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  2. Call and response (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call_and_response_(music)

    In Sub-Saharan African cultures, call and response is a pervasive pattern of democratic participation—in public gatherings in the discussion of civic affairs, in religious rituals, as well as in vocal and instrumental musical expression. Most of the call and response practices found in modern culture originated in Sub-Saharan Africa.

  3. Field holler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_holler

    Field hollers are also known as corn-field hollers, water calls, and whoops. An early description is from 1853 and the first recordings are from the 1930s. The holler is closely related to the call and response of work songs and arhoolies. The Afro-American music form ultimately influenced strands of African American music, such as the blues ...

  4. Call and response - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call_and_response

    In some African cultures, call-and-response is a widespread pattern of democratic participation—in public gatherings, in the discussion of civic affairs, in religious rituals, as well as in vocal and instrumental musical expression (see call and response in music). African bondsmen and bondswomen in the Americas continued this practice over ...

  5. Shosholoza - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shosholoza

    The song was sung by working miners in time with the rhythm of swinging their axes to dig. It was usually sung under hardship in call and response style (one man singing a solo line and the rest of the group responding by copying him). [1] It was also sung by prisoners in call and response style using alto and soprano parts divided by row.

  6. Ewe music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ewe_music

    The call and response type of song is usual in Africa [sic]. African [Ewe] melodies are diatonic: the major exception being the sequence dominant-sharpened subdominant-dominant. Short triplets are occasionally used. The teleological trend: many African [Ewe] songs lean towards the ends of the lines: it is at the ends where they are likely to ...

  7. Music of Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Africa

    Another distinguishing form of African music is its call-and-response style: one voice or instrument plays a short melodic phrase, and that phrase is echoed by another voice or instrument. The call-and-response nature extends to the rhythm, where one drum will play a rhythmic pattern, echoed by another drum playing the same pattern.

  8. African-American music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American_music

    Call-and-response organizational procedures, dominance of a percussive approach to music, and off-beat phrasing of melodic accents have been cited as typical of the genre in virtually every study of any kind of African-American music from work songs, field or street calls, shouts, and spirituals to blues and jazz."

  9. Swing Low, Sweet Chariot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swing_Low,_Sweet_Chariot

    The song was originally intended to be sung in a call-and-response, a format that draws from the heritage of African styles of music and is widely used in African-American churches today. A leader sings the differentiated lines, and the congregation replies “Coming for to carry me home” after each.