African music is a broad, pan‑continental umbrella that encompasses thousands of local traditions, court and ritual musics, and modern popular styles from across Africa. It is characterized by layered polyrhythms, cyclical forms, call‑and‑response vocals, timeline bells, and a participatory performance ethos where dance and music are inseparable.
While rooted in ancient indigenous practices, the modern category of “African music” took shape in the recording era as regional styles such as highlife, jùjú, Congolese rumba/soukous, and Afrobeat spread beyond their homelands. Over time, electric instruments, brass sections, and later drum machines and DAWs were integrated, producing contemporary scenes like kwaito, Afrobeats, and amapiano.
Across the continent, core sonic features include interlocking ostinatos, off‑beat phrasing, and groove‑centric vamps rather than heavy functional harmony. Timbres range from resonant harps and lutes (kora, ngoni) and wooden idiophones (mbira, balafon) to talking drums and hand percussion (djembe, dunun, shekere), with strong regional variation in scales, tunings, and vocal techniques.