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  2. Music of Ethiopia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Ethiopia

    Complex rhythms: Ethiopian music is known for its intricate rhythmic patterns, as with the case for many African music, often featuring irregular meters and syncopation. Vocal styles: Traditional Ethiopian singing includes a variety of vocal techniques, such as melismatic, ornamentation, vocal slides, and call-and-response structures. In terms ...

  3. Ethiopian Golden Age of music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethiopian_Golden_Age_of_music

    The Ethiopian Golden Age of Music was an era of Ethiopian music that began around the 1960s to 1970s, until the Derg regime progressively diminished its presence through politically motivated persecutions and retributions against musicians and companies, which left many to self-imposed exile to North America and Europe.

  4. Girma Yifrashewa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girma_Yifrashewa

    Yifrashewa's fourth album Love & Peace was released by US record label Unseen Worlds in 2014, and comprises five solo piano pieces, including an homage to a melody written by Ashenafi Kebede, as well as traditional Ethiopian hymns and wedding songs. [7] Reviews of Love & Peace compared Yifrashewa's playing to pianists Scott Joplin and George ...

  5. Orthodox Tewahedo music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthodox_Tewahedo_music

    Orthodox Tewahedo music refers to sacred music of the Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church. The music was long associated with Zema (chant), developed by the six century composer Yared . It is essential part of liturgical service in the Church and classified into fourteen anaphoras, with the normal use being the Twelve Apostles .

  6. Ashenafi Kebede - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashenafi_Kebede

    Minuet for Flutes and Pipes (In the spirit of Ethiopian washints and embiltas) also known as "Fantasy for Aerophones: Ethiopian Washint and Japanese Shakuhachi" [1967]. Mot (Death)-Soliloquy II for 2 sopranos, 1 flute, and 2 Kotos, composed by Ashenafi Kebede in Western notation with Amharic text 1974.

  7. Hailu Mergia & His Classical Instrument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hailu_Mergia_&_His...

    [2] By the time of the album's re-release, synthesizers and drum machines had become common instruments within Ethiopian pop music, albeit in a different fashion than that on His Classical Instrument. Tangari felt one of the aspects which separates the Mergia album from other Ethiopian music "is the fact that it was made in solitude, and ...

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  9. Tilahun Gessesse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tilahun_Gessesse

    Tilahun's death left a lasting impact on the Ethiopian music community, one that has been unmatched with wavering support from other Ethiopian figures. Most notably, Tamagn Beyene, a close friend to Tilahun. A year after Tilahun's passing, a memorial service was held by Tamagn to honor the life and legacy of Tilahun.