The Thumb Piano and San Identity in Central Botswana

Similar documents
The Kalimba, its African History, and Black Pride. Mark Holdaway Kalimba Magic

AFRICAN MUSIC AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

Chapter 1: When Music Began

The Winston Churchill Memorial Trust of Australia

Instrumental 1.usic of the KALAHARI SAN RECORDED BY MARJORIE SHOSTAK, MEGAN BIESELE, NICHOLAS ENGLAND ETHNIC FOLKWAYS RECORDS FE 4315

Chapter 1 Heating Up!

newbooks! TO ORDER There is nothing like it in the field. International Library of African Music South Africa

The Music of Africa. of Indigenous African Music. Geography Musical Style Music in Community Life Instruments Traditional Styles

Arranged and Edited by Ivodne Galatea and Mark Holdaway Kalimba Magic 11/23/2014

East & Central. Supersport Maximo 2 x x

DEATH, MOURNING AND BURIAL RITES AMONGST THE KHOISAN PEOPLE OF BOTSWANA: A COMPARATIVE STUDY

Foundation Course In African Dance-Drumming. Introduction To Anlo-Ewe Culture

Chapter One Traveling to West Africa

Pianola: sound, music and mechanics

Grade Level Expectations for the Sunshine State Standards

South African Music in Global Perspective. Gavin Steingo Assistant Professor of Music University of Pittsburgh

African pottery why archaeologists don t t get it

ENDURING UNDERSTANDINGS

Making a drum International House of Blues Foundation, Inc. Limited reproduction for educational use only is permitted. 1

Locating the Chopi Xylophone Ensembles of Southern Mozambique

LESSON 2: EFFICACY AND ACTION

Traditional Music and Dances Comenius

MUSIC BOOK 2. Maria Minnaar-Bailey

The String Family. Bowed Strings. Plucked Strings. Musical Instruments More About Music

Music and Dance in African Culture. Music and dance are closely interrelated in all aspects of African life. Professor Yapo quotes

Instruments. Of the. Orchestra

History of Percussion in Music and Theater

KNES PRIMARY (YEAR 1)

62. Mustapha Tettey Addy (Ghana) Agbekor Dance (for Unit 6: Further Musical Understanding)

Play and great inventions 1. Early flutes were made from animal bones. 2. The invention of the computer is solely the result of military technology. 3

Multicultural Art Series

Transition from analogue to digital broadcasting

A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS IN ETHNOMUSICOLOGY

AFRICAN MUSIC SCHOOL PROJECT

African-American Spirituals

You Can Didjeridu It: Experiences with Australian Aboriginal Music A Smithsonian Folkways Lesson Summary:

Theoretical Systems and Practical Realization: Observations of Children Musicians in Bahər Dār

Views as far as the eye can see

Searching for New Ways to Improve Museums

Transition of Music Labor in Post Socialist Croatia: the Case of Klapa Singing

A Fine Arts Standards Guide for Families

Music Grade 6 Term 2. Contents

by Staff Sergeant Samuel Woodhead

PIANO: HISTORY & FACTS

An Introduction to Sega: The Music and Dance of Mauritius

Grade Level Music Curriculum:

African Dance Forms: Introduction:

by Martin Scherzinger

Native American Flute Craft: Ancient To Modern By C. S. Fuqua READ ONLINE

Day of Drumming Study Guide

Lorinda Jones. Education Support Materials. Teacher/Student Study Guide. A Musical Journey of Kentucky. Program Goal: Program Description:

SEC 7th Street & Butler Drive

GRAAD 12 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE GRADE 12

Contemporary Oviritje: Value Added To The Existing Cultural Heritage Of The Ovaherero People Of Namibia

Suggested Music Units and Support Notes for non-specialist teachers in training in colleges of education

bible society catalogue 2018

By Jack Bennett Icanplaydrums.com DVD 14 LATIN STYLES 1

EDUCATIONAL NOTES FOR VALANGA KHOZA

What's the Difference? Art and Ethnography in Museums. Illustration 1: Section of Mexican exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Chapter 1 Traditions of Knowledge: Indigenous Knowledge and the Western Music School

AFRICAN MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS IN KENYA

Carlos Santana Vs. Johannes Brahms May,2018 Personal code:gnd088

Fieldwork in the Kalahari

MUSIC CURRICULUM GUIDELINES K-8

Sincerely, P. Madeleine Bocaya Bernal Heights resident, homeowner, tax payer and voter

Jaw Harp: An Acoustic Study. Acoustical Physics of Music Spring 2015 Simon Li

Constant. Ullo Ragnar Telliskivi. Thesis 30 credits for Bachelors BFA Spring Iron and Steel / Public Space

Jeremy Montagu Side-blown horns p. 1 of 5

ILAM PRODUCT LIST BANKING DETAILS:

Articulation Clarity and distinct rendition in musical performance.

