African Journey: A Search for the Roots of the Blues
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African Journey: A Search for the Roots is a blues album by American historian Samuel Charters and is his attempt to examine how the American blues genre of the 1920s and 1930s can trace its roots and influences back to the tribal music of West Africa. Charters draws connections between the two, mainly covering similarities in their song content, instrument type, and instrument usage.
In 1974, Charters traveled the length of the West African "crescent", from Senegal to Nigeria. He then returned to travel up the Gambia River to a slave pen in Janjanbureh, following a similar path that would have been taken by slave traders. All of the album's musical performances were recorded by means of a tape recorder. The album was released as a double vinyl set. Volume One contains songs performed by historians as well as celebratory songs from The Gambia, Senegal, and Mali. Volume Two consists of funeral processions, dances, and songs from Ghana, Togo and The Gambia.