Blues historians such as Paul Oliver and
Samuel Charters have suggested that the essential elements of the
blues originated in the Sahel region of West Africa, brought over by Africans via the slave trade. Whereas the African Slaves brought to
South America and the
Caribbean were largely from Percussion based cultures in southern coastal west Africa (like southern Nigeria),
central Africa and Bantu speaking parts of Africa lacking in many elements that created the
blues, Many of The slaves brought to North America were from the
Sahel region and much more Familiar with stringed instruments basing the Banjo on string instruments from the Sahel like
Akonting, Charters found that many Sahelian slaves were from Muslim cultures and favored stringed, melodic, and solo singing, which differed from the drum-based music of other African regions. These traditions, which were sometimes permitted by plantation owners who feared drums as tool of rebellion and thus evolved into the blues.
Blue note a hallmark of blues music and
Rhythm and blues characterised by flattened thirds, fifths, or sevenths—has deep roots in the musical traditions of The Sahel region of West Africa, making African American popular music like the
blues having a Sahelian based origin in contrast to the more percussion based
Afro-Brazilian music and
Afro-Cuban music music which have more of a southern coastal west African, Central African and Bantu influence where the
blue note is absent. The
Griot tradition of the Sahel also may have influenced
Talking blues and by extension
Hip hop, The
Griot tradition is also absent in Bantu speaking central, Eastern and Southern African cultures. There are few characteristics common to all blues, as the genre takes its shape from the distinctive attributes of each individual performance. This pre-blues music was adapted from the field shouts and hollers performed during slave times, expanded into "simple solo songs laden with emotional content". Many of these blues elements, such as the call-and-response format, can be traced back to the
music of Africa. The use of
melisma and a wavy, nasal intonation also suggests a connection between the music of Sahelian West Africa and the blues. The belief that blues is historically derived from the
West African music including from
Mali is reflected in
Martin Scorsese’s often quoted characterization of
Ali Farka Touré’s tradition as constituting "the DNA of the blues". Perhaps the most compelling African instrument that is a predecessor to an African-American instrument is the "
Akonting", a folk lute of the
Jola tribe of
Senegambia. It is a clear predecessor to the American
banjo in its playing style, the construction of the instrument itself and in its social role as a folk instrument. The
Kora is played by a professional caste of praise singers for the rich and aristocracy (called
griots or jalis) and is not considered folk music.
Jola music may not have been influenced much by
North African/
Middle Eastern music, which may point to African American music not being, according to
Sam Charters, related to kora music. The music of the Akonting and that played by on the banjo by elder African-American banjo players, even into the mid 20th century is easily identified as being very similar. The akonting is perhaps the most important and concrete link that exists between African and African-American music. While the findings of Kubik and others clearly attest to the essential Africanness of many essential aspects of blues expression, studies by
Willie Ruff and others have situated the origin of "black" spiritual music inside enslaved peoples' exposure to their masters'
Hebridean-originated gospels. Additionally, there are theories that the four-beats-per-measure structure of the blues might share its origins with the Native American tradition of
pow wow drumming. ==Other African influence==