Downloads   Galeries   Forums   Audios   Vidéos   Liens   Livre d´or   Partenaires   Contact   
  Accueil
  Actualité
  Régions/Peuples
  Historique
  Sawanité
  Le Ngondo
  Tourisme
  Littérature
  VIP
  F.A.Q
  Agendas
  Evénements
  Annonces
  Projets
  Communauté



      


29.08.2006

The story of Highlife 

The story of Highlife

Professor John Collins
Musicologist at the University of Ghana

Ghanaian highlife is one of the oldest popular dance-music styles of Africa.

It emerged in the 1880s, a fusion of rhythms from the West African coast and those from Europe, and black people from both South and North America.

Its influence spread to other African countries such as Sierra Leone, the Congo and Nigeria.

In the 1970s, highlife was hugely influential in the work of Ghanaian Afro-rock band Osibisa and the Nigerian Afro-beat star Fela Anikulapo-Kuti.

There were three main forms of early Ghanaian highlife - Adaha, Fanti Osibisaaba and palm wine music.

The first known form could be seen in the local Adaha brass-band music played in the 1880s on the Fanti coast, located in the south of modern Ghana.


´The greatest asset West Africans and for that matter Africans have is highlife music´ Akwasi, London


This was the legacy left by the regimental bands of 6,000 West Indian soldiers, who had been stationed at the Cape Coast and Elmina Castles by the British colonial administration.

The early years

Adaha music spread like wildfire throughout southern Ghana.

In the small towns and villages that could not afford expensive brass instruments, a poor man´s drum-and-voice version called konkoma (or konkomba) developed in the 1930s and spread as far as Nigeria.

The second form of highlife was Fanti Osibisaaba music in which local percussion instruments were accompanied by the guitars and the accordions of sailors, particularly the Kru seamen of Liberia.

They, in the early 20th century, pioneered Africanised cross-fingering guitar techniques.

This technique became key not only to the development of Ghanaian highlife, but also to the Maringa of Sierra Leone, the Juju music of western Nigeria and "dry" guitar music of Central Africa.


Coastal Fanti Osibisaaba highlife percolated into rural Ghana during the 1930s, where it fused with the music of the traditional Akan "seprewa" or harp-lute.

This combination created a more rootsy style of highlife called "odonson", Akan "blues" or "palm-wine music".

Between the 1920s and 1940s, many records of the early guitar highlife styles of Jacob Sam, Kwame Asare, Mireku and Appiah Adjekum were released by western record companies such as Zonophone, Columbia, Odeon and HMV, which were based in Ghana.

Living the highlife

It was in the early 1950s that theatre groups, which travelled around the country and with their "concert party" shows, started to use highlife guitar bands as part of their act.

One of the people to pioneer this was EK Nyame, whose records became popular in eastern Nigeria.

The third type of highlife evolved when poor people laid claim to the music formerly played only by the cream of society, by large ballroom and ragtime dance orchestras, such as the Excelsior Orchestra and Jazz Kings of Accra, formed in 1914.


By combining this so-called high-class music with local street tunes, a totally different type of music was born - the highlife we know today.

One of the first highlife orchestras was the Cape Coast Sugar Babies, who will be remembered for its sensational tour of Nigeria in 1937.

During the Second World War, swing was introduced by British and American servicemen based in Ghana. As a result, the large dance orchestras gave way to the smaller highlife dance-bands.

The most famous was the Tempos band, led by the Ga trumpeter ET Mensah, and which incorporated Afro-Cuban percussion played by the band´s drummer Guy Warren, now known as Kofi Ghanaba.

It was the Tempos´ brilliant fusion style that made such an impact on Nigeria in 1950 and encouraged the likes of Bobby Benson, Victor Olaiya and Rex Lawson to form their own Yoruba and Ibo highlife dance bands.

During the 1970s when Ghana´s economy declined, eastern Nigeria became an important and lucrative destination for highlife musicians.


Apart from local acts, like Victor Uwaifo, Peacocks, Chief Osita Osadabe and Oriental Brothers, there was also room for Ghanaian artists like TO Jazz, Konadu and Kofi Sammy to make a living.

