East African
Composer: Ndiche Band (Performer)Composer not specified |
1923-00-00 |
banjo, East African, Guitar, Instrumental, Malawi, Ndiche Band, Nyanja, Nyasaland, Popular music, Southern African, Vocal, ILAM |
Further details refer ILAM shellac record (commercial recordings) number: CR1015
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Artist(s): Bom Amberon (Leader) |
Composer: Salum's Brass Band (Performer)Composer not specified |
1950/07/10 |
Amberon,Bom, Band music, Brass, Dance music, Daressalaam, Drum, East African, Nguja, Quick-step, Salum's Brass Band, Swahili, Tanganyika, Tanzania, ILAM |
Further details refer ILAM shellac record number: TP1642
Artist(s): S. Saliman (Leader) |
Composer: Salum's Brass Band (Performer) |
1950/07/05 |
Band music, Brass band, Dance music, East African, Nguja, Quick Step, Salum Seliman, Salum's Brass Band, Swahili, Zanziba, ILAM |
Quick step by brass band. Further details refer ILAM field card (D3P9)
Composer: Bomera (Performer)Tibuhoire (Performer)Composer not specified |
1952-00-00 |
Asegu flute, Bomera, East African, Hoima, Indigenous music, Kikali, Nyoro, pipe tunes, Tibuhoire, Uganda, ILAM |
Further details refer to ILAM record number: CR1927.
Artist(s): Kepkoske Arap Chepkwony (Performer) |
Composer: Kipkemo Arap Sitonik (Performer and Composer) |
1950/09/15 |
Chepkwony,Kepkoske Arap, East African, Indigenous music, Kenya, Kipsigis, Kipsigis, Lyre, Praise song, Sitonik,Kipkemo Arap, ILAM |
Further details refer ILAM field card number D6L-3.
Artist(s): Kipkemo Arap SitonikKepkoske Arap Chepkwony |
1950/09/15 |
Bowl lyre, Chepkongo bowl lyre, Chepkwony, Kepkoske Arap, East African, Indigenous music, Kapkatet, Kenya, Kericho, Kipsigis, Kipsigis district, Praise song, Sitonik, Kipkemo Arap, ILAM |
A praise song with Chepkongo 6 string bowl lyre. This lyre is strummed and fingered like the Bangwe zither of Nyasaland. The right hand strums the strings and the left mutes or opens the 6 strings, making it possible to play two or three chords on the open un-muted strings. The singer mentions by name his home village, places of common interest to his friends. The player flips the body of his lyre on the 2nd and 4th beats. In common with several African verse makers, the singer sings in couplets, repeating the second phrase and making it the first line of the next.Details from ILAM field card number: D6L 3
Composer: Malakwen Chepsaikut (Performer)Composer not specified |
1950-00-00 |
Chepsaikut, East African, Kapsabet, Kenya, Malakwen, Nandi, Nandi district, Praise song, ILAM |
Topical song with Kipukandet 5 string lyre (5 or 6 string pentatonic lyre used by Nandi tribe in Kenya, also known as Kibugantet and Chepkong.) This lyre is strummed like a guitar with the right hand, the left hand stopping the five strings, like the Bongwe zither of Nyasaland. This gave 2 chords. Notes 1, 3 and 5 and notes 2 and 4. One string, they said, was missing, the lower octave of number 1. The scale was: 308, 256, 232, 206, 180, (154) vs.
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