The Cultural Importance Of Ewe Drumming
by: vgevge
status: Platinum Poster
Total views: 2
Word Count: 514
Ewe drumming is as complex as its history is long. The Ewe people are thought to have migrated to their current location around the 13th century, and their tradition of drumming has long been an established fact. Ewe drumming involves not only complicated drumming but a complex culture as well. These people believe that if a person is a good drummer, it is because they inherited the spirit of an ancestor who was a good drummer. In addition to familial implications, music among the Ewe is used to enhance a sense of community. Clearly, Ewe drumming is more than a simple form of entertainment.
Ewe drums are generally constructed like barrels, "staved" with metal rings, although it is possible to obtain high-quality instruments carved from a single block of wood. The drums are played with either sticks or hands. Enhancing the social importance of these instruments is the fact that they are often named after members of the family: the "kagan" is the "baby brother drum," and it's beats are usually weak and in a repeated pattern; the "kidi," or "mother drum," has a much more active role, but it is still an accompanying instrument; the "sogo," or "father drum" leads the "kidi," and all of these are responsive to the "atsimevu," or "grandfather drum." Such names and roles make clear the importance of drums in Ewe culture.
Ewe drumming involves sophisticated cross rhythms (beats shifted in a metric pattern to different positions) and polyrhythms (simultaneous soundings of two or more independent rhythms). Some authorities hold that the art's use of rhythm is similar to that of jazz which, it is interesting to remember, originated in the African-American communities of the southern United States.
In addition to its roles in family and community, these drums have a place in religious practices as well. The "Tro-u" is a style of drum music used to invite ancestors to shrines on sacred occasions. The rhythms of this style are dictated by a priest or priestess, and the music allows this person to communicate with the spirit world. "Sowu" is one of the sacred forms of music used by the cult of Yewe in worship of the God of Thunder.
BlueWaterArticles.com: - The Cultural Importance Of Ewe Drumming
About the Author
Victor Epand is an expert consultant for guitars, drums, keyboards, sheet music, guitar tab, and home theater audio. You can find the best marketplace at these sites for drums, Ewe drumming, sheet music, guitar tabs, and home theater audio.
*You may use the contents of the above article on any site so long as you adhere to our Terms Of Service and include a link back to our site as follows
Rating: Not yet rated