Although the three types of "traditional" highlife have waned in Ghana over the last 20 years, new types of highlife have appeared.

The "gospel highlife" of the local churches, "techno" forms of the music like "burgher highlife" created by Ghanaians living in Germany and, more recently, vernacular rap "hip-life", a combination of hip hop and highlife.

Over the years, highlife has also influenced Ghanaian traditional music such as the Borborbor recreational music of the Ewe people and the Kpanlogo drumming and "cultural groups´´ like the Wulomei of the Ga people of Accra.


Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/africa/3695260.stm

Published: 2004/09/28 14:39:00 GMT
 

Source:  | Hits: 35810 | Envoyer à des amis  ! | Imprimer ! | Réagir(0)

PLUS DE NOUVELLES


  Psycho-Slavery: Black Boys, White Female Teachers & The Rise of A.D.H.D.
( | 13.03.2011 | 39679 hits  | 0 R)

  International Women´s Day 2011 (Sister Nyangon is honoured)
( | 11.03.2011 | 37292 hits  | 0 R)

  Race and Arab Nationalism in Libya by Glen Ford
( | 11.03.2011 | 33306 hits  | 0 R)

  Henriette Ekwè (Nyangon) primée aux Etats-Unis
( | 02.03.2011 | 34918 hits  | 0 R)

  Livre: COMMENT L´AFRIQUE EN EST ARRIVEE LA, par Axelle Kabou
( | 26.02.2011 | 32389 hits  | 0 R)

  Côte d´Ivoire - Le Panel de l´Union africaine propose de revenir aux Accords jamais respectés de Ouagadougou
( | 24.02.2011 | 33576 hits  | 0 R)

  Regards: La Grammaire de la Révolte
( | 14.02.2011 | 38148 hits  | 0 R)

  MISS NGONDO 2010: Ekambi Lobe
( | 12.02.2011 | 41874 hits  | 0 R)

  FOMARIC 2011: Hommage à Nkotti François
( | 09.02.2011 | 37046 hits  | 0 R)

  SCHISME DE 1814, MYTHE OU REALITE
( | 01.02.2011 | 38355 hits  | 1 R)

  CES ROIS DES BERGES DU WOURI
( | 01.02.2011 | 36758 hits  | 1 R)

  Who loves to hate Haiti? An interview with Haitian Activist Pierre Labossiere
( | 28.01.2011 | 37175 hits  | 0 R)

  COTE D´IVOIRE : L´EX REBELLE AB ACCUSE ! OUATTARA, SORO DANS LE COLLIMATEUR !
( | 13.01.2011 | 41470 hits  | 2 R)

  Kamerun: Une guerre cachée aux origines de la Françafrique (1948-1971)
( | 11.01.2011 | 37916 hits  | 0 R)

  L´imposture des Nations unies en Haïti et en Côte d´Ivoire
( | 09.01.2011 | 40230 hits  | 1 R)

  Et de quatre pour Samuel Eto’o Fils
( | 21.12.2010 | 34296 hits  | 0 R)

  Regards (sur la crise ivoirienne): En attendant le vote des bêtes sauvages...
( | 21.12.2010 | 33273 hits  | 0 R)

  Cote d´Ivoire: Face à l´impérialisme, l´avenir de l´Afrique se joue à Abidjan
( | 10.12.2010 | 36585 hits  | 0 R)

  Situation en Côte d´Ivoire: Déclaration et Appel du Bureau du Comité Directeur de l’UPC
( | 08.12.2010 | 43759 hits  | 1 R)

  Afrique, Colonisation: Invasion programmée de la Côte-d´Ivoire, par Aimé M. Moussy
( | 07.12.2010 | 32602 hits  | 0 R)

  Race as Biology is Fiction, Racism as a Social Problem is Real
( | 05.12.2010 | 29182 hits  | 0 R)

  Lettre ouverte au FESMAN III - par Rhode Bath-Schéba Makoumbou
( | 04.12.2010 | 39916 hits  | 0 R)

  Que sont devenues les anciennes Miss Ngondo ?
( | 04.12.2010 | 43496 hits  | 0 R)

