The kalumbu or musical bow is probably found more often than any other indigenous instrument in Zambia. I have been able to make a careful study of several of these instruments and there are many points of interest both in the tuning and general layout of the music. Two of my players used a large bow which they said was peculiar to the Ila people. The calabash resonator is from some kind of pumpkin which they call kankuli. The instrument can be tuned by moving the calabash, which is attached to a piece of wire acting as bridge, up or down the stick
The nnanga is a bowed-neck harp found in the Buganda kingdom, located on Lake Victoria in southern U...
The Tsonga of Mozambique and South Africa are located between the Venda in the northwest and the Cho...
Musical bows are frequently seen in south-western Angola among populations which speak Humbi, Handa ...
In the 1965 issue of this Journal, I gave some details of the music and tuning of two Zambian kalumb...
Nearly all musical bows used in the indigenous music of southern Africa are single string melody ins...
The music quoted in this article was played to me by Leonard Kembe, who is one of the few educated Z...
Once I got the opportunity to go to Zambia to conduct field research and stay with the Lala people f...
In the late 1970s a vinyl LP disc was published with recordings by David Marks of the Mpondo Xhosa m...
In the last issue of the Journal I gave some details of an eight-keyed Lunda Kalendi with the tuning...
The kalimba described here is one used by the Lunda people in the North Western Province of Northern...
The author was fortunate enough to be able to spend some days among them in the company of Dr Jiro T...
In the last issue of this Journal there was an account of a traditional instrumentalists’ course con...
There is a relatively long history of scholarly interest in the tuning of different musical pitch sy...
In October, 1953, I sent to the British Museum parts of a tripartite musical apparatus used by the M...
The recordings on which this analysis is based, were made between July 24th and August 7th, 1961, in...
The nnanga is a bowed-neck harp found in the Buganda kingdom, located on Lake Victoria in southern U...
The Tsonga of Mozambique and South Africa are located between the Venda in the northwest and the Cho...
Musical bows are frequently seen in south-western Angola among populations which speak Humbi, Handa ...
In the 1965 issue of this Journal, I gave some details of the music and tuning of two Zambian kalumb...
Nearly all musical bows used in the indigenous music of southern Africa are single string melody ins...
The music quoted in this article was played to me by Leonard Kembe, who is one of the few educated Z...
Once I got the opportunity to go to Zambia to conduct field research and stay with the Lala people f...
In the late 1970s a vinyl LP disc was published with recordings by David Marks of the Mpondo Xhosa m...
In the last issue of the Journal I gave some details of an eight-keyed Lunda Kalendi with the tuning...
The kalimba described here is one used by the Lunda people in the North Western Province of Northern...
The author was fortunate enough to be able to spend some days among them in the company of Dr Jiro T...
In the last issue of this Journal there was an account of a traditional instrumentalists’ course con...
There is a relatively long history of scholarly interest in the tuning of different musical pitch sy...
In October, 1953, I sent to the British Museum parts of a tripartite musical apparatus used by the M...
The recordings on which this analysis is based, were made between July 24th and August 7th, 1961, in...
The nnanga is a bowed-neck harp found in the Buganda kingdom, located on Lake Victoria in southern U...
The Tsonga of Mozambique and South Africa are located between the Venda in the northwest and the Cho...
Musical bows are frequently seen in south-western Angola among populations which speak Humbi, Handa ...