Music Of The Democratic Republic Of The Congo Musikkgruppe & Artist Liste

Congolese music incorporates a variety of musical traditions. The traditional music serves as entertainment and as a means of expressing customs, emotions, and social values, with each ethnic group developing its own styles of singing, dancing, and vocal expression, which are typically performed at important ceremonies such as births, marriages, initiations, and funerals. Instruments, typically crafted by local artisans, range from drums and slit gongs used for communication to melodic instruments such as the lamellophone sanza and arched harp. These traditions are characterized by polyrhythmic percussion, pentatonic scales, collective polyphonic singing, improvisation, vocal exclamations, handclapping, and dance.
Congolese popular music developed alongside the urban growth of Léopoldville (now Kinshasa) in the 1930s and the expansion of colonial commercial enterprises, which exposed local musicians to global genres such as Cuban rumba, jazz, blues, biguine, highlife, and bolero. Among the key transitional genres was the Kongo partner maringa dance, which originated in the former Kingdom of Loango, and later flourished in the bar-dancing culture of Brazzaville and Léopoldville in the 1920s–1940s, with early performances using instruments such as the bass drum, accordion (likembe), and glass bottles used as percussion. During the 1940s and 1950s, the arrival of Cuban son recordings played a major role in maringa's transformation into "Congolese rumba", as works by groups like Sexteto Habanero, Trio Matamoros, and Los Guaracheros de Oriente were often marketed as "rumba".
During the 1960s and 1970s, Congolese rumba gave birth to a wave of innovative popular dance styles, including soukous, a faster-paced genre known for its intricate guitar work and layered polyrhythms. In the late 1990s, ndombolo emerged as an offshoot of soukous and also rose to continental prominence. Throughout this evolution, there has never been a single, universally accepted term for Congolese music. It was once commonly referred to as muziki na biso ("our music"), while today the term ndule, meaning "music" in Lingala, is more widely used. Labels such as "rumba" or "rock-rumba" are also applied broadly, though they remain imprecise.
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- Du kan stemme opp eller ned. Vennligst alltid vurdere konteksten for å stemme, for eksempel en sang skal bli stemt opp eller ned i forhold til de andre sangene som finnes på albumet, en skuespiller prestasjoner i forhold til andre aktører i samme film, en bok med hensyn til andre bøker av samme forfatter eller innenfor samme sjanger.
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- Hver bruker har en stemme per element innenfor en bestemt liste hver 24. time. Etter 24 timer kan du stemme på nytt på den samme varen innen den samme listen.
- Du kan stemme på så mange elementer som du liker i en liste eller på samme element hvis det er en del av en annen liste. For eksempel kan du stemme David Bowie opp eller ned på listen over pop artister samt på listen over indie rock artister og på listen over rock artister etc.
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