ABSTRACT:
The music of Central Africa is well known for the complexity of its temporal organization. In 1965, from the Mbenzele Pygmies in the Central African Republic, I collected what appeared to be a short, unremarkable monodic piece that regularly alternated sung and whistled sounds, both performed by a single musician.
Upon analyzing this piece much later, I realized that it implemented all the metrical and rhythmic principles – from the simplest to the most complex – upon which the music of this region is based. It was as if the Mbenzele had distilled a uniquely African signature out of a vast corpus, thus concentrating the quintessence of its rhythmic genius in a single composition.
The lecture will present musical examples, musical transcriptions and a brief video.
Simha Arom: "The Forest for the Trees": The Metric and Rhythmic Foundations of African Music
Simha Arom is Senior Research Scientist Emeritus, CNRS, France.
April 09, 2008
16:30 - 18:00