'Afrobeat' is a combination of
Yoruba music,
jazz,
Highlife, and
funk rhythms, fused with
African
percussion and
vocal styles, popularized in
Africa in the 1970s.
Afrobeat's main creator and best known artist was the
Nigerian multi-
instrumentalist and
bandleader Fela Kuti, who coined the term Afrobeat, shaped the musical structure and also the political context of the genre. He launched Afrobeat in the early 60s. Kuti had earlier played a fusion of jazz and
highlife (For which he first used the term 'Afrobeat') with his
Koola Lobitos Band. The distinctive production sound of Afrobeat's rhythms are the hallmark of drummer
Tony Allen, a long-standing musical collaborator and band-leader with Fela. While Afrobeat as a concept existed prior to Allen's involvement, Allen must be correctly credited with securing the role and pattern of the (Afro) "beat" through his distinctive syncopated and polyrhythmic minimal playing style.
Characteristics of Afrobeat are:
★
Big bands: A large group of musicians playing various instruments (Fela Kuti's band in the 80s ''Egypt 80'' did not feature 80 musicians);
★ Energy: Energetic, exciting and with high tempo,
polyrhythmic percussion;
★ Repetition: The same musical movements are repeated many times;
★
Improvisation: Performing without set music;
★ Combination of genres: A mixture of various musical influences.
★ Vocals tend to be sung in Yoruba and
Pidgin English as Kuti, who spoke perfect English, regarded this as being the language best understood across all of Africa's borders.
Origins
Afrobeat originated from the southern part of
Nigeria in the 60s where Kuti experimented with many different forms of contemporary music of the time. Prevalent in his music are native African harmonies and rhythms, taking different elements and combining, modernizing and improvising upon them.
Politics are essential to the genre of Afrobeat, since founder Kuti was deeply concerned in social criticism to pave way for social change. His message can be described as confrontational and controversial, which can be related to the political climate of most of the African countries in the 60s, many of which were dealing with political injustice and military corruption while recovering from the transition from colonial governments to self-determination.
As the genre spread throughout the African continent many bands took up the style. The recordings of these bands and their songs were rarely heard or exported outside the originating countries but many can now be found on compilation albums and CDs from specialist record shops.
Influence
Jazz musicians have always been attracted to Afrobeat. From
Roy Ayers in the seventies to
Randy Weston in the nineties there have been collaborations which have resulted in albums such as ''Africa: Centre of the World'' by Roy Ayers, released on the Polydor label in 1981. In 1994
Branford Marsalis, the American jazz saxophonist, included samples of Fela's "Beast of No Nation" on his ''Buckshot leFonque'' album.
Afrobeat has profoundly influenced important contemporary producers like
Brian Eno, who credits Fela Kuti as an influence.
New generation DJs of the 2000s who have fallen in love with both Kuti's material and other rare releases have made compilations and remixes of these recordings, thus re-introducing the genre to new generations of listeners and fans of Afropop and Groove.
Afrobeat Today
Post-Fela, the Afrobeat scene is spreading and the music has taken solid root on the World Café. There is a diverse group of bands influenced by the music operating out of different countries. A list of acts to watch would definitely include
Femi Kuti (Fela's first son and a saxophonist) and the Positive Force; Dele Sosimi's Gbedu Resurrection (former keyboardist and musical director of Fela's band and cofounder of Femi Kuti's positive force);
Seun Kuti (another of Kuti's sons, now fronting his father's original band); Ayetoro (a group led by Nigerian pianist/composer
Funsho Ogundipe); Afrobeat Down, a Los Angeles based group working with Sandra Izsadore; Akoya Afrobeat Ensemble;
Antibalas (
Brooklyn, New York based multiracial Afrobeat Orchestra formed by baritone saxophonist Martin Perna);
Chicago Afrobeat Project, which brings a fresh contemporary twist to the genre;[Mifune
[1]], a group from Cleveland Ohio that incorporates Afrobeat elements into its original sound; Nomo, a very original afrobeat orchestra based in Ann Arbor, Michigan; [ALBINO!
[2]] from San Francisco is leading the pack of west coast afrobeat groups.
Illinois based Afrobeat group the
Alma Afrobeat Ensemble; Speak in Tones, originating from Tribeca's Walker Stage scene (international artists all over the world celebrating Afrobeat & indigenous rights.); Rameses Revolution, from Sweden; Femme Nameless, a US all girl band led by trombone player, Nameless; The Soothsayers from the UK; and finally,
Tony Allen, the man who held the drum chair during Fela's productive "Africa 70" phase, and whose drumming was, according to
James Brown's autobiography, the influence behind his 'Discovery' of funk.
References
★
BBC Afrobeat Documentary
★
The AfroFunk Music Forum Daily news, music reviews and commentary on Afrobeat and related music from Africa, The Caribbean and The Americas.
★
The Afro Caribbean Website Afro Caribbean videos website, watch movies, music videos and more.