Has Afrobeat Overtaken Reggae/Dancehall in Global Popularity?

sportscribe

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Not sure why this thread is 22 pages.

The obvious answer is yes. Afrobeats didn't really blow up though till it started incorporating elements of dancehall into it and Nigerian radio stations made it mandatory to play Nigerian music over foreign music on the airwaves to promote local content.
 
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Peter Popoff

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As a Haitian American



Are those genres African also?
It stems from house which has African roots. There's different types of EDM. I don't listen to that white boy hardcore shyt.

South African house is my other wave. Guys like house victimz, black coffee and bucie.
 

GrindtooFilthy

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Really? :obama:

We're you at a convention?

I was on the board of my city's chapter years ago.
Yeah went with my boy, I keep telling everyone if you are in that industry and need a job join these professional black networks they help out alot
 

invalid

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Yeah went with my boy, I keep telling everyone if you are in that industry and need a job join these professional black networks they help out alot

Oh yeah. It was always been known to us that when you were out of a job, just go down to convention to snag a job since employers interview and extend offers on the spot. It's the cheat code for black professionals.

name those networks again please

He was talking about NABA which you and I have discussed before.
 

invalid

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Are those genres African also?

All electronic genres has its roots in House which was created by blacks Gen Xers in Chicago.

While Jamaicans and Caribbean folks of that generation were going to "bashments", blacks in Chicago were going to "house" parties. It's the music when I was younger, my young aunt's and uncles were in the basement with their friends partying to or going to clubs to hear or were playing at local college and fraternity parties.

Which is why it's interesting when I've been hearing multiple times in this thread that reggae was in it's heights in the 90's because it was pretty absent from our lives in Chicago in the 90's which was being dominated by House. Like I knew some tunes like Sister Nancy but not much more than that.

But to Suppers point about Afram musical insularity, House is still very popular locally but we don't have new artist furthering the progression of the genre because Hip Hop came in and crush the building and so now younger generations view the music as being "gay" or just not interested in any other music outside Hip Hop & R&B. That's what the legacy of Hip Hop, it promoted conformity and killed curiosity. Or it could be as one of the posters mentioned "the ultimate genre" taking in elements from all others, which would explain why many Aframs have largely abandoned the other genres of music we created. I don't exactly see Hip Hop that way though.

But as I was saying, I'm glad it picked up popularity by other black groups specifically in South Africa. I would rather the progression of the genre be spearheaded by other black folks than by whites, for instance, like Techno, which is the sister genre to House, was picked up and made popular by black Detroiters, but is completely white washed now.

I feel like alot of that music is old school though and not enough new material which is why I do think afrobeats can fill a void.

Come to a Chicago bbq. We still playing the same 90's Frankie Knuckles House Music.

Let me go and drop some of this South African House Piff that @GrindtooFilthy blessed us in this thread and folks will be raving.

Edit: A lot of younger ADOS view house music as "gay" so we don't have that many younger new artist trying to further the progression of the genre. But the older millennials and Gen X still love the music. And I think it's wonderful that other black groups have taken what we have done and have ran with it.
 
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invalid

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name those networks again please

mainly just nsbe and naba for now

I'm not going to go through each and every one of the organizations that I mentioned previously but I want to point out the black professional associations:

NABJ - National Association of Black Journalist (Black Journalist)
NABA - National Association of Black Accountants (Black CPAs and Financial Professionals)
NBA - National Bar Association (Black Lawyers)
NMA - National Medical Association (Black Doctors)
NBMBA - National Black MBA Association (Black Investment Bankers and Financial Professionals)
NSBE - National Society of Black Engineers (Black Engineers)

***These are the organizations that I personally know of but I'm sure there are many more organizations for other industries****

Each one of these national professional societies provide countless networking opportunities for black people who would not have had them otherwise.

Each organization have pipeline programs to encourage black high school students to major in their respective fields in college to increase the black presence among their professions.

Each organization offers scholarship and grant money to black high school and college students to help them pursue careers in their respective fields

Each organization helps secure internships for black college students.

Each organization performs countless hours of community oriented projects to help raise the collective awareness of different issues in the black community.

You also have the CBC - The Congressional Black Caucus for blacks in politics. Their convention, the Annual Legislative Conference is coveted by all black professionals.
 

Blackrogue

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Africa right now producing music to a point where it's consumption of outside stuff has diminshed. You know the vibe and energy of certain sounds doesn't make sense until you in an environment where everyone but mostly women are dancing and vibing to it.

You go to a club in Africa and they'll play music from all over the Africa with a sprinkling of stuff from outside.
 
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