African Instruments
African Instruments
African Instruments
Table of Contents
Kettledrum (Antakarana)
Arm rattle
Box rattle
Basketry rattle
Angle harp
Resources
The Singing Man: Adapted from a West African Folktale by Angela Shelf Medearis Let Your Voice Be Heard: Song from Ghana and Zimbabwe: Call and Response, Multipart, and Game Songs (with audio cassette) by Abraham Adzinyah Africa: The Music of a Continent (audio CD) by Various Artists Musical Instruments of Africa Image Slideshow (with audio cassette)
generation. Through their work, all of these people have built international interest in African music and helped maintain Africas traditional musical heritage for Africans and the rest of the world. However, it is important to realize that while traditional African music is worth preserving, contemporary musical styles also deserve admiration and praise. Many musicians have taken traditional elements and reworked them by adding Western instruments, adopting different vocal techniques, and using the latest sound mixing technology. They have also incorporated aspects of musical styles from around the world. African music has come full circle. Many American musical styles came out of the music brought to the New World by African slaves, including jazz, the blues, gospel, rock and roll, rap, and hip-hop, along with many Latin and Caribbean beats. Those musical forms (among others) now inspire and influence modern African musicians. Through the process of borrowing from other cultures and experimenting with their own, these contemporary musicians have created a new sound that is still rooted in the rich musical traditions of their past.
Another important musical instrument in the African repertoire is the human body, which fits into several of the categories above. People may create a melody or harmony line by singing, or add percussion to a song by clapping their hands, slapping their thighs, pounding the upper arms and chest, and stamping or shuffling their feet. Known as body percussion, these movements have traditionally been incorporated into the routines of dancers, who perform solo or in groups, maneuvering in circles and line formations in time to the music.
Words in boldface have been included in the Vocabulary Words section on page 16.
ACTIVITY 1
All Grades
Africa is a continent of many countries, climates and peoples, but throughout the land music is a major part of daily life. Hundreds of different instruments may be combined in an infinite number of ways to create unique melodies, harmonies, and rhythms. As your students prepare to learn more about the instruments in the case, it is important to remind them that they already possess the most common instrument in the African orchestra: the human body! Along with singing, people from all over Africa also boast an amazing repertoire of body percussion. You and your students can begin to make music like them by simply clapping their hands, slapping your thighs, or stamping your feet!
Discussion Questions:
When you make music by singing or clapping, what instrument are you using? What are some other ways you can make musical sounds using parts of your body? Have students name some musical instruments with which they are familiar. How do these instruments make sound? Talk with students about instruments that make sounds by having air blown into them, by being plucked or bowed, and by being struck, shaken, or scraped. Older students may be able to classify the instruments they know (as outlined in the next activity). What role does music play in your life? Do you make music yourself by singing or playing an instrument? Where do you hear music? What kind of music do you like to listen to?
Materials:
Just yourselves!
What To Do:
1 Gather your students in a circle. Discuss how the human body may be used as an instrument (see Discussion Questions below). 2 Have each child come up with a different sound. They may use their mouth, hands, feet, or any other part of their bodies (examples: clapping hands, slapping thighs or chest, stamping feet, whistling, hooting, or shouting). Encourage them to use their imaginations! 3 When each student has chosen a sound, go around the circle quickly, with each student repeating his or her noise so that you all can hear how the noises sound in combination.
See page 17 for details on how this activity meets New York State Learning Standards.
ACTIVITY 2
Grades 35 Related Objects: All
This activity encourages your students to observe the instruments in the case very closely in order to classify each instrument and relate it to the environment in which it was made. Ask the students to focus on the physical properties of each instrument, which may yield clues about which category of instrument it belongs to and where it was made.
Discussion Questions:
Some instruments are easy to classify, but some are tricky. Discuss the students classifications. What characteristics put the instruments in one group or another? (Be aware that membranophones and idiophones comprise a broader category of percussion instruments, and that thumb pianos are not chordophones.) Have your students close their eyes while you play an instrument from the case, and see if they can identify it by sound alone. Listen to the Musical Instruments of Africa audio tape in the case, which demonstrates the sounds made by the different types of instruments. How do your students describe the differences? As a group, have the students name all the materials from which the instruments are made. What do these materials have in common? Are there other natural materials not represented in the list that can be used to make music? Why arent these instruments made from those materials, too?
