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Dakar Audio Diffusion
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Folk
Folk is a song-centered acoustic tradition rooted in community storytelling, everyday life, and social history. It emphasizes clear melodies, simple harmonies, and lyrics that foreground narrative, protest, and personal testimony. As a modern recorded genre, folk coalesced in the early-to-mid 20th century in the United States out of older ballad, work song, and rural dance traditions. It typically features acoustic instruments (guitar, banjo, fiddle, mandolin, harmonica), strophic song forms, and participatory singing (choruses, call-and-response).
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Griot
Griot (also called jeli/jali) is the hereditary West African tradition of poet-singers, historians, and musicians whose craft combines storytelling, praise-singing, genealogy, diplomacy, and music. It is centered in the Mande world of today’s Mali, Senegal, Gambia, and Guinea, and is best known for virtuosic performances on the kora (21‑string harp-lute), balafon (xylophone), and ngoni (lute), alongside powerful, ornamented vocals. Griot music is structured around cyclical ostinatos with improvisatory flourishes, call-and-response, and text that preserves communal memory—epics, lineages, and moral instruction—delivered in languages such as Mandinka and Bambara. While deeply traditional, the griot aesthetic has adapted to modern stages and studios, influencing global “world music,” West African pop, and blues-derived styles.
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Mbalax
Mbalax is the high‑energy urban dance music of Senegal (and the wider Senegambia region, including The Gambia and parts of Mauritania). It fuses indigenous Wolof/Serer vocal styles and polyrhythmic sabar drum ensembles with modern electric bands and pop song forms. Rooted in the Serer ritual tradition of njuup (noted for call‑and‑response vocals, praise singing, and driving hand‑drum cycles), mbalax was shaped in the post‑colonial, pan‑ethnic city culture that formed around Dakar. From the late 1970s onward, singers and bands adapted sabar’s interlocking rhythms to electric bass, guitar, keyboards, horns, and the tama (talking drum), while drawing on Cuban son and Congolese rumba/soukous as well as American soul, funk, R&B, and pop. The result is a dazzling, syncopated groove—athletic in its percussion, melismatic in its vocals, and celebratory on the dance floor—that became Senegal’s signature popular style and a major West African musical export.
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
Every Noise at Once
, which inspired us to help curious minds keep digging into music's ever-evolving genres.