Folk Music
Blues
Instruments
Artists
Glossary
 
 
 
Ballads: A song that tells a story.

Call and Response: Comes from song leaders and choirs in West Africa. Song leader calls out a phrase and choir responds with a musical phrase. Can also occur between a singer and instruments.

Field Holler: A musical verse sung over and over, often used during work.

Groit: Western African social cast of singers and musicians. Traveled from village to village singing the oral history of the people. Often accompanied by an instrument that closely resembles the banjo.

Minstrel Show: Starting early in the nineteenth century, white men with burnt cork smeared on their faces to make them look black performed song, dance and comedy routines loosely based on plantation life. Although most of the minstrel's songs and skits make fun o the slaves, they did spread a version of black music to a white audience that had previously been completely ignorant of it

Powwow: A north American Indian gathering to affirm and celebrate tribal values through drumming, singing, dancing and feasting.

Spirituals: African American religious folk music that contributed to blues.

Songster: Traveling musician of the late nineteenth and early twenty centuries whose repertoire included blues, ballads, spirituals and popular tunes. Also a pocket-sized book of song lyrics.

Work Song: Field songs of slaves on plantations.