Materials:
A copy of the What Type of Instrument Is It? chart for each student, OR a transparency of the chart and an overhead projector, OR a large piece of chart paper. Musical Instruments of Africa audio tape
What To Do:
1 Start with a discussion: Tell the students that the instruments in the case represent three of the four categories of instrument that can be found not only in Africa but throughout the world. Those categories are aerophones (flutes, horns, trumpets, and whistles), chordophones (harps, lyres, lutes, and guitars), membranophones (drums with skins), and idiophones (bells, rattles, gongs, and thumb pianos). (See page 5 for more information about these categories of instruments.) 2 Create several stations in the classroom. Place one or more of the instruments at each station. 3 Use one instrument and the observation chart to demonstrate how to observe and describe an object, and how to record what you have seen. Talk about the shape and sound of the instrument, the material from which it is made, and its decoration (if any).
See page 17 for details on how this activity meets New York State Learning Standards.
Look at each instrument carefully. How does it make sound? Put an X in the category where you think it belongs. What type of instrument is not found in the case? _________________________________________________
What materials is Aerophone Chordophone Membranophone Idiophone this instrument made of?
ACTIVITY 3
Grades 2 4 Related Objects: Kettledrum (Antakarana), arm rattle, box rattle, basketry rattle
One of the most common elements of the music of many African nations is percussion. Percussion instruments are a type of instrument that is beaten or struck to create sound. They often mark the tempo of a song, and usually include membranophones and idiophones (though people may also create body percussion by clapping their hands or stamping their feet, for example). Since percussion instruments do not necessarily need to maintain a certain pitch, they are much easier to make than tuned instruments like harps or thumb pianos. The three instruments described below are simple and fun to make, and can be used to complete other activities in this guide.
Materials:
Drums: Containers (such as metal or sturdy plastic cans, or ceramic flower pots) of different sizes Uninflated balloons (one per student), cut to fit over the head of the each childs container Large rubber bands, twine, and raffia (optional) Rattles: Paper cups Dried peas, beans, or rice Scrapers: Plastic beverage bottles (labels removed) Wire Glue and colorful collage materials or paint to decorate the outside of the instruments
What To Do:
Drums: 1 Have each student choose a container, and work with the students to stretch the balloons over the open end of their containers. Secure the balloon with a large rubber band. 2 If desired, they may tie twine or raffia around the drum to cover the rubber band. 3 Pass out collage materials or paints for students to decorate the outside of their drums. Rattles: 1 Have your students fill one paper cup halfway with dried peas, beans, or rice. 2 Then they should turn the second cup upside down to make a lid for the first cup, and tape the two cups firmly together. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS OF AFRICA 11
Discussion Questions:
What is a membranophone? What is an idiophone? What type of instrument did you make? What other percussion instruments can you think of? What are the three ways a percussion instrument can be played? (Struck, shaken, or scraped) What role does percussion play in making music? Is it always in the background, or can it provide the melody as well?
See page 17 for details on how this activity meets New York State Learning Standards.
ACTIVITY 4
Grades 25 Related Objects: Kettledrum (Antakarana), arm rattle, box rattle, basketry rattle
How can a group of percussion instruments play together without sounding like a bunch of meaningless noise? The trick is to establish a steady beat and have each instrument play a rhythm that follows it. Try these easy patterns with your class using the instruments in the case, or instruments your students have made themselves. Students will learn how rhythmic patterns are produced and combined to make music using mathematical thinking.
Materials:
Percussion instruments from the case OR percussion instruments made in the previous activity
Write these patterns on the board, and count out loud as each section practices its pattern individually. When each group knows its rhythm, have all three groups play at the same time. 7 Once the students have completed this last exercise, encourage each group make up its own four-beat rhythm and have the three groups play all together again.
What To Do:
1 Try these patterns in roughly the following order. You should start out as the leader, but once the class has gotten the hang of each pattern, try letting a student lead. 2 Call and response: The leader plays a rhythm on one instrument, and everybody else plays the same rhythm in reply. 3 Question and answer: In pairs, one person plays a rhythm (the question) and their partner plays a different rhythm (the answer) in reply. 4 Together beat: The leader repeats a rhythm over and over. Everyone else joins in only on every third, fourth, or fifth beat.
Discussion Questions:
Have students evaluate how they performed in their groups and as a class. Did they follow each pattern as it was established? Were they able to maintain a steady beat? In the last activity, were they able to play their own groups rhythm, or did they unintentionally start following the rhythm of another group?
See page 17 for details on how this activity meets New York State Learning Standards.
ACTIVITY 5
Grades 15 Related Objects: Kettledrum (Antakarana), arm rattle, box rattle, basketry rattle
Music is a vital part of everyday life in Africa, even for the very young. Children learn to sing and keep rhythm by observing their parents and elders. Many childrens games allow them to practice these skills. We have adapted the following activity from Oboo Asi Me Nsa, a well-known Ghanaian childrens rhythm game found on pages 1416 of Let Your Voice Be Heard! Songs from Ghana and Zimbabwe (included in the case). The book includes several other game songs you might try in addition to or instead of this one.
