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  2. Sakara music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakara_music

    Goje violin and Sakara drum. Sakara music is a form of popular Nigerian music based in the traditions of Yoruba music . It mostly in the form of praise songs, that uses only traditional Yoruba instruments such as the solemn-sounding goje violin, and the small round sakara drum, which is similar to a tambourine and is beaten with a stick. [1]

  3. Fuji music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuji_music

    Fuji. Fújì is a genre of Yoruba popular music that emerged in Nigeria in the 1960s. It evolved from the improvisational wéré music also known as ajísari (meaning "waking up for sari ", performed to awaken Muslims before dawn during the fasting season of Ramadan. Fuji music was named after the Japanese stratovolcano -mountain, Mount Fuji by ...

  4. Bolojo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolojo

    Bolojo. Bọ̀lọ̀jọ̀ is an African dancing and popular musical style among the Yewa Yoruba clans situated in the western regions of Ogun State, Nigeria [1][2] and other closely linked Yoruba subgroups in the nearby Plateau Department of Benin. It is mostly featured in festivals, parties and in Gelede shows.

  5. Yoruba music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoruba_music

    Yoruba music is the pattern/style of music practiced by the Yoruba people of Nigeria, Togo, and Benin. It is perhaps best known for its extremely advanced drumming tradition and techniques, especially using the gongon [1] hourglass shape tension drums. Yoruba folk music became perhaps the most prominent kind of West African music in Afro-Latin ...

  6. Jùjú music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jùjú_music

    Jùjú is a style of Yoruba popular music, derived from traditional Yoruba percussion. The name juju from the Yoruba word "juju" or "jiju" meaning "throwing" or "something being thrown". Juju music did not derive its name from juju, which is a form of magic and the use of magic objects, common in West Africa, Haiti, Cuba and other Caribbean and ...

  7. Agogô - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agogô

    Agogô. An agogô (Yoruba: agogo, meaning bell) is a single or a multiple bell now used throughout the world but with origins in traditional Yoruba and Edo music and also in the samba baterias (percussion ensembles). The agogô may be the oldest samba instrument and was based on West African Yoruba single or double bells.

  8. Ojude Oba festival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ojude_Oba_festival

    Ojude-Oba Festival is a one-day celebration of culture, fashion, glamour, candour, beauty and royalty as sons and daughters of Ijebuland. [23] [24] The festival always commenced with prayers by the Imam of Ijebuland, then followed by the National Anthem, then the Ogun State Anthem and the Awujale Anthem, and finally the Lineage praise of the Ijebus.

  9. Apala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apala

    Cuban music. Cultural origins. 1930s, Yoruba people in Colonial Nigeria, British West Africa. Regional scenes. Nigeria. Apala (or akpala) is a music genre originally developed by the Yoruba people of Nigeria, [1] during the country's history as a colony of the British Empire. It is a percussion -based style that originated in the late 1930s.