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AUSTRALIA - Aboriginal - Songs from the Northern Territory cd4
Infohash:
D3D2126004A257294D0613FDC30853122F685BC5
Type:
Music
Title:
AUSTRALIA - Aboriginal - Songs from the Northern Territory cd4
Category:
Audio/Music
Uploaded:
2008-09-11 (by starinar )
Description:
CLICK ON starinar TO GET MORE TRIBAL AND INDIGENOUS MUSIC.
BE A MEMBER OF A GLOBAL SeeDeRS TRIBE. MoRE CoMING SooN. ENJoY!
Artist/Collector:
Alice Moyle
Label Information:
Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS): AIAS 4 CD
Media Type:
CD
Year:
Recorded 1963; Released 1997
Availability:
AIATSIS
Notes: For the purpose of music description, Eastern Arnhem Land of the Northern
Territory is divided here as follows: the north-eastern sector including offshore
islands; the eastern sector, extending along the coast as far south as the Roper
River; and the Groote Eylandt archipelago north-west of the Gulf of Carpentaria.
Field recordings reproduced on this compact disc were collected at Milingimbi and
Yirrkala in the north-eastern sector and at Angurugu and Umbakumba on Groote Eylandt.
The Aboriginal communities at Milingimbi and Yirrkala, together with the people at
Galiwin'ku (previously known as Elcho Island) have been referred to in the
anthropological literature as the Murngin (WL Warner) and Wulamba (RM Berndt). More
recently, they have become known as the Yolngu, from a local word meaning 'people'.
The people on Groote Eylandt were known by mainland groups as the Wayingurra and
their language, Ingurra. In the absence of a name for the Groote Eylandters,
Warnindilyakwa, a name formerly given to one of the larger clans on the island, is
sometimes used. Anindilyakwa is the name of the island language.
Item characteristics of Eastern Arnhem Land clan songs performed and recorded in
the 1960s-all of which were sung by men-are summarised here as follows: (1) a didjeridu
accompaniment which utilises two tones differing widely in pitch (the interval between
the higher or overblown tone and the fundamental often sounding close to a tenth
but varying according to the shape and length of the hollowed branch); (2) a narrow
vocal range of pitch (compare them, for instance, with Western Arnhem Land songs)
which rarely exceeds a fifth or sixth and may be less than a second; (3) song words
which are translatable, meaningful and appropriate to relevant clan territories
and related myths; and (4) the occurrence of an unaccompanied vocal termination (UVT),
or termination of a song item by voice or voices alone after the accompanying
instruments have ceased. Good examples of this fourth item characteristic are to be
heard on this disc (Track 1) and disc 3 (Track 11).
Song refrains may consist of repeated strings of words and syllables, a prolonged
single syllable or a repeated pattern of vocal sounds (for example, bird calls).
These calls are incorporated into the particular sectional or phraselike structure
of many item sequences performed in Eastern Arnhem Land.
On Groote Eylandt (tracks 7-13), only the first three of the above characteristics
are to be heard. There is no occurrence of the UVT in these items but the following
additional characteristics distinguish emeba (Groote Eylandt clan songs) from manikay
(north-eastern Arnhem Land clan songs):
a. the shaky voice, a deliberate manner of vocal ornamentation used by some emeba singers;
b. the break or brief cessation of the vocal part of a Groote Eylandt clan song which is
signalled by certain words the singer chooses to sing (the song subject at this point may
fall, swoop down, or change abruptly in some way-it was said that the break gives the singer
time to decide which words to sing next);
c. a short, patterned interplay between sticks and didjeridu during the break; and
d. the general clatter of stick-beating percussion arising from several different sources
at the same time.
Further comparison of emeba and manikay reveals that, whereas the durations of the latter
are usually about one minute or less, emeba items may last for more than two minutes each.
Manikay.com
Files count:
13
Size:
48.37 Mb
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