Materials:
Let Your Voice Be Heard! Songs from Ghana and Zimbabwe book and audio tape One or more rocks, balls, beanbags, or other small objects to be passed around during the game Percussion instruments from the case OR percussion instruments made in the previous activity
What To Do:
1 Write the words to Oboo Asi Me Nsa on the board, along with their pronunciations (found on page 15 of Let Your Voice Be Heard!). 2 Practice chanting the words out loud with the class. 3 Play the song from the audio tape. Now try singing the words along with the tape. Practice until you and the class can sing the song by yourselves, without the audio tape. 4 Have the class sit close together in a circle on the floor, and teach your students the motions for the game. (The object of the game is to pass one or more rocks counterclockwise around the circle, but it is easiest to practice the motions before giving them anything to pass.) In a four-beat pattern, the students pick up the rock and tap it the ground on the first Beat Words: Pronunciation: Action: 1 Oboo Obwah Tap 2 asi me see me Pass 3 nsa, sah, Tap 4
Discussion Questions:
How did singing the song help you keep track of the rhythm of the game? Did it make passing the rock easier or harder? Do you play rhythm games with your friends? What kind? (Examples: chanting or singing while performing hand-clap patterns or jumping rope.) What lessons do these rhythm games emphasize? (Examples: accuracy, cooperation, paying attention.)
See page 17 for details on how this activity meets New York State Learning Standards.
ACTIVITY 6
All Grades Related Objects: All
Sing a Story
5 Read your class the story of The Boy and the Tree of the Animals (found on page 40). Pause where marked in the text, and lead the class in singing Zangaiwa Chakatanga Pano. Make sure to sing it at the storys ending, too! 6 If you like, your students may play their percussion instruments softly as they sing, to help keep the beat. Alternatively, they may make up sounds or actions to accompany different parts of the story.
Africa has a rich storytelling tradition. Travelling minstrels (known as griots in West Africa, though they have other names in different parts of the continent) go from village to village, playing harps and other instruments, and entertaining their audiences with legends and folktales told in a combination of story and song. We have adapted the following activity from Zangaiwa Chakatanga Pano, a Ghanaian story song found on pages 3741 of Let Your Voice Be Heard! Songs from Ghana and Zimbabwe (included in the case). The book includes several other story songs you might try in addition to or instead of this one.
Discussion Questions:
What would the story of The Boy and the Tree of the Animals have been like if there was no song to go with it? How did the song add to your experience of the story? Discuss how people in the U.S. tell stories using a combination of words and music. For example, encourage students to draw parallels between a griots tale and musical theater, both of which tell stories in words and music. Is it possible to tell a story while singing all the words? Can you name some American examples of stories told entirely in song? (Classic examples include The Star-Spangled Banner, Mary Had a Little Lamb, and My Darling Clementine, but there are plenty of modern rock and rap examples, too, such as Leader of the Pack, Love Potion No. 9, Parents Just Dont Understand, and I Missed the Bus.)
Materials:
Let Your Voice Be Heard! Songs from Ghana and Zimbabwe book and audio tape The Singing Man by Angela Shelf Medearis (optional) Instruments from the case OR percussion instruments made in the previous activity (optional)
What To Do:
1 Optional: Read The Singing Man aloud to your students to introduce them to the role of storytellers in West African society. 2 Write the words to Zangaiwa Chakatanga Pano on the board, along with their pronunciations (found on page 38 of Let Your Voice Be Heard!). 3 Chant the Leaders line out loud for the class, and have your students practice chanting the Group line back to you in response. 4 Play the song from the audio tape. Now try singing the words along with the tape. Practice until you and the class can sing the song by yourselves, without the audio tape.
See page 17 for details on how this activity meets New York State Learning Standards.
ACTIVITY 7
Music has been called a universal language. Certainly it is one with instant appeal for children, and which they can appreciate across cultural boundaries. All over the world but particularly in Africa, music is closely tied to cultural practices. Therefore, music in Africa offers a good starting point not only for music and art curricula, but also connections with topics in social studies, literacy, geography, and even science. The activities and resources in this guide are all intended to give you some ideas for incorporating African instruments into your curriculum. They are only meant to provide a starting point, though. We have included a matrix detailing how each activity connects to current New York State Learning Standards (see page 16), but there are many more connections you could make with other content areas. You and your students together can determine how and where you wish this curriculum to go.
