- Ogun is
known in the Afro-Brazilian
tradition of Candomblé as Ogum (Ketu,
Ijexa and Efon nations) or Gu (Jeje nation). Ogum is
syncretized with
Saint George...
- Candomblé religion. It came to
indicate a
musical rhythm,
named ijexá derived from the
ijexá nation within Candomblé.
Cultural performances of the afoxés...
- 2019-04-05. Riserio, A, A. (1981).
Carnaval Ijexá:
notas sobre afoxés e
blocos do novo
carnaval afrobaiano [Carnaval
Ijexá:
notes about afoxés and
blocks of the...
-
numerous are
those from Oyo,
capital of the
Yoruba kingdom".
Others included Ijexa (Ijesha), Lu****i, Ota (Aworis), Ketus, Ekitis,
Jebus (Ijebu), Egba, Lu****i...
- Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil Genres MPB
samba rock
frevo forró baião
choro axé
ijexá Instruments Vocals guitar Years active 1969–2020
Labels Continental Ariola...
- sub-genres of Afro-Brazilian
musical genres are samba, marabaixo, maracatu,
ijexá, coco, jongo, carimbó, lambada, maxixe, and maculelê. Like
every other part...
-
blackface makeup. Afoxé is the name
given to a
group dedicated to
playing ijexá,
which is a kind of
religious music, part of the Candomblé tradition. In...
- |LH.HL.H. Style: Samba-Reggae or
Bossanova 3:2; O..O..O.|..O..O.. Style:
Ijexa 3:2; LL.L.LL.|L.L.L.L. (HH.L.LL.|H.H.L.L.) For 3rd
example above, the clave...
-
Carnaval procession by
maintaining their African roots with the
puxada do
ijexá (a
rhythm pla**** in
honor of the orixás or Afro-Brazilian deities), the...
- Jeje (Gege) or Mina-Jeje, and
Angola or Congo-Angola;
others include the
Ijexá (Ijesha), Egba, Efan (Ekiti) and Caboclo. Each
derives influence from a...