Mtsitso Wa Wuraru; The Analysis of Chopi People’s Music and Its Relation to Indonesia

Mtsitso Wa Wuraru; The Analysis of Chopi People’s Music and Its Relation to Indonesia

Authors

  • I Wayan Sudirana Institut Seni Indonesia Denpasar

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31091/lekesan.v4i1.1455

Keywords:

Chopi, Xylophone, Timbila, Wilah, Bilah

Abstract

Many scholars have suggested that Chopi performance was influenced by Indonesian performance practices because of its similarity to Javanese and Balinese Gamelans (Jones 1964, 6). By using non-musical evidence to support their arguments, some have explored in depth the similarities in the use of the terminology, tuning system, organology and orchestration. Even though they found some striking similarities, the lack of evidence of this issue rendered their arguments inconclusive. Therefore, I am here not to argue against or to agree with these scholars. Instead, I will reexamine their arguments, especially the one by A.M. Jones in his Book “Africa and Indonesia,” and based on my knowledge of Indonesian music and literature review of the music of Chopi people, and hopefully to come to the most coherent conclusion. This paper discusses the historical, cultural, and musical form of the music of the Chopi people of Southern Mozambique. The Chopi has an extraordinary musical culture, which features their large xylophone orchestras. I will examine their xylophone (timbila) in terms of its history, instrumentation, cultural and social context, as well as briefly explore the performance of dance based on literature review. I will analyze a piece from Hugh Tracey’s impressive recording called “Msitso Wa Wuraru,” the third orchestral introduction of the Migodo dance performance, to illustrate the complexity of the playing technique and musical performance. Then, I will compare the xylophone tradition of the Chopi and Indonesian, in order to find the similarities and differences between them.

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References

Chernoff, John Miller. 1979. African Rhythm and African Sensibility. The University of Chicago Press. Chicago.

Hogan, Brian. 2006. Locating The Chopi Xylophone Ensemble of Southern Mosambique. Pacific review of Ethnomusicology, Vol. 11, UCLA.

Hutton, J.H. 1946. West Africa and Indonesia: A Problem in Distribution. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol.76, No. 1, pp. 5-12. Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland

Jones, A.M. 1959. Indonesia and Africa: The Xylophone as Culture-Indicator. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 89, No. 2, pp. 155-168.

________,1964. African and Indonesia, The Evidence of the Xylophone and Other Musical and Cultural Factors. Leiden E. J. Brill. Amsterdams.

Smith, Alan K. 1973. People of Southern Mozambique: An Historical Survey. The Journal of African History. 14 (4): 565-580.

Tracey, Hugh. 1964. Wood Music of the Chopi. Journal of the International Folk Music Council, Vol. 16. p. 91.

_____________, 1970. Chopi Musicians. Oxford University Press, London. Vail, Leroy and White, Landeg. 1983. Forms of Resistance: Songs and Perceptions of Power in Colonial Mozambique. The American Historical Review, Vol. 88, No. 4. pp. 883-919.

Voisin, Frederic. 1994. Musical Scales in Central Africa and Java: Modeling by Synthesis,

Leonardo Music Journal, Vol. 4, pp. 85-90, The MIT Press

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Published

2021-06-08

How to Cite

Sudirana, I. W. (2021). Mtsitso Wa Wuraru; The Analysis of Chopi People’s Music and Its Relation to Indonesia. Lekesan: Interdisciplinary Journal of Asia Pacific Arts, 4(1), 27–38. https://doi.org/10.31091/lekesan.v4i1.1455

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