Jazz and blues feedback for Jamaican music seems to imitate time to some extent. When human beings experience history, music and that language are essentially excited about human culture, its way, its desire and the mirror of sorrow, but it is always excited (Santoro, 2). In this article we follow this path to show the importance of music for Jamaican and American culture. In this article, I explain that American music (mainly jazz and blues) has greatly influenced reggae in Jamaica and show their relationship by decomposing each type of music into simple rhythms.
Jamaica is known as the home of reggae music, Bob Marley, Blue Mountain Coffee, Usain Bolt. Our music and athletes have brought us great pride and made great progress in the international arena. Jamaica's Blue Mountain Coffee is considered to be the best in the world. The main income source of the island is sightseeing. You can consider switching Jamaica to an international training ground for athletes. This will bring more income to our island and can help to promote our economy. Jamaica's unemployment rate as of 2016 was 12.9%
Like American jazz, rhythm, and blues, Reggae was born directly from Jamaican ska and rocksteady in the 1960s, despite the strong influence of traditional mint and calypso music. The common name of Jamaican music was recorded between 1961 and 1967, and Ska came from Jamaica's R & B, which was based mainly on American R & B and doo-wop. Rastafari mainly enters several countries through reggae music; therefore, movement in these places is particularly affected by reggae music and the social environment. The movement of Rastafari had a major influence on reggae, and the drummer of Rasta participated in a breakthrough recording like Earl of Ossi. One of the predecessors of reggae drumming is a ceremonial drum style, nyavagirism, used as a practice of community meditation in the life of rastafarian.
Reggae (/ rɛɡeɪ / /) is a music genre born in Jamaica in the late 1960s. This term also refers to contemporary Mexican pop music and its overseas representatives. The single "Do the Reggay" by Toots and Maytals in 1968 was the first popular song using the word "regga", in effect naming this type and introducing it to the audience of the world. Sometimes it is widely used to refer to the most popular Jamaican dance music, but reggae is better suited to traditional inspiration and certain music style inspired by American jazz, rhythm and blues, especially New Orleans You can express it. R & B was practiced by Fats Domino and Allen Toussaint, developed from the early genres of ska and rocksteady. Reggae usually includes news, social gossip, political commentary. Reggae music first expanded to the field of commercial jazz known as "Rudie Blues", then "Ska", then "Blue Beat", "Rock Steady".