WORLD INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ORGANIZATION GENEVA WIPO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND THE CREATIVE INDUSTRIES

Kaja Avberšek Peter Kus Boštjan Gorenc Pižama

Elk Grove Unified School District Visual and Performing Arts Resources Theatre

Summer Assignment. B. Research. Suggested Order of Completion. AP Art History Sister Lisa Perkowski

The Britannica Guide To Africa READ ONLINE

MINUTES OF THE REGULAR MEETING WORTHINGTON ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW BOARD WORTHINGTON MUNICIPAL PLANNING COMMISSION April 27, 2017

Musical Instruments Percussion Instruments

Greenwich Music Objectives Kindergarten General Music

Key Words: Categorization; Cognitive sciences; Ethnomusicology; Ju

Tiffany Galus Telephone to the Spirits: Mbira Music in Shona Culture Grade Level: Middle School/Junior High

Pan-African Socio-Economic Status measures (PA-SES)

AN INTRODUCTION TO PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE DRUM TALK

Prerequisites: Familiarity with barred Orff Instruments, recorder pitches B, A, G, E (for lesson segment 3 only).

Music Notation: A South African Guide. Christine Lucia Pretoria: UNISA Press. 318 pp.

The Most Important Findings of the 2015 Music Industry Report

World Music. Music of Africa: choral and popular music

Introducing Ethnomusicology in Ethiopia and the Need. for Establishing a Research and Documentation Center

The Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s

ARIA for voice(s) //Alexis Porfiriadis //2010/11

A STUDY OF SIPELU MUSIC AND DANCE AMONG THE MASUBIA PEOPLE OF THE ZAMBEZI REGION OF NAMIBIA A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT

Ba Cissoko. Guinean culture is very similar to the cultures of the countries closely surrounding

A deeper understanding of the Native American Style Flute:

Folk Music in the Melting Pot at The Sheldon Concert Hall Handbook for Teachers

Clash of cultures - Gains and drawbacks of archival collaboration

Goals/Objectives/Student Outcomes: Materials: Background:

Avo Randruut, director

High School Adaptive Music Curriculum

Big Idea 1: Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and how is it made?

Uses of Fractions. Fractions

THERE ARE MANY DIFFERENT TYPES

Transcription:

SENRI ETHNOLOGICAL STUDIES 70: 273-284 2006 Updating the San: Image and Reality of an African People in the 21st Century Edited by R. K. Hitchcock, K. Ikeya, M. Biesele and R. B. Lee The Thumb Piano and San Identity in Central Botswana National Museum of Ethnology, Japan INTRODUCTION The thumb piano (Lamellaphone) is a musical instrument that originated in Africa and is still used widely around the continent 1). It is variously called Mbira, Sanza, Kalinba, Likenbe, and Irinba in different localities. The instrument s history is presumed to be closely connected with that of iron, the material of which its keys are made. Yet it remains unknown when and in which district it was invented. Some studies of the San thumb piano have been published (Nurse 1959; Biesele 1975). They indicated that the thumb pianos used by the San living in the central part of the Kalahari are of two types, with either one or two lines of iron keys. Also, although Nurse (1959: 24) states that it is sometimes played in accompaniment to women s clapping or boys whistling, it is reportedly never played as an accompaniment to singing. Additionally, this musical instrument is said to have been introduced into Ju Hoan communities in the northern part of the Kalahari from the north and the east in 1961 (Biesele 1975: 172). In about 1958, when an epidemic struck livestock near the border, a veterinary team came from Southwestern Africa (Namibia) to build a fence. This meant that wires and nails were available, and a new era was launched. This report presents a description of the distinctive features of the San over-thethumb pianos among those used throughout Africa, the process whereby the instrument spread to San communities in Central Botswana, and its function in their lives. For this stuty, 18 San thumb piano players living in central Botswana were interviewed about how they performed and the history of the instrument s introduction. The sample group comprised members of San language groups including Gana, Gui, Hai nu, and Tsila, who inhabit the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (Figure 1). The process of the instrument s introduction can be understood in terms of the history of the relation between the sample groups, such as Gana, Gui, Kalanga, and Nharo because their place of residence borders on the localities inhabited by Kalanga of Bantu descent to the northeast and of Nharo to the northwest. 273

