Close window

Close window

Year END Appeal advertisement
Get our weekly e-Newsletter!
Classic Streams
on Afropop Worldwide

Get Realplayer
You will need the RealPlayer plugin to listen to this program stream. To download the plugin, simply click on the RealPlayer icon.

Africa--her people, musical ideas, instruments, spirituality, languages--lives on in the Americas. This audio stream celebrates Africa's roots and branches in New York, the American South, Cuba, and South America.
Listen


Where did America's most popular beats and sounds come from? We asked the brilliant, late author Robert Palmer ("Deep Blues") to share his research with us. From the Bo Diddley beat, to the Cuban connection to Pygmy vocal styles, get ready for some mind-blowing revelations.
Program Log:
Introduction to the Cuban connection. Listen
Discussion of classic Cuban bass line. Listen
The New Orleans-Havana connection. Listen
The cha cha cha and 1950s R&B hits. Listen
Senegambian slaves as string players in southern plantation society. Listen
The crossroads in Robert Johnson's repertoire and Yoruba cosmology. Yoruba focus on drum music, preserved ingeniously as the ring shout when American slaves were prohibited to play drums. The hambone and patting juba. Fife and drum music in North Mississippi. Listen
Slave trade shifts from West Africa to Congo. The pygmy octave jumping, whooping vocal style and vocal styles in southern U.S. Listen
Vocal styles and harmonica. Listen

We travel all over this diverse country-from the capital Caracas, to villages on the Caribbean coast, to the high plains to hear groups such as Los Vasollos del Sol, Un Solo Pueblo, Huracan de Fuego, Tambor Urbano and others.

Program Credits:
Host: Georges Collinet
Field Research & Co-Producer: Dan Rosenberg
Co-Producer & Series Producer: Sean Barlow
Mix Engineer: Michael Jones

Program Log:
Georges introduces the diversity of Venezuela--the land, people, music. Listen
Introduction of group Un Solo Pueblo. Interview w/group member about Venezuelan calypso. Listen
Heading west from Caracas for "music of the plains" where you find local instruments--cuatro, bandola, harp. Listen
Gaita rhythm from northwestern Venezuela. Listen
Bus trip to villages on Caribbean coast, home to many Afro-Venezuelans. Story of the San Juan Festival and music. Listen
Story of the annual devil dance festival. Scene changes to eastern region of Barlovento where locals trace their mina drum to Ghana. Song by Tambor Urbano featuring mina drum. Song by Los Vasallos. Listen

Fiddle and banjo are usually associated with old timey white music. But for centuries in America, before recordings were made, these instruments were played by African Americans. And there was a lot more mixing of white and black musicians than you might expect. Our guide for the program is the now late multi-instrumentalist, Howard Armstrong, 91-years old when this program first aired.
Program Log:
Introduction Listen
Featured guest artist, 91 year old Howard Armstrong, talks about the origins of banjo, violin, and guitar in Africa. The African one stringed violin (called njarka and other names) and the black fiddler tradition in America. Listen
Howard Armstrong talks about the history of slaves who were musicians and got special privileges. Black and white American musicians learn each others repertoires and sounds. Listen
Howard Armstrong live. Listen
White minstrel shows imitate black musicians. Listen
Fast forward to modern times. Malian string wizards collaborating with American musicians. Listen
Taj Mahal talks about Malian ngoni player's concert in Tennessee. Listen
Howard Armstrong talks about playing blues in front of white audiences. Listen
Howard Armstrong talks about playing blues in front of white audiences. Listen