTrinidadianensemble that evolved from improvised percussion instruments used in Carnival processions. Steel bands were banned by the British colonial authorities. Nevertheless, steel drums spread across the Caribbean, and are now an entrenched part of the culture ofTrinidad and Tobago.[9]

French Caribbean islands and others

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TheFrench islandsof Martinique and Guadeloupe share the popularzoukstyle and have also had extensive musical contact with themusic of Haiti,itself once a French colony though not part of the Lesser Antilles. TheDutch coloniesofCuraçao,Bonaireand Aruba share thecombined rhythmpopular style. The islands also share a passion forkaseko,a genre ofSurinamese music;Suriname and its neighborsGuyanaandFrench Guianashare folk and popular styles that are connected enough to the Antilles and other Caribbean islands that both countries are studied in the broader context of Antillean or Caribbean music.

Oceania

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Australia

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Starting from the second half of the 19th century, African American performance through the colonial type ofblackface entertainmentgained popularity in Australia.[10]

Melanesia

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The use of funk, hip hop, and reggae inPapua New Guineais a phenomenon that occurred post-1970s, however the racial identifications expressed within said phenomenon originate from the mid 20th century duringWorld War II.American presence in the Second World War brought African-American and West Indian soldiers into contact with Melanesian andAboriginalindigenous groups. Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islanders were able to identify with the American and West Indian servicemen due to the similarities of their physical appearance, most notably their darker skin color, and consequently shared dances and songs with them.[11]The so-called Black Pacific, i.e. the cultural contact of African and Melanesian people, was fostered mainly through the Melanesiannégritudethat became the focal point of cultural communication, including music and the arts. Popular music bands with an evident anti-colonial,Black Poweridentity were the Black Brothers, a rock-reggae band from West Papua in 1970s, and the Black Sweet, a Melanesian band in the 1980s.[12]

United States

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When Africans came to the United States they brought their music with them. Over time, a new genre of music developed, calledspirituals.Spirituals were the songs that the enslaved Africans sang. Most have religious texts, and they were sung by the enslaved Africans at many different times, including while working, in prayer meetings, and in black churches. They helped the enslaved Africans cope with slavery. They were composed by the community and the genre came out of the enslaved African experience.[13]

Spirituals developed because the enslaved Africans masters forcedChristianityonto them. Through Christianity, the enslaved Africans learned many hymns. Eventually, the hymns and the text of the Bible combined with many elements of music that the enslaved Africans had brought with them from Africa, such as antiphony (thecall-and-responsepattern) and syncopation.[14]This eventually formed into the genre called Spirituals.

Many other African-American music genres, such as gospel and jazz, developed from this genre.

Protest Music of the African Diaspora

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2016-present

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As the music of the African Diaspora progresses, more recent and popular songs have demonstrated an act of protest in their lyrics and significant elements that are featured in the music of the African Diaspora. An example of a song would be, "Formation"by the African-American singer,Beyoncé;released in 2016. This popular musical composition mentioned racial injustice events that triggered the Black Lives Matter Movement (e.g. police brutality/violence) but, also included Beyoncé embracing her distinct African heritage.[15]

Authenticity

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In his book,The Black Atlantic,SociologistPaul Gilroystarts a discussion of authenticity in the Black trans-Atlantic arena of diasporic music production by presenting how black music has become a truly global phenomenon leading to a dilution of black music into an ever-increasing number of genres and styles across the world.[16]This dilution has created tension around what music can be considered authentically Black.

In understanding how authenticity is conceived, Gilroy discusses how authenticity functions as an aspect of Black music that comes from perceived proximity to the origin of said music. On page 96 of his bookThe Black Atlantiche was quoted saying:

“folk, or local expressions of Black culture have been identified as authentic and positively evaluated for that reason, while subsequent hemispheric or global manifestations of the same cultural forms have been dismissed as inauthentic and therefore lacking in cultural or aesthetic value precisely because of their distance (supposed or actual) from a readily identifiable point of origin.”[17]

However, Gilroy proceeds to counter this perception by saying, “In all these cases it is not enough for critics to point out that representing authenticity involves artifice. This may be true, but it is not helpful when trying to evaluate or compare cultural forms let alone in trying to make sense of their mutation.”[16]By making the word artifice synonymous with the representation of authenticity in this context, Gilroy is acknowledging the lack of definitive ability to denote authenticity.[18]Gilroy then goes a step further to express how sticking to conversations of what is authentic hurts our ability to better understand the “mutation” of Black music as it engages and it changed by theBlack Diaspora.[16]

In understanding the motivations behind pronouncing authenticity, Gilroy identifies the financial and market-based benefits to this pronouncement by saying, “the discourse of authenticity has been a notable presence in the mass marketing of successive Black folks cultural forms to white audiences,” demonstrating the reason for desiring being denoted as authentic.[18]However, he also acknowledges that even seemingly authentic art forms like hip-hop, an American art form, are diasporic in nature incorporating global influences into their origin questioning how definitive apparent authenticity can be.[16]Gilroy describesHip-Hopas having “formal borrowings from the linguistic innovations of Jamaica's distinct modes of 'kinetic orality,'" this flips his earlier description of authenticity on its head by presenting a seemingly culturally regional and authentic Black art form as a truly global manifestation, depicting how ambiguous authenticity can be.[19]As such, Gilroy effectively deconstructs the concept of authenticity.

