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Music of the Gambia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Musicians from Gambia, West Africa gave a free public concert in the Carmichael Auditorium, National Museum of History and Technology, now the National Museum of American History, in June of 1977. The musicians performed on the koru, hallam, and balafon

The music ofthe Gambia is closely linked musically withthat of its neighbor, Senegal, which surrounds its inland frontiers completely. Among its prominent musicians isFoday Musa Suso.Mbalax is a widely known popular dance music ofthe Gambia and neighbouringSenegal. It fuses popular Western music and dance, withsabar, the traditional drumming and dance music of theWolof andSerer people.

National music

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"For The Gambia Our Homeland", the national anthem of the Gambia, was composed by Jeremy Frederic Howe, based on the traditional Mandinka song"Foday Kaba Dumbuya", with words by Virginia Julia Howe, for an international competition to produce an anthem (and flag) before independence from the United Kingdom in 1965.[citation needed]

Traditional music

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The Gambia, the smallest country in mainland Africa, is an independent coastal state along theRiver Gambia. It gained its separate identity as a colony of the United Kingdom while Senegal was a colony of France, but the two countries' traditional music are very much intertwined. AmongGambia's people, who together number some 1.728 million (2010), 42% areMandinka, 18%Fula, 16%Wolof\Serer, 10%Jola and 9%Soninke, the remainder being 4% other African and 1% non-African (2003). 63% of Gambians live in rural villages (1993 census), though the population is young and tends towards urbanization. 90% are Muslims and most of the remainder Christians.

Griots, also known asjelis, hereditary praise-singers, a legacy of theMande Empire, are common throughout the region. Gambiangriots, as elsewhere, often play thekora, a 21 string harp. The region ofBrikama has produced some famous musicians, includingFoday Musa Suso, who founded theMandingo Griot Society inNew York City in the 1970s, bringing Mande music to the New York avant-garde scene and collaborating withBill Laswell,Philip Glass and theKronos Quartet.

Mbalax (meaning "rhythm" in Wolof), derives its from accompanying rhythms used insabar, a tradition that originated from theSerer of theKingdom of Sine and spread to theKingdom of Saloum whence Wolof migrants took it to the Wolof kingdoms.[1] TheNder (lead drum),Sabar (rhythm drum), andTama (talking drum) percussion section traces some of its technique to the ritual music ofNjuup.[2][3][4]

TheNjuup was also progenitor ofTassu, used when chanting ancient religious verses. The griots of Senegambia still use it at marriages, naming ceremonies or when singing the praises of patrons. Most Senegalese and Gambian artists use it in their songs.[5] The Serer people are known especially for vocal and rhythmic practices that infuse their everyday language with complex overlapping cadences and their ritual with intense collaborative layerings of voice and rhythm."[5] Eachmotif has a purpose and is used for different occasions. Individual motifs represent thehistory andgenealogy of a particular family and are used during weddings, naming ceremonies, funerals etc.

Popular music

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Gambian popular music began in the 1960s.The Super Eagles andGuelewar formed under the influence of American, British and Cuban music. The Super Eagles playedmerengue and other pop genres with Wolof lyrics and minor African elements. They visited London in 1977, appearing onMike Raven'sBand Call. After the programme, when the band began playing traditional tunes, an unknown listener is said to have inspired the group to return to the Gambia's musical roots, and they spent two years travelling around studying traditional music. The reformed band was calledIfang Bondi, and their style wasAfro-Manding blues.

GambianLaba Sosseh, who relocated toDakar,Senegal as a teenager, spent his entire career outside of the Gambia, becoming a significant presence in the African and New York salsa scene.Musa Ngum, formerGuelewar andSuper Diamono frontman relocated to Senegal in 1981.[6] Civil unrest caused Ifang Bondi and other Gambian musicians to leave for Europe.

Former Ifang Bondi musician Juldeh Camara has been working with Justin Adams since 2007 and has been touring all over the world. Also from Ifang Bondi,Musa Mboob and Ousman Beyai have started a new group XamXam[7] which started with a project in the Gambia to produce new music by taking six musicians based in the UK to the Gambia to work with top musicians from four different tribal backgrounds. Ousman Beyai moved to the UK where he worked with Musa Mboob to set up the live band XamXam.

Jaliba Kuyateh and his Kumareh band is currently the most popular exponent of Gambia's Mandinka music. There is also a thrivingGambian hip hop scene.

The Hip-hop in Gambia started in the late 1990s. The first rap group of Gambia was black nature founded in 1995.[8] Others crew are also in the hip-hop movement like Da fugitivz. They are mixing their music with their Traditional instruments likejunjung,Balafon, Djembe etc... According to the development of the country some rapper are using the music for changes of the country.[9]

It is impossible to overstate the importance of Alhaji Bai Konte as the first to introduce the kora and its musical culture to the live and mass media music audience. Every kora musician after his North American debut tour in 1973 owes him a unqualified debt of gratitude for his accomplishments. In 1973, Alhaji Bai Konte of Brikama, Gambia, introduced the kora to mass audiences in North America. He performed at some of the largest festivals in North America, appeared multiple times on National Public Radio and Television, was interviewed and reviewed by many newspapers. The tour would not have happened without the dedication and hard work of Marc and Susan Pevar, who organized, promoted and facilitated Alhaji Bai Konte's tours in North American from 1973 through 1980. That story is told elsewhere, including:HOME

References

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  1. ^Patricia Tang. Masters of the Sabar: Wolof griot percussionists of Senegal, p-p32, 34. Temple University Press, 2007.ISBN 1-59213-420-3
  2. ^(in French)Ferloo
  3. ^Mangin, Timothy R. "Notes on Jazz in Senegal." Uptown Conversation: The New Jazz Studies. Eds. O'Meally, Robert G., Brent Hayes Edwards and Farah Jasmine Griffin. New York: Columbia University Press, 2004. 224-49. Print.
  4. ^For theNjuup tradition, see:The Culture Trip
  5. ^abAli Colleen Neff. Tassou: the Ancient Spoken Word of African Women. 2010.
  6. ^"Gambia’s superstar musician Musa Ngum dies",The Point (the Gambia), October 12, 2015.Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  7. ^"Home".www.xamxam.co.uk.
  8. ^"Gambia musical coruscate - Black nature".www.gambia.dk.
  9. ^"Gambia : the role music plays in political Activism".www.dw.com.

Sources

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  • Hudson, Mark, Jenny Cathcart and Lucy Duran. "Senegambian Stars Are Here to Stay". 2000. In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.),World Music, Vol. 1: Africa, Europe and the Middle East, pp 617–633. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books.ISBN 1-85828-636-0

Discography

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A Gambian music discography is located atRadio Africa - Gambian vinyl discography

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