When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. The Rough Guide to Highlife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rough_Guide_to_Highlife

    Part of the World Music Network Rough Guides series, the release covers the Highlife musical genre of Ghana and surrounding countries, focusing on the 1960s and 70s. [1] Graeme Ewens wrote the liner notes, and Phil Stanton, co-founder of the World Music Network, was the producer. [2] This album was followed by a second edition in 2012.

  3. Highlife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highlife

    Highlife is characterized by jazzy horns and guitars which lead the band and its use of the two-finger plucking guitar style that is typical of African music. Recently it has acquired an uptempo, synth-driven sound. [2] [3] Highlife gained popularity and the genre spread throughout West African regions.

  4. List of Nigerian highlife musicians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nigerian_highlife...

    This is a list of notable Nigerian highlife musicians arranged in alphabetical order. There are several other genres of music in Nigeria these include Ikorodo , Igbo gospel , Owerri Bongo , Fuji music , Ekpili Jùjú music , Apala , Were music and Highlife .

  5. Owerri Bongo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Owerri_Bongo

    In 1972, Nze Dan Orji, and Raphael Amarabem formed the Peacocks International Band. The band’s first single, “Sambola Mama,” was the first truly popular Bongo music. It would go on to sell 150,000 copies in Ghana, and more than double that amount in Nigeria. The 1970s and ‘80s marked the strongest periods in the trajectory of Bongo ...

  6. Ghanaian Highlife Forms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghanaian_Highlife_Forms

    The Fanti Osibisaaba pioneered Africanised cross-fingering guitar techniques which developed to be Ghanaian Highlife, Maringa of Sierra Leone, the Juju music of western Nigeria and "dry" music of Central Africa. [1] Later in 1930, in rural Ghana,there was a fusion with traditional Akan "seprewa" or harp-lute.

  7. Chief Stephen Osita Osadebe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chief_Stephen_Osita_Osadebe

    He succeeded in completely transforming highlife into the call-and-response pattern of African music. [4] Following the Nigerian Civil War in the late 1960s, the massive exodus of the eastern peoples of Nigeria (especially the Igbo) out of western Nigeria had caused the death of the Highlife's prominence in the then capital, Lagos. During the ...

  8. Igbo highlife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igbo_highlife

    The genre is primarily guitar-based music, with a rare characteristic blend of horns and vocal rhythms. [1] [2] Igbo highlife lyrics are sung mostly in Igbo with occasional infusion of Pidgin English. [3] One of the most influential composers and performers of the music is Chief Stephen Osita Osadebe whose career spanned over 40 years. Osadebe ...

  9. Jerry Hansen (musician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Hansen_(musician)

    John William Hansen (23 February 1927 – 7 April 2012) popularly known as Jerry Hansen was a Ghanaian highlife musician. He was a singer, a composer, an arranger, a saxophonist and a pioneer of highlife music. [1] He was the bandleader and founder of the Ramblers International Band. [2]