274 Botswana N Ghanzi D kal Maun Molapo New Xade Central Kalahari Game Reserve Metsamaneng Mothomelo Gaborone Lobatse 0 100 200km Ghanzi District paved road Figure 1 The study area DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF THE SAN THUMB PIANO Although the thumb piano is reportedly distributed widely throughout Saharan and sub-saharan Africa, its entire African distribution remains unknown. For this paper, I identify the social spheres in which the thumb pianos are used from the precise distribution of the regions where they are played. Consequently, the northern limit extends to southern Sudan and Ethiopia and the southern limit is Lesotho. Thumb pianos are found mainly among the Bantu peoples of central and southern Africa, but are also widely used among communities such as the Nilote, Cushite, Pygmy, and San. The size of the instrument can be small or large. The number of keys varies from 5 6 to 70 80. The keys material is commonly iron or palm wood. The most widely found basic arrangements of keys are zigzag and V-shaped. For example, the San thumb piano in Botswana has three lines of keys arranged in a zigzag pattern. The Shona style in Zimbabwe has two lines of keys on the left side only, arranged in a V-shape (Berliner 1978). The Gogo in Tanzania use a type with one line shaped to resemble a letter W. Different kinds of vibrators (the device that makes the sound) are seen, including iron balls like beads, circles of metallic fragments, rounded keys, crown caps, chains, and pins. The purposes of playing this musical instrument may be categorized into three types: Mainly for personal pleasure; for earning income, and for exorcism rituals, weddings, and naming ceremonies.

The Thumb Piano and San Identity in Central Botswana 275 Among African thumb pianos, the distinctive features of those used by the San are their small size, standard number of 15 20 keys, and unique key arrangement of three lines arranged in zigzags. THE SAN THUMB PIANO IN THE CENTRAL KALAHARI 1) Classification of forms The thumb piano comprises three parts: keys; a resonator (sounding board); and vibrators. Those used by the San in the Central Kalahari have four different arrangements of keys. These different types are called Enate, Karanyane, Taon taon, and Runba by the San people (Photo 1). The Enate has two key lines and ten keys. The Karanyane has two lines and 12 keys. The Taon taon has three lines on the left side and two lines on the right. The Runba has three lines arranged in zigzags. Cylindrical cans of milk powder are often used as resonators by the San. Different from practices in other districts, wooden boxes or gourds are rarely used. Enate Karanyane /Taon /taon Runba Photo 1 The four different types of the San thumb piano.

276 As vibrators, bead-like iron balls strung on a wire are common. Recently, however, throwaway vinyl pieces have been inserted into keys to transmit the key vibrations. This was the invention of the San people of New Xade village in Central Botswana. 2) The route by which each form spread I have described above the four types of San thumb piano used in the Central Kalahari. I shall now describe the route by which each was introduced to the district. First, the Karanyane was introduced to the Gui by Nharo living on farms at Ghanzi. The Gui learned of this type around 1960, when the Nharo visited the watering place at Xade (Photo 2). In contrast, the Enate, Taon taon, and Runba were introduced by the Kalanga. The Enate was learned from Mr. A of the Kalanga when an inhabitant of Molapo (Mr. K. A.) visited Racops. Subsequently, an inhabitant of Xade learned how to play the instrument on a visit to Molapo. In the early 1970s, the San were leading a nomadic life within the Central Kalahari Game Reserve. Although wild watermelon was important as their source of water in those days, their annual change of residential location depended greatly on precipitation conditions in the rainy season. One year, when wild watermelons flourished in Kouchuugyomu, many inhabitants of Molapo (including Mr. C) visited Photo 2 A thumb piano player in about 1960.

The Thumb Piano and San Identity in Central Botswana 277 (Zimbabwe) B D (Botswana) A C Kalanga Shona Venda (South Africa) Central Kalahari Game Reserve A : Enate B : Karanyane C : /Taon/taon D : Runba Camp with many watermelons Figure 2 The diffusion routes of the thumb piano there and lived with Gana and Gui in Xade, teaching the method of Runba playing to the people in Xade. Subsequently, it was documented that this skill had been passed from an older brother to a younger brother in Xade. The skill of playing the San thumb piano has passed easily from one person to another in the Central Kalahari. It was introduced via two routes: from Nharo to the northwest and Kalanga to the northeast (Figure 2). 3) Manufacturing skills Thumb pianos are sometimes made by their players themselves, and sometimes not. First, the maker hollows the instrument s body from part of the trunk of an acacia tree (Photo 3). When an NGO called Mambo Art was active, planks of wood they provided were used as the piano material. The maker also acquires scrap iron at villages or towns and processes it into keys for the instrument. The keys are tuned by adjusting their lengths with reference to the sound of existing instruments (Photo 4). Lastly, the maker installs a vibrator, which is commonly produced by passing the wire for a key through a 1 cm diameter ring.

