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Yaw Pereko, Abdua Kkkyha and Cecelia11 Comments-
I found out about this beautiful black woman’s music on a subreddit like a month ago I had to Shazam to find it. And now I’m in a rabbit hole for this genre. Very therapeutic for some reason and it makes you feel like you’re in the Sahel in the 1300s, probably because that stringed instrument has a harp/ banjo sound to it. My future children will be studying this music after school and not that european classical garbage for sure.
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Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
@Reno awesome. Hey can you create an account on our site https://abibitumitv.com. There you can import our music to the music category to share from a black site to a black site.
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@AgyaKwadwo I already have one, idk why that never crossed my mind to do that. I’m on it
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@Reno I just came across this a couple days ago on a Yoruba teaching page, then saw it was actually Bambara. I’ve never really heard the language in depth until now, so I’m definitely gonna deep dive into Wassourou. I love this traditional type of music across the continent a lot more than even the contemporary stuff. Probably because of the strings and vocals like you said! It really does feel ancestral, and our children will for sure be indulging in this over the European stuff(which they actually got from us lol) Àṣẹ
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@Zay Yoo same for me first time in depth with the language .. So that’s the name of the genre dope stuff man. And for the classical music yea I know just like rock and blues. but they took what was ours and made it bland with no seasoning. In my home I want fell like I’m home and not soulless Europe😄
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Thanks for sharing!! Sounds wonderful and the lyrics are thought provoking!!
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@Cecelia Listen this song brings me to tears since I looked up the lyrics lol. Very powerful like you said!
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