  Le Ngondo, les sawa, l’Indépendance et la Réunification
( | 01.12.2010 | 39044 hits  | 0 R)

  PETIT-PAYS victime d’un coup monté. Un mandat d’arrêt contre Petit-Pays
( | 01.12.2010 | 38554 hits  | 0 R)

  L´HISTOIRE DU KABA -NGONDO
( | 01.12.2010 | 37870 hits  | 0 R)

  Le cinéaste Dikonguè Pipa - Les héros nationalistes honorés
( | 23.11.2010 | 33778 hits  | 0 R)

  Ngondo 2010: Foire, animations et gastronomie
( | 22.11.2010 | 43152 hits  | 0 R)

  la troisième édition du Festival Mondial des Arts Nègres
( | 04.11.2010 | 31471 hits  | 0 R)

  ACHILLE MBEMBE: POUR L´ABOLITION DES FRONTIÈRES HÉRITÉES DE LA COLONISATION
( | 03.11.2010 | 33771 hits  | 0 R)

  Gregory Isaacs, Jamaican reggae artist, dies at age 59
( | 30.10.2010 | 38110 hits  | 1 R)

  Calliste Ebenye: Le restaurant Sawa Village devient Mboa´su
( | 21.10.2010 | 37715 hits  | 0 R)

  Manu Dibango - Jean Serge Essous, qui était le maître ?
( | 15.10.2010 | 37531 hits  | 0 R)

  Thomas Eyoum ´a Ntoh: La longue agonie d´un chevalier de la plume
( | 16.09.2010 | 35130 hits  | 0 R)

  Charles Onana: L’Afrique centrale pourrait connaître le scénario rwandais
( | 16.09.2010 | 32596 hits  | 0 R)

  Hommage à Um Nyobé, 52 ans après !
( | 14.09.2010 | 37116 hits  | 1 R)

  Les migraines de la diaspora !
( | 28.08.2010 | 37404 hits  | 2 R)

  L’ultime Reconnaissance - Hommage à nos Hommes d´exception! Merci Pius NDJAWE
( | 06.08.2010 | 29587 hits  | 0 R)

  Décès jeudi de Jean Bikoko, l’un des doyens de la musique camerounaise
( | 22.07.2010 | 37721 hits  | 0 R)

  Le diagnostic d’un échec
( | 18.07.2010 | 29647 hits  | 0 R)

  Au-delà de la débâcle des Lions indomptables au Mondial 2010
( | 25.06.2010 | 39613 hits  | 1 R)

  La Halte du Cinquantenaire ! Par Charles MOUKOURI DINA MANGA BELL
( | 01.06.2010 | 33138 hits  | 0 R)

  Kessern aus Kamerun: Die Biografie eines schwarzen Crailsheimers (1896 - 1981)
( | 22.05.2010 | 44035 hits  | 1 R)

  L´indépendance, il y a 50 ans ! L´indépendance, depuis 50 ans ?
( | 17.05.2010 | 37708 hits  | 0 R)

  Indépendance, la désullision?
( | 27.04.2010 | 30689 hits  | 0 R)

  Cinquante ans de décolonisation africaine
( | 18.03.2010 | 36461 hits  | 0 R)

  Les circonstances de l`assassinat de UM Nyobe, par Louis Noé Mbengan
( | 18.03.2010 | 32720 hits  | 0 R)

  Chefferies traditionnelles du Littoral
( | 04.03.2010 | 45375 hits  | 0 R)

  Peuplesawa rencontre Miss EBENYE BONNY
( | 19.02.2010 | 36678 hits  | 0 R)

  Grand Sawa: Le retour aux démons du «qui perd gagne» dans les Chefferies de la région du Littoral
( | 18.02.2010 | 43641 hits  | 2 R)



   0 |  1 |  2 |  3 |  4 |  5 |  6 |  7 |  8 |  9 |  10 |  11 |  12 |  13 |  14 |  15 |      ... >|



Jumeaux Masao "Ngondo"

Remember Moamar Kadhafi

LIVING CHAINS OF COLONISATION






© Peuplesawa.com 2007 | WEB Technology : BN-iCOM by Biangue Networks