278 Photo 3 The thumb piano body is made by planing a roughly cut block of wood. Photo 4 The keys are tuned by adjusting their lengths.

The Thumb Piano and San Identity in Central Botswana 279 THE ROLE OF THE SAN THUMB PIANO 1) Players All the eighteen players whom I interviewed were male, comprising five Gana, ten Gui, two Hai nu and one Tsila (Table 1). Only some of the men play the instrument within villages in the settlement. They play the pianos walking through the villages or sitting under trees in daytime, or in order to calm themselves when they cannot fall asleep after others have gone to bed. Each plays for himself, needless of any surrounding listeners. The player plays the thumb piano by moving the thumbs of both hands smoothly along the long and short zigzag lines of keys arranged on the trunk. After a few minutes, he sometimes stops playing and tunes the keys to make his preferred sound. The pitch differs according to the length of the key. Long keys make a lowpitched sound, whereas short keys produce a higher pitch. The keys are seldom arranged in a seven-note scale. Unexpectedly, the players generally do not learn how to play the pianos from their fathers, but rather from their acquaintances (Photo 5). There are a few rare individuals who can play more than one type of thumb piano. Most, however, can play only one. The Runba tends to be played by younger players; older men commonly play the others. Among the eighteen players, four cannot make their own thumb pianos. Ten Table 1 Characteristics of thumb piano players No. Ethnic Resident area type technique owner 1 Gana Molapo A 2 Gana Molapo A 3 Gana Molapo D 4 Gana Molapo D 5 Hai nu Metsamaneng A 6 Tshila Mothomelo A 7 Gana New Xade D 8 Gui New Xade A, C 9 Gui New Xade C 10 Gui New Xade B 11 Gui New Xade B 12 Gui New Xade B 13 Gui New Xade A, B, C, D 14 Gui New Xade D 15 Gui New Xade D 16 Gui New Xade D 17 Gui New Xade B 18 Hai nu New Xade B A, Enate; B, Karanyane; C, /Taon/taon; D, Runba

280 Photo 5 The player makes the keys. players own their own instruments. Players who do not have their own instruments borrow instruments from the owners. The skill of playing is not passed down from father to son. Rather, visitors to camps or villages have distributed the instruments. 2) Analysis of tunes Each player has his own personal set of tunes that he can play. For example, Mr. S plays the Song of Gemsbock, God called Peacetago, Heartybeast, Wildebeest, the Song of New Xade (Kweisakweni), the Song of Debt, the Song of an Ostrich, the Song of Runba, and the Song of a Hare. The tunes are divided into those for the Runba, which has a seven-note scale, those for the Enate, and others. Runba tunes have particular musical characteristics. The instrument s keys are arranged from left to right with the notes fa, la, do, re, mi, fa, and sol (Figure 3). Initially, a Kalanga living in Racops visited Zimbabwe, where he learned tunes for the Runba. These were then broadcast over the radio in Botswana. Mr. S listened to them on the radio and arranged them to compose his own original songs. Figure 4 shows a musical score for the Runba by Mr. S. This tune has a threepitch range and is composed of melody and bass sounds. It consists of the monotonous repetition of two short patterns in which the high and low fa are repeated alternately. Because players have only two thumbs, it is impossible to touch

The Thumb Piano and San Identity in Central Botswana 281 Figure 3 The relationship between the key s position and musical scores in the thumb piano (Transcription by Youko Shimomura) Figure 4 Musical scores of the Runba (Transcription by Youko Shimomura)

282 Photo 6 This player has many original songs. three keys simultaneously. However, three sounds can be made at the same time by producing two sounds while another resonates. 3) Changes in recent years In recent years Mr. S, who is known as the best player in the village, has begun to go on concert tours with westerners. This resulted in his being categorized as a musician. As a result of this experience, he has composed a number of his own tunes (Photo 6). The Song of Debt is a song deploring people who do not pay their debts. In the Song of Kweisakweni (the name of the new community to which they moved), he expresses the pain of an unsuccessful new life (Ikeya 2001). Currently, he is adept at playing Runba tunes in imitation of popular songs broadcast on the radio. He has developed a wide repertoire of original popular songs based on his own real-life experiences. CONCLUSIONS This report has described the thumb pianos used by the San people living in Central Botswana. Its intention was to offer a description of their forms, processes of introduction, tune structure, and function in peoples lives. The author draws the following conclusions.

