Showing posts with label Nyoro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nyoro. Show all posts

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Hugh Tracey - Musical Instruments - 2 - Reeds (Mbira)


Hugh Tracey - The Music of Africa Series
Musical Instruments - 2 - Reeds (Mbira)
Kaleidophone - KMA 2 - P.1972


Side A

Pentatonic Instruments

A01 Kyonda ali mugenyi (The careful father) Nyoro - 1'24
A02 Maganga kalila zanwelo (Manganga wishes you luck) Gogo - 1'04
A03 Dylowe dyambule kabanda (The ant carries a load) Luba - 1'24
A04 Ndiri - Alur - 1'26
A05 Kiriyo (A woman is wonderful) - Soga 2'07

Hexatonic Instruments

A06 Detyetye kusheka (To laugh) Ndau - 3'34
A07 Hondoro (Hondoro, soul) Ndau - 1'18
A08 Meki, ye Meki woye (Meki has lost something) Ndau - 2'44
A09 Mwadzi itira (He did it himself) Ndau - 1'33
A10 Kemai - Luba - 1'25

Side B

B01 Bata wasungu mulundu - Lala - 1'50
B02 Harusi (Wedding tune) Nyamwezi -1'21
B03 Bidera - Venda - 1'18
B04 Magonde (Song for the Chief) Njanja - 1'37
B05 Gororombe yawakuru (The Gororombe dance of the elders) Karanga - 1'29
B06 Sitima senda namoto (The train goes with fire) Mbunda - 2'24
B07 Tambuka nalikishi (The mask dance) Mbunda - 1'51
B08 Muzeze (Prisoner, dance the Muzeze) Binza - 1'56
B09 Nemangolia - Medje - 1'14
B10 Dzoli - Medje - 1'45




This LP has the same contents as the K7 recently posted by the good Stefan at the Worldservice blog here. I have not checked that carefully, like track times and such, but all the tracks seem to match and the order is the same so I assume they are identical edits as well. This particular series on Kaleidophone consisted of 10 LP's and I will post all of the others here and also some more individual volumes from earlier series on Decca and Gallotone but I only have random numbers from those catalogue.







Hugh Tracey - Musical Instruments - 1 - Strings


Hugh Tracey - The Music of Africa Series
Musical Instruments - 1 - Strings
Kaleidophone - KMA 1 - P.1972


Side A

A01 Ganga - Ganda - 1'22
A02 Okwagala omulungi kwesengareza - Ganda - 3'04
A03 Elosi aberu akipore imaqniti abiro - Teso - 0'55
A04 Ekyoma kyabora - Nyoro - 1'37
A05 Tichi mabere - Dhola - 1'27
A06 Gitari na Congo - Zande- 1'33
A07 Munya gwerira Munyale - Ganda - 1'37
A08 Bengeria - Kipsigis - 1'18
A09 Chemirocha - Kipsigis - 1'26
A10 Chepchona marinda - Nandi - 1'00
A11 Gideon Magak - Luo - 1'13
A12 Abasevendi abada - Ganda - 1'18


Side B

B01 Odhiambo Odet - Luo - 1'22
B02 Dzombe rija - Chewa - 1'11
B03 Nenemegyeti - Medje - 1'36
B04 Ngwidika sadanga wapamagulu - Hehe - 3'08
B05 Lukiza - Haya - 2'41
B06 Ndalame - Tonga - 1'56
B07 Kazela kambe lemba - Yao- 1'25
B08 Tisimbi wasauka - Chewa - 1'11
B09 Ihlomulo walekaya mangawa yauima - Hlengwe - 0'53
B10 Ngoneni ngoneni bakithi - Swazi - 1'12



Inspired in parts by a post from Stefan on his wonderful blog Worldservice I decided to pay my tribute to Hugh Tracey who devoted much of his life to preserve African music that most likely otherwise would never have met our ears. The only gripe is of course that much is presented in a very inventory fashion and often we are left with a minute or two , sometimes even less, of music that could have gone on for hours. Well, I am sure his efforts helped to make many more people aware of the richness, creativeness and immense beauty, diversity and depth of African Music. This first part of the series of seven LP's are the devoted each to a group of instruments and the last three edited by geographical origin. Actually by nation, and I think, but I do not know for sure, that many of the other volumes, they were supposedly 118 LP's in all, issued on different labels, had that similar approach. I have come across a few others that were not by nation (geography) but by the best hits of a certain year. This of course resulting from the fact that some recordings he made, he also tried to place on the more hit-driven commercial market. He placed several recordings on 78 rpms in the Gallo catalogue, but most were produced and distributet to reseach libraries, National Radiostations, institutions of music and and musicology and most likely some batches were distributed to various Ethnographic Museums over the world.