Acman3, you're definitely into the swing of things, this is history by ear and nothing else. This music came from Africa with the slaves, and was suppressed, that's why we didn't hear it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2EJUWRThg-c
Enjoy the music.
Jazz for aficionados
Acman3, you're definitely into the swing of things, this is history by ear and nothing else. This music came from Africa with the slaves, and was suppressed, that's why we didn't hear it. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2EJUWRThg-c Enjoy the music. |
While the music in Africa, which was the point of origination, evolved; the music in Brazil, in Bahia for example, could be the same as when it left the continent of Africa hundreds of years ago. I find the Afro Brazilian music more pleasing to my musical sensibilities than the music of Africa, and some of it could be the African original, since it's traditional. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3ORkB1eKWE This music "Pops" like nothing I've heard recently. Enjoy the music. |
Rok, this time it's about the evolution of music from Africa since the time of slavery, and how it's represented in this hemisphere; that would also include a comparison of evolution in the reverse direction, meaning from here to Africa. It's really beautiful when you think of artists like Hugh Maselela, and Miriam Makeba where the evolution went in the reverse direction of my original post. Enjoy the music. |
**** I want to trace African music from slavery to the present, beginning with music from Brazil.**** So far, I don't think we have dug deeply enough, and skipped a few rungs on the ladder. It all began with something like this: http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=nKgCJCvY5Vo Around 1450, the Portuguse brought African slaves to Brazil. Their music mixed with the indigenous music and resulted in something like this (notice the typically African "call and response" nature of the music, and the name "Macumba"): Add the Portuguese/European melodic and harmonic tradition to the mix of Afro/Brazilian approach to rhythm and we get, among other things, the choro; the first popular Brazilian music style: [URL]http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=KtI-uq8R1yo>http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=2YiMtWFfydo[URL] Add the Portuguese/European melodic and harmonic tradition to the mix of Afro/Brazilian approach to rhythm and we get, among other things, the choro; the first popular Brazilian music style: [URL]http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=KtI-uq8R1yo |