The evolution of African music and its function in the present day
Item
- Title
- The evolution of African music and its function in the present day
- Performer / Recordist
- Tracey, Hugh
- Subject
- African Music Society
- International Library of African Music
- Evolution
- African music
- Styles
- Beauty
- Instruments
- Perishable material
- Lithophones
- Nigeria
- Stones
- Bushman paintings
- Chopi
- Limpopo
- Birds
- Imitation
- Onomatopaeia
- Zimbabwe
- Bird calls
- Long eared owl
- Temple
- Nile
- Egyptian civilization
- Sub-Suharan Africa
- Stringed instrument
- Indonesian theory
- Langauge
- Mission
- Catholic music
- Arabs
- Swahili
- Portuguese
- Brazilian
- Guitar
- Father Andre Fernandes
- Missionary
- Dove
- Nile Basin Theory
- Egypt
- Slaves
- Musicians
- Harps
- Lyres
- Loots
- North East
- Sub-Saharan Africa
- String
- Tanganyika
- Sea farers
- Xylophone
- Congo
- Participation
- Dance music
- Repetitive
- Rhythmic
- Tradition
- Relocation
- Intergration
- Continuity
- English music
- Afrikaans music
- Sarie Marie
- Change
- Static
- Classics
- Popular music
- Greensleeves
- A Bicycle made for Two
- Latin singing
- Latin chant
- Chant
- British Empire
- Negro Spiritual
- Folk songs
- Anti-slavery movements
- David Livingstone
- Musical migrtatiatioh
- Hand piano
- Zambezi Valley
- Nyasaland
- Nguni
- Kampala
- Bands
- Chitimkhulu
- Bemba
- Blindness
- Court band
- Blinded musician
- South Africa
- Choral
- Forests
- Drums
- Xylophones
- Fighting song
- Agriculture
- Semi-nomadic
- Politicians
- Hastings Banda
- Fooding and drinking party
- European hymns
- Ghana
- Degree
- Complexity
- Simplicity
- Poly-rhythms
- Rural areas
- Churches
- Competitions
- Eisteddfodd
- Inferiority
- Johannesburg
- Drama
- King Kong
- Jazz importations
- Voice
- Skill
- Instrument makers
- Commercialisation
- Gramophone
- Radio
- Creolisation
- Modern Jazz
- Louisiana
- French
- Spanish
- Genius
- Town songs
- Country songs
- Social climbers
- Patriotism
- Kwela
- Penny-whistle
- America
- Politics
- Pitch
- Archive
- BP Southern Africa
- Evangelists
- Indoor music
- Mine
- Continuation
- Notation
- Migration
- Study of Man in Africa
- Mr. Michael Lane
- Description / content note
- Lecture by Hugh Tracey given for the Institute for the Study of Man in Africa (ISMA)
- Language
- English
- Publisher
- International Library of African Music (ILAM)
- Date issued / published
- 1961-10-11
- Identifier
- BC160
- Is Format Of
- Analog reel item
- Duration (time)
- 01:17:37
- File format
- wav
- Sample Rate
- 15ips reel
- Provenance
- 96000Hz 24Bit Stereo
- Studer A812 Recorder-Reproducer
- Sound Forge 9.0
- Rights Holder
- International Library of African Music
- License
- CC Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
- Access Rights
- Public
- Is Part Of
- ILAM Hugh Tracey Broadcast Series
- Format
- audio/mp3
- Item sets
- Hugh Tracey Broadcast Series