Friday, 4 July 2014

African Music Styles & Performance





African music is very traditional and has been handed down from father to son and from generation to another. When a music concert is forthcoming, posters will be pinned on every street wall, radio adverts play and the final day for the concert sets in. Africans line up in queue with either their money or tickets in their hands, eagerly waiting for the performance from the Artiste of the day.












The magic about going to an African music concert is much different from going to a classical concert. At a music concert the audience will join in by clapping, singing or playing an African music instrument, rather than just sitting and listening to the music quietly. Most people will stand up during the performance, raise their hands as they sing along..

















It is interesting and interactive. The music (African) sounds very different from European classical music. Although it is nearer to popular music styles, it still seems very unusual to western ears.






Music instruments like the drums are more complex than those found in Europe. Western music is usually played with the same rhythm throughout the piece. African music, however, is often played with a number of rhythms at the same time. This is known as a polyrhythmic style of music.




At the heart of African singing is the "call and response" style. In this style a group of singers might sing a line which is repeated or answered by a soloist. African artistes also like to put a lot of emotion into their performances as if they were acting a part. They like to shout words.





African instruments are often made from plants and animal products such as hide and bone. African artistes are very fond of percussion instruments and use a wide variety of drums, clappers, scrapers, gongs and xylophones.





Perhaps the most famous African percussion instrument is the "talking drums". By loosening or tightening the cord around the body of these drums variations in pitch can be produced which are so subtle they sound like the human voice. Stringed instruments such as bows, lyres, lutes, zithers and harps are popular as well as wind instruments like whistles, reed pipes, trumpets and horns.

Since the 1980's there has been a growing interest in African music from amongst American and English record buyers. Musicians such as Youssou N'Dour from Senegal and Hugh Masekela now have an international reputation. With more upcoming young energetic artistes, Africa is destined for musical superiority.

 Harps are played mainly north of the Equator, in a broad band extending from Uganda to the western Savannah. Harp-lutes, such as the Gambian kora, are popular in West Africa. Other string instruments include fiddles in East Africa and the musical bow, fashioned like a hunting bow and played, with varying techniques and great sophistication, throughout the continent.

 Africa singing and dancing has survived as long as we can remember the existence of humankind. African music will last long after we are gone. For more information, Please visit   AFRICAN MUSICIANS and watch traditional African Videos

Africans bring their continent's style to the worldwide fashion scene



In the hilly Rwandan capital of Kigali, 300 female survivors of the 1994 mass violence are stitching kanga cloth into cocktail dresses for Anthropologie stores and crafting braided banana-leaf bangles for Nicole Miller and Ralph Lauren. Similar women's cooperatives have opened in the capitals of Uganda, Ghana and Ethiopia, all part of a recent push to bring African fashion — garments that are made by Africans — into high-end American stores. cocktail dresses






The effort began several years ago after a group of young African fashion designers working in ateliers in the District and New York noticed that many of Africa's indigenous textiles and styles were being co-opted by multimillion-dollar fashion houses and thought: Not this time — you can't steal from Africa anymore.


The designers connected with development organizations to set up for-profit women's cooperatives in Rwanda and East Africa that offer fair wages, as well as business and fashion design training. The group also organized this year's African Fashion Week New York, which takes place July 14-16, to offer a platform to young African designers in the United States and Africa. Liberian "Project Runway" Season 5 runner-up Korto Momolu will open the event, which showcases 21 other designers from Africa and the African Diaspora — including Olatide "Tide" Adeniyi, a Ni­ger­ian American based in Silver Spring.


The event underscores how eager this generation of young, upwardly mobile Africans in the United States is to redefine the continent's image. It's a generation that has come of age during the Obama presidency — an era when first lady Michelle Obama rocked a bright pink Mali-inspired top designed by Duro Olowu, the Nigerian-born designer whose clothing is sold at Barneys and blends vintage looks with African patterns.



A new momentum

If fashion is a guidepost to cultural change, then the expanding scope of African fashion indicates a new momentum among the African Diaspora in this country, many of whom being the sons and daughters of immigrants who are now in the middle and upper classes and who have more freedom to choose creative professions.

"It's our moment, and it's just beginning. Young African designers are becoming real players now. People have been taking resources from Africa for generations. But our generation, raised in both worlds, is changing that," said Adiat Disu, 24, the Ni­ger­ian American producer of the fashion week during a pre-show event in Soho.


The list of luxury fashion houses using African patterns has never been longer, Disu said. The Burberry Resort 2012 collection has supplemented its traditional plaid with African tribal designs. There's Bottega Veneta's bright blue African-print canvas-and-leather tote and Diane von Furstenberg's iPad case in a Nigerian-style zebra print. And a wooden African-mask charm bracelet by Yves Saint Laurent, the Algerian-born designer credited with first bringing African patterns and themes onto runways in 1967. And, of course, trend-echoing fashion retailers such as H&M, which carries a collection of African-inspired dresses, are getting in on the act. cheap cocktail dresses