Vocabulary Words
aerophone:
a wind instrument, which is caused to sound by blowing air through it. Flutes, trumpets, horns and clarinets are examples of aerophones.
beat: a pattern of evenly spaced, rhythmic accents used to keep time in a song. chord:
a combination of two or more musical notes that blend harmoniously when played together.
percussion: a type of instrument (or group of instruments in a band) that is beaten or struck to create sound. Percussion instruments often mark the tempo of a song, and usually include membranophones and idiophones. People may also create body percussion by clapping their hands or stamping their feet, for example. pitch: how high or low a tone is. resonator: a hollow chamber in a musical instrument that increases its ability to sound (and therefore its volume). Also known as a sound box. rhythm: an organized pattern of accented and unaccented tones or silences that carries music forward. tempo:
how fast or slow a song is.
chordophone:
a stringed instrument, which is caused to sound by plucking, strumming, or bowing the strings. The arched harp in the case is a chordophone. Guitars, lutes, fiddles, and zithers are other examples of chordophones.
clapper:
a piece of wood or metal hung inside a bell. When the bell is rung, the clapper strikes the sides of the bell and makes it sound.
griot:
a traveling singer and storyteller from West Africa.
tone:
a musical sound produced by an instrument or the human voice.
harmony: a series of musical notes that, when played at the same time as the melody, create chords. head: a membrane stretched across one end of a drum, which is struck to create sound. idiophone:
an instrument that vibrates as a whole when it is played, and which is caused to sound by striking or shaking. Bells and rattles are examples of idiophones, as are gongs, xylophones, and cymbals.
tongue: a piece of metal, wood, or another material that is attached to a musical instrument (such as a thumb piano) and resonates when plucked. Known as a tongue because, like an animals tongue, it is long and fastened only at one end. vibration:
in musical instruments, vibration is how sound is produced. When a string is plucked or a bell is struck, the tiny particles it is made out of move back and forth rapidly (but often so slightly as to be invisible), creating sound waves that the human ear interprets as a musical tone. For more vocabulary ideas, see the Word play extension activity on page 15.
melody:
the tune of a song.
membranophone:
an instrument that has a membrane (often made of animal skin) stretched over a resonator. The most common membranophone is the drum, but mirlitons (such as the kazoo) are also membranophones; their membranes vibrate and create sound when air is blown across them.
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Arts
Music
Arts
Music
Arts
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Arts
Visual Arts
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a b d
Arts
Music
Arts Arts
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Music Music
f a
Arts
Music
Arts
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Arts
Music
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ELA
Listening & Reading Listening & Reading Speaking & Writing Speaking & Writing Speaking & Writing Speaking & Writing Speaking & Writing Speaking & Writing Speaking & Writing
ELA ELA
1 1
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Social Studies
Social Studies
Social Studies
3 3
Brincard, Marie-Therese. Sounding Forms: African Musical Instruments. New York: The
American Federation of Arts, 1989.
Dagan, Esther A., ed. Drums: The Heartbeat of Africa. Montreal: Galerie Amrad African Art
Publications, 1993.
Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn (718) 638-5000 www.brooklynmuseum.org
DjeDje, Jacqueline Cogdell, ed. Turn Up the Volume! A Celebration of African Music. Hong
Kong: University of California Los Angeles Fowler Museum Publications, 1999.
Los Angeles County Museum of Art: The Heritage of African Music. Written for children,
this site includes good contextual information and vocabulary words. www.lacma.org/art/exhibition/african/body.htm
National Museum for African Art: Audible Artworks: Selected African Musical Instruments. This Smithsonian site includes
audio clips of different instruments being played. www.nmafa.si.edu/exhibits/aud_art/
Stanford University Libraries: African Music on the Internet. A comprehensive list of links to
Internet sites about African musical styles (both contemporary and traditional), musical instruments, and musicians. Includes many links to audio clips of African music. www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/music.html
The Brooklyn Childrens Museum also offers programs on a variety of cross-cultural topics. For a listing of programs currently available, please see our website at www.brooklynkids.org, or contact the Scheduling Assistant at 718-735-4400, extension 118.
Acknowledgments
Beth Alberty Niobe Ngozi Chrisy Ledakis Yuko Waragai Tim Hayduk Nobue Hirabayashi
Special Thanks
Gloria Cones The Teachers of the New York City Department of Education
Funding
This revision of Brooklyn Childrens Museums Portable Collections Program is made possible by a Learning Opportunity Grant from the Institute for Museum and Library Services.
2006 Brooklyn Childrens Museum 145 Brooklyn Avenue Brooklyn, New York 11213 718-735-4400 ext. 170 www.brooklynkids.org
For information about renting this or other Portable Collections Program cases, please contact the Scheduling Assistant at 718-735-4400 ext. 118.