See also

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References

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  1. ^Singley, Richard Lawson (2021-02-02)."Roots: The Impact of Black Music on America and the World".Medium.Archivedfrom the original on 2022-11-30.Retrieved2022-11-30.
  2. ^"The soundtrack of history: How Black music has shaped American culture through time".NBC News.21 February 2021.Archivedfrom the original on 2022-04-19.Retrieved2022-11-30.
  3. ^Humanities, Center for the (2011-07-09)."What is Black Music?".Center for the Humanities.Archivedfrom the original on 2022-12-05.Retrieved2022-12-05.
  4. ^Wickham, Phebe (2021-06-22)."Exploring the History of Black Music -".Music Forward Foundation.Archivedfrom the original on 2022-11-07.Retrieved2022-11-07.
  5. ^"Negro Spiritual Singers".New Deal Network.Archivedfrom the original on 29 July 2015.Retrieved31 January2020.
  6. ^Kunzler's dictionary of jazz provides two separate entries: "blues", and the "blues form", a widespread musical form (p. 131). Kunzler, Martin (1988). Jazz-Lexicon. Hamburg: Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag.
  7. ^Stephen Davis. "Reggae." Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press. Web.16. 30 January 2020.
  8. ^Daynes, Sarah and Peter Martin. “Ch. 5: Slavery and the Diaspora: Temporal and Spatial Articulations.” In Time and Memory in Reggae Music: The Politics of Hope. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2010. Pp. 85, 94-104.
  9. ^abcdManuel,Caribbean Currents,pgs. 183 - 211
  10. ^UNSW, Brewster, Anne, English, Media, & Performing Arts, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, UNSW Miller, Benjamin Ian, English, Media, & Performing Arts, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences (2009).The Fantasy of Whiteness: Blackness and Aboriginality in American and Australian Culture.University of New South Wales. English, Media, & Performing Arts.OCLC1130301951.{{cite book}}:CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^Solis, Gabriel (2015). "The Black Pacific: Music and Racialization in Papua New Guinea and Australia".Critical Sociology.41(2): 297–312.doi:10.1177/0896920513509822.S2CID144748531.
  12. ^Webb, -Gannon Camellia; Webb, Michael; Solis, Gabriel (2018-07-01)."The" Black pacific "and decolonisation in Melanesia: Performing 'negritude and indigenitude'".Journal of the Polynesian Society.127(2): 177–206.doi:10.15286/jps.127.2.177-206.S2CID149505067.
  13. ^Curtis, Marvin V. (August 1996). "The Lyric of the African-American Spiritual: The Meaning behind the Words".Choral Journal.37(1): 15.
  14. ^Carson, Clayborne; Lapsansky-Werner, Emma J.; Nash, Gary B. (2011).The Struggle for Freedom: A History of African Americans, Combined Volume, Second Edition.Boston: Prentice Hall. p. 22.ISBN978-0-205-83240-8.
  15. ^Wang, Yanan (2016-02-09)."The Black Lives Matter protest that you missed from Beyoncé's halftime show dancers".Washington Post.ISSN0190-8286.Archivedfrom the original on 2017-12-07.Retrieved2017-12-06.
  16. ^abcdGilroy, Paul (1993).The black Atlantic: modernity and double consciousness.Cambridge, Massachusetts.ISBN0674076052.OCLC28112279.{{cite book}}:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  17. ^Gilroy, Paul (1993).The black Atlantic: modernity and double consciousness.Cambridge, Massachusetts. p. 96.ISBN0674076052.OCLC28112279.{{cite book}}:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  18. ^abGilroy, Paul (1993).The black Atlantic: modernity and double consciousness.Cambridge, Massachusetts. p. 99.ISBN0674076052.OCLC28112279.{{cite book}}:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  19. ^Gilroy, Paul (1993).The black Atlantic: modernity and double consciousness.Cambridge, Massachusetts. p. 85.ISBN0674076052.OCLC28112279.{{cite book}}:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Further reading

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  • Spencer, Jon Michael.Black hymnody: a hymnological history of the African-American church(1992)