Africa is the richest continent in the world. She stores diamonds, metals, gold, and silver deep in her belly and an abundance of exotic fruits and vegetables sprout from her soil. No other continent on Earth is as abundant as Africa regarding natural resources. (Williams) Human beings with unique traditions and various beliefs inhabited Africa’s lands. In the 18th century, European colonists sailed to Africa, exploiting resources, and unjustly shipping millions of West Africans across the Atlantic to America, known then as the New World. The Africans were separated from their families and put on plantations, forced to do unpaid agricultural labor in barbaric conditions contrived by white americans. Despite being stripped from their home, slaves in the American plantation South carried their culture with them. Spirituals were sung as they chopped crops in rhythm to the beat of the vocals derived from the syllabic African languages. Song was also used to discretely spread messages to one another; Some of which were guides for escaping to freedom in the North. From the beginning, African American music has been used to cope with the daily trials they faced and hope that it would end in equality and deliverance. One of the first genres that developed post-abolition was Blues. The name was derived from the common perception of the sound that made blues music ‘blue’: the flat third and fifth degrees. Which just means that the pitch of the third and fifth note in the scale used
Looking back at the history of Blues music, one can see the influence of the African-American community, tradition, and culture very apparent in it. The Blues music genre came into being from the songs
The blues, a uniquely American art form, was born on the dusty street corners of the Deep South in the late 1800s. An evolution of West African music brought to the United States by slaves, created the blues which was a way for black people in the south
During the slaves’ trip through the middle passage, they had to abandon their old customs and hide their religious rituals as well as priceless artifacts. After arriving into the new world, they had to adapt themselves and create a new way of life in order to survive. Slaves introduced many different foods and edible plants to the colonies (“Slavery”). Before their journey to the colonies, they had gathered black-eyed peas, okra, lima, and kidney beans and brought the food with them. Traditional African dishes and techniques have been perpetrated in American food culture, most prominently deep frying, gumbo, fufu and millet bread. Also, many nursery rhymes and folklore were derived from those of Africans, some famous ones being Chicken Little and Brer Rabbit and Brer Fox. Furthermore, indigenous people had made drums, but due to some slave owners banning them, they were forced to use foot tapping as well as clapping, which are two motions prominently featured in today’s music culture. These achievements mentioned are only some of those notable contributions African culture made on white in the
From the 1500s to the 1700s, African blacks, mainly from the area of West Africa (today's Senegal, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Gambia, Liberia, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Dahomey, Togo, Nigeria, Cameroon, and Gabon) were shipped as slaves to North America, Brazil, and the West Indies. For them, local and tribal differences, and even varying cultural backgrounds, soon melded into one common concern for the suffering they all endured. Music, songs, and dances as well as remembered traditional food, helped not only to uplift them but also quite unintentionally added immeasurably to the culture around them. In the approximately 300 years that blacks have made their homes in North America, the West Indies, and Brazil, their highly honed art
Blues is a music genre originating in Africa .This genre emerged with the introduction of African people as slaves to America's south. Slaves were employed in poor conditions in the cotton fields before the Civil War. Making music meant avoiding the pain for them. People think Blues music is slow and smooth because the lyrics of the Blues music always includes depression, loneliness and anger.
There is a problem in the United States that is growing and is causing issues in our country, but not everybody knows about it. The problem is the distribution of wealth in our society and the world as a whole, and how it is getting worse. Some people would say that it is an inequality due to the needs of the society, while others would say it is to the needs or individuals. This causes even more problems because of there being more than one supposed reason for the issue at hand. The problem is that the distribution of power is possibly starting to be lopsided, and for many reasons. There are two main views of why this is happening, the functionalist perspective and the conflict
Blues started in the South, long ago, when slavery was still socially accepted. Slaves were severely oppressed because they were legally bound to their masters. One way they found emotional freedom was to sing songs, which were called “slave songs.” “It Makes a Long Time Man Feel Bad”, “Hammer, Ring”, “Cornfield Holler”, were just a few of the popular slave songs (“Slavery and the Making of America”, 2004). Slave songs were in various forms such as field hollers, work songs, spirituals, and country string ballads (“The Blues- A History”, 2003). As time passed, these types of songs were starting to become known as the blues. After slavery ended in 1865, blues was not only still present, but became more evident. In the beginning of the 20th century, blues music was on the
In ancient African civilizations music took precedence in all activities that the tribes participated in. There was a song for every celebration, every birth, and every death. As Africans were enslaved and moved to North America by Europeans, many customs and traditions followed with them. As their culture was stripped from them and European ideals were placed upon them, they kept song as their universal language and their link to the motherland. From early on, slave songs also known as “Negro Spirituals” were the first inclination of what could be considered African American music. These songs were largely influenced by the conversion of many Africans to Christianity, and generally held a religious overtone. As slavery came and went and
The roots of modern american rock and roll music, are firmly planted in Africa. As the native Africans were torn apart from their family’s and brought to the new world their lives were immediately and drastically changed forever. Finding themselves immersed in a completely new environment with a foreign culture, they thankfully persevered and carried on with their own traditions and most importantly to this paper, musical ones. Most American slaves originated from Western and Central Africa. The West Africans carried a musical tradition rich with long melody lines, complicated rhythms (poly rhythmics) and stringed instruments CITATION. The West Africans music was also strongly integrated into their everyday lives. Songs were preformed for religious ceremonies and dances and music was often a
Like many others demoralized cultures during the Atlantic Slave trade period, Africans fell victim to the sixteenth century discovery of Columbus' so called "New World." Europeans used the Atlantic Slave Trade to capitalize on Columbus' so called "Discovery." For more than three centuries, the regions of Africa were in a state of destabilization. More than thirty million Africans were taken out of Africa and put in the Americas and surrounding countries.
African Americans were brought to the United States in the 1700s and have adapted tremendously since then. After their emancipation from slavery, African-American traditions continued to flourish, such as linguistic style, radical innovations in music, art, and literature, religion, and cultural cuisine. The greatest influence of African cultural practices on European culture is found below the Mason-Dixon line within the American South.
2. The blues first emerged as a distinct type of music in the late-1800s. Spirituals, work songs, seculars, field hollers and arhoolies all had some form of influence on the blues. Early blues were a curious mixture of African cross-rhythms and vocal techniques, Anglo-American melodies and thematic material from fables and folktales, and tales of personal experience on
work being done by the natives. The Africa slaves were used mostly in the sugar plantations and
The origin of blues music dates back all the way to the late 19th century, eventually going on to gain more recognition and popularity in the post-Reconstruction Era of the United States and early 20th century. It is widely known that the blues have deep roots in African-American history, having been conceived on Southern plantations where slaves would sing of their misery and unjust lives as they were extremely mistreated and over-worked endlessly in the fields by their slave-owners. After the end of the Civil War and Reconstruction Era, blues music began making
What makes a nation wealthy? Answering this basic question may not be as simple as it seems. Because we must first analyze what “wealth” is. This essay is going to cover Adam Smith and Karl Marx’s work and their views how the society works and how wealth is created. It is going to highlight the theory of “Division of labour” and how it shaped the social relations. Lastly Robert Heilbroner’s concept of “drive for capital” will be discussed and how it produces wealth and misery to analyze Sinclair’s insights into the nature of industrial life in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.