There is a relatively long history of scholarly interest in the tuning of different musical pitch systems that African peoples have evolved for their music making. One notable contribution is the pioneer effort of Hugh Tracey from the 1930s to the 1960s with his large set of tuning forks which he used for matching the pitches of many of the African instruments he recorded. Since then many of the pages of successive issues of African Music have contained tