world music african
TRANSCRIPT
World Music
Africa
Africa is a very large and diverse continent with many musical styles and cultures across its different countries and regions.
African Music
Part of everyday activities- everyone joins in clapping, singing and dancing to the music.
Part of rites and ceremonies where it is performed by specialist master drummers and court musicians
Not normally written down but passed on through oral tradition
Traditional African music has influenced contemporary styles such as blues, gospel and jazz.
African Drums
The bigger the drum the lower the note
Played at using hands or sticks or both
DjembePronouced ‘Zhem-bay’.
It is shaped like a large goblet and played with bare hands. The body is carved from a hollowed trunk and is covered in goat skin.
It dates back to the 12th century Mali Empire of West Africa.
Talking Drums
Imitate the rhythms and intonations of speech
The drums can be used to imitate speech patterns or as signals to make announcements or warnings.
The pitch of the note is changed by squeezing or releasing the drum’s strings with the arm.
Sakara
Sakara is a hand held drum played with a light stick
Doumbek
Played with the fingers.
Dum is the bass tone played with your right hand in the middle of the drum
Tek is a high ringing sound played with your right hand
Ka is the same sound as tek, but played with your left hand
Gonkogui
Like an agogo bell. Played with a stick.
Yenca, Shekere, Toke
Yenca and Shekere is like a maraca shaker.
Yenca has a sponge plug which can be removed to change the seeds for different sizes, to give a different sound.
Shekere can be hit at the top of the ball to create a deeper tone.
Toke or a banana bell is played by striking it with a metal rod.
Kora
A 12-stringed harp-lute
Xalam
A plucked lute, very much like the banjo
Non- Percussion
Flute, Whistles, Oboes and trumpets
Materials from bamboo, reed, wood, clay, bones, animal horns or wood.
Common Elements ofAfrican Music
Repetition-
Improvisation- make up music spontaneously
Polyphony- texture featuring two or more parts, each having a melody line and sounding together-creates a multilayered texture
Call and response- simple form comprising a solo (call) followed by a group answering phrase (response)
Categories
Drumming
Choral song (tribal music)
Instrumental music (xylophone, mbira and kora)
Drumming
Oral tradition- no music notation
The master drummer stands in the centre of the ensemble and is responsible for directing the whole performance.
He will be surrounded by other drummers and percussion instruments.
The master drummer will signal to the other players when he is ready to start, often with a vocal cry followed by a short rhythmic solo to set the mood or tempo of the music.
This is called a cue and the other players will then come in together to play the response.
the response could be an exact copy or even a different rhythm entirely.
Structures in Drumming
Cueing will happen throughout the music and creates a structure of contrasted sections.
The music is essentially a series of variations on rhythmic patterns.
Master drummer can signal individual players for a solo. This again will be a variation or development of the original rhythmic pattern.
A steady continuous beat, called the ‘timeline’, is often played by the master drummer.
Cross RhythmsPolyrhythms
the complex rhythm played by the drummers create polyrhythms, often with stresses that conflict with each other and with the steady constant beat of the timeline- creating cross rhythms. The result is a polyrhythmic texture.
The music will usually increase in tension as the piece progresses, and the tempo and dynamics will vary from section to section to provide interest and variety in the music. It is the responsibility of the master drummer to control the changes and make sure that the music never becomes monotonous or dull.
Listening- DrumAkan Drumming, Pan
African Orchestra Identify as many of the common features of
African drumming:
What mood or feelings do you get from listening to the piece?
What do you notice about the tempo and dynamics during the course of the music?
How is the hypnotic effect of the music achieved?
Choral
Music serves as a link to the spirit world.
Call and response
Melodies are usually short and simple, repeated XX
Melodies are usually in a scale of 4-7 tones
These melodies can be changed at will by other singers- format into theme and variations
Polyphony- performers improvise new melodies while others continue the original melody.
Texture- singers coming in a different points in a continuous cycle.
Harmony- in unison or parallel 4th, 5th, or 8ve. Others harmonize in 3rds or 4ths
Listening- ChoralMbube, Soloman Linda’s Original Evening Birds
Which musical features of African singing could you detect in both pieces?
What differences did you notice in the two performances?
Which piece did you prefer? Give at least two musical reasons for your choice.
Kangivumanga,Ladysmith Black
Mambazo
Which musical features of African singing could you detect in both pieces?
What differences did you notice in the two performances?
Which piece did you prefer? Give at least two musical reasons for your choice.
Mbira (thumb piano)
Used at religious rituals as well as social gatherings
22 metal strips of varying length, fixed to a soundboard
The two thumbs stroke the keys downwards and the right forefinger then plucks them back up.
Balophone (Xylophone)
Wood
Features of African Instrumental Music
Repetition
Ostinato/repeated rhythm, melody or chord pattern
Improvisation
Cyclic structures
Polyphonic textures
Intertwining melodies
Listening-Induna Indaba, Chopi
people of MozambiqueWhat other instruments, apart from the
xylophones, can you hear?
What is the main musical features in the music played by the xylophones?
Describe the tempo and mood of this music
How many different sizes of xylophone are in the ensemble?