The Thumb Piano and San Identity in Central Botswana 283 1) Distinctive features of the San thumb piano The thumb piano of the San people in Botswana has a distinctive form, with three lines of keys arranged in zigzags. It is unique among those in Africa. 2) The process of introduction The thumb piano played in the Central Kalahari has spread easily from one player to another. This paper has described two routes and processes of introduction, one from San living to the northwest and another from those to the northeast. 3) Characteristics of players and the function of the instrument in their lives It was found that those who play the instrument have not always produced it themselves. Some players do not have their own instruments, and the instruments are therefore frequently borrowed or rented. Playing skills are not passed down from father to son. In cases where it was introduced, it was learned from the same player. The contents of the tunes are highly expressive of the people s spiritual world. Examples are a song about the mental anguish caused by the move to a new settlement and one deploring unpaid debts. As I have described, there are four different shapes of thumb piano that are used in Central Botswanan San communities. Playing skills are not passed down from fathers to sons. Rather, they are learned from outsiders during visits to other communities or during visitors stays in their own community. For this reason, I consider that the ease with which the instruments are made and a pattern of behavior that allows players to stroll from one camp to another playing the instruments are reasons why thumb pianos have spread easily. In previous studies, I have elucidated the socio-economic relations between the Bantu and the San through the distribution of fur in the Kalahari (Ikeya 1998, 1999). The San thumb pianos, however, are spread through chance meetings with others. I therefore infer that a study of the history of how these instruments were introduced into communities of the San people will provide a novel perspective on the history of relations between the San and the Bantu. Such a perspective might even be more useful than the study of economic relations. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank the office of the President of the Botswana Government for permission to undertake the investigations. NOTES 1) Although there are many published studies of the thumb piano in Africa (Kubik 1998; Tracy A. 1961,1963; Tracy H. 1961, 1969; Berliner 1978; Dehoux 1986; Borel 1986; Kubik 1998;

284 Ikeya 2004), few papers have described San thumb pianos (see, for example, Nurse 1959; Biesele 1975). 2) It is said that non-san instruments used there are thumb pianos (lamellaphones) and mouth bows and harps (Nurse 1959). REFERENCES Biesele, M. 1975 Song by the Master of Tricks: Kalahari San Thumb Piano Music. Botswana Notes and Records 7: 171 188. Berliner, P. 1978 The Soul of Mbira. Berkeley: University of California Press. Borel, F. 1986 Les Sanza. Neuchatel: Musée de Ethnographie. Dehoux, V. 1986 Chants a Penser Gbaya (Centrafrique). Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique. Ikeya, K. 1998 Interaction between San and Kgalagadi in the Colonial Era. In Proceedings of the Khoisan Identities and Cultural Heritage Conferences. Cape Town: Infosource. pp.59 66. 1999 The Historical Dynamics of the Socioeconomic Relationship between the Nomadic San and the Kgalagadi. Botswana Notes and Records 31: 19 32. 2001 Some Changes among the San under the Influence of Relocation Plan in Botswana. Senri Ethnological Studies 59: 183 198. 2004 Thokwe Lamellaphones in Northeastern Angola. Cultures Sonores D Afrique III: 111 125. 2005 Socioeconomic Relationship between Herders and Hunters: A Comparison of the Kalahari Desert and Northeastern Siberia. Senri Ethnological Studies 69: 31 44. Kubik, G. 1998 Kalimba, Nsansi, Mbira-Lamellophone in Afrika. Berlin: Museum für Völkerkunde. Nurse, G. T. 1959 Musical Instrumentation among the San (Bushmen) of the Central Kalahari. African Music 5(2): 23 27. Tracy, A. 1961 Mbira Music of Jege A. Tapera. African Music 2 (4): 44 65. 1963 Three Tunes on the Mbira dza Vadzimu. African Music 3 (2): 23 26. 1970 The Matepe Mbira Music of Rhodesia. African Music 4 (4): 37 61. Tracy, H. 1961 A Case for the Name Mbira. African Music 2 (4): 17 43.