AFRIČKA MUZIKA
Pročitajte taj zanimljivi tekst na engleskom, autor je "Christo"
(upotrebili smo njegov tekst sa bogate web stranice www.acslink.aone.net.au/christo/f_afrihi.htm)
African Music in Social Context
Authentic African music - the traditional music of the black peoples of
Africa - is little known abroad. The non-African listener can find the
music strange, difficult, and unattractive; and therefore often concludes
that it is not of interest. Both African and non-African music are human
inventions and individual notes contain the same elements such as pitch,
duration, tone colour and intensity. Music plays a similar role in most
societies, as work songs, lullabies, battle songs, religious music, and
so on. Generally speaking the same categories of instruments are found
in Africa as in Europe, namely stringed instruments, wind instruments,
and percussion.
The African concept of music is totally different to the Western one though.
Traditional African musicians do not seek to combine sounds in a manner
pleasing to the ear. Their aim is simply to express life in all of its
aspects through the medium of sound. The African musician does not merely
attempt to imitate nature by music, but reverses the procedure by taking
natural sounds, including spoken language, and incorporate them into the
music. To the uninitiated this may result in cacophony, but in fact each
sound has a particular meaning. To be meaningful, African music must be
studied within the context of African life.
Music has an important role in African society. Music is an integral part
of the life of every African individual from birth. At a very early stage
in life the African child takes an active role in music, making musical
instruments by the age of three or four. Musical games played by African
children prepare them to participate in all areas of adult activity -
including fishing, hunting, farming, grinding maize, attending weddings
and funerals and dances.
An intimate union forms between man and art in Africa. It amounts to a
total communion that is shared by the whole community. This may help explain
why some languages in black Africa have no precise noun to define music.
The art of music is so inherent in man that it is superfluous to have
a particular name for it. The drum is so important in African society
that it is sometimes equated with a man. Women must consequently treat
it with the same respect that they would show towards their menfolk. In
some African countries women are not even allowed to touch a drum under
any circumstance, though Islam and European colonial influence have softened
some of these traditions. African music is nearly always coupled with
some other art such as poetry or dance and is one of the most revealing
forms of expression of the black soul.
It seems logical to conclude that everyone in black Africa must be a musician
by definition. Nevertheless, it would be a mistake to assume that all
Africans are necessarily musicians in the full sense of the word. In some
African societies music is a dynamic and driving force that animates the
life of the entire community. This communal music may be quite elaborate
in form. In other societies musicians form a semi-professional group.
They earn their livelihood from their music for only part of the year
and rely on some other activity for the remainder of the time. In numerous
African societies, the right to play certain instruments or to participate
in traditional ceremonies is not open to all, but is the privilege of
the professional musician. Such musicians live solely by their art and
belong to particular families or castes. Griot is the term used throughout
West Africa to designate professional musicians. The role of the griot
extends far beyond the realm of music and magic. He or she is the relater
of history, philosophy and mythology, the archive of the peoples' traditions.
He or she dispenses a healing therapy for the medicine man. He or she
is a praise-singer, a troubadour - the counterpart of the medieval European
minstrel. People fear griots, admire them but often treat them with contempt
because they belong to one of the lowest castes. The fact that music is
at the heart of all of the griot's activities is yet further proof of
the vital part he or she plays in African life. The equivalent of the
griot in equatorial Africa is the player of the mvet (harp-zither). This
person is, in some ways, more fortunate than the griot because the admiration
that he enjoys is not tinged with scorn, maybe because he does not normally
sing the praises of the rich and powerful like the griot does.
The African musician is feeling the effects of the revolution that is
currently sweeping the entire continent. Music, as it is conceived in
traditional society, is not a function which enables its exponents to
meet the demands of modern life. Furthermore, the competition is enormous
and under these conditions music as a profession offers very little opportunity.
In some societies, music is not conceived as a profession at all, a fact
which is even more limiting. As things exist today, traditional music
is threatened with eventual extinction and will gradually disappear unless
the musician's future is assured. This is especially true for African
traditional music which is of course not written down, but handed down
from generation to generation.
This does not mean that the traditional African musician should be sheltered
from the infiltration of foreign influences. Such infiltration can be
a source of artistic enrichment contributing to the cultural cross-fertilisation
[...].
!! Christo
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