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Kye kye kule

Kye kye kofinsa


Kofisa langa
Kaka shilanga
Kum aden nde
Kum aden nde, hey
MUSIC
QUARTER 2
Music of Afro-Latin American,
Popular and OPM Music
MUSIC OF AFRICA
 Music has always been an important part in
the daily life of the African.

 Singing, dancing, hand clapping and the


beating of drums are essential to many
African ceremonies, including those for birth,
death, initiation, marriage, and funerals.

 Music and dance are also important to


religious expression and political events.
TYPES OF AFRICAN MUSIC

Afrobeat

is a term used to describe the fusion of West


African with black American music.

Apala

is a musical genre from Nigeria in the Yoruba


tribal style to wake up the worshippers after
fasting during the Muslim holy feast of Ramadan.
YORUBA APALA MUSICIANS
 Axe is a popular musical genre from Salvador,
Bahia, and Brazil. It fuses the Afro-
Caribbean styles of the marcha, reggae, and
calypso.
 Jive
a popular form of South African music
featuring a lively and uninhibited variation of
the jitterbug, a form of swing dance.
 Juju
is a popular music style from Nigeria that relies
on the traditional Yoruba rhythms,
where the instruments in Juju are more Western
in origin.
LATIN AMERICAN MUSIC
INFLUENCED BY AFRICAN MUSIC
 Reggae is a Jamaican sound dominated by
bass guitar and drums. The most
recognizable musical elements of reggae are
its offbeat rhythm and staccato chords.

 Salsa music is Cuban, Puerto Rican, and


Colombian dance music. It comprises various
musical genres including the Cuban son
montuno, guaracha, chachacha, mambo and
bolero.
 Samba is a lively and rhythmical dance and
music with three steps to every bar, making
the Samba feel like a timed dance.
 Soca is a modern Trinidadian and Tobago
pop music combining “soul” and “calypso”
music.
This is Muslim music performed often as a
wake-up call for early breakfast and prayers
during Ramadan celebrations.
 Zouk is fast, carnival-like rhythmic music
originating in the Carribean Islands and
popularized in the 1980’s.
 Blues
is a musical form of the late 19th century
that has had deep roots in African-
American communities. These communities
are located in the so-called “Deep South”
of the United States. The slaves and their
descendants used to sing as they worked in
the cotton and vegetable fields.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS OF
AFRICA
 A. Idiophones

Balafon Rattles
IDIOPHONES

Agogo
Atingting Kon

Slit drum Djembe


IDIOPHONES

Shekere

Rasp
MEMBRANOPHONES

Luna

Body percussion
LAMELLAPHONE

It is known by different names according to the regions


such as mbira, karimba, kisaanj, and likembe
CHORDOPHONES

Musical Bow Lute

African kora
CHORDOPHONES

Raft zither

Zeze
AEROPHONES

Panpipes

Fulani Flutes
AEROPHONES
Kudu horn

Reed pipes

Trumpets
African whistle
AFRO-LATIN AMERICAN MUSIC

 The African influence on Latin


American music is most pronounced
in its rich and
varied rhythmic patterns produced
by the drums and various percussion
instruments.

RATTLE – regarded as a sacred object


in Latin-American music.
POPULAR LATIN AMERICAN
MUSIC

 Latin America has produced a


number of musical genres and forms
that had been
influenced by European folk music.

 Some of these Latin American


popular music forms are tango,
bossa nova, samba, son, and salsa.
ACTIVITY
 Identifying Music:

Quarter 2 Characteristics of Type of Music


Music
Africa
Latin
Popular
OPM
Presentation of output
APPLICATION

1. Choose two folksongs ( localization ) and


sing it to the following style:
a. Tango
b. African Style ( call and response technique )

2. Create a musical drama that would


showcase the importance of music in
everyday life of the Filipino. Choose a
popular music
ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS:
1. Once spoken by the European explorers as the
“Dark Continent.”
2. A professional musician in West Africa is called
___________.
3. Pertains to the use of repeated rhythms and
melodies w/c is common in African music.
4. The most important musical instrument of
Africans.
5. A term used to describe the fusion
of West African with black American music.
6. A musical genre from Nigeria in the Yoruba
tribal style to wake up the worshippers after
fasting during the Muslim holy feast of Ramadan.
7. A popular musical genre from Salvador, Bahia,
and Brazil.
8. (Latin-America) A Jamaican sound dominated by
bass guitar and drums.
9. A musical form of the late 19th century that has
had deep roots in African-
American communities.
10. Is a fast, carnival-like rhythmic music
originating in the Caribbean Islands and
popularized in the 1980’s
11. The most important instrument of Latin-
American music.
12-14. Native Latin-Americans.
15-20. Musical instruments of Africa (excluding
drum & rattle).
ANSWERS

1.AFRICA 11. RATTLE


2. GRIOT 12. INCAS
3. OSTINATO13. INDIANS
4. DRUM 14. AZTECS
5. AFROBEAT 15. BALAFON
6. APALA 16. AGOGO
7. AXE17. ATINGTING
8. REGGAE 18. DJEMBE
9. BLUES 19. SHEKERE
10. ZOUK 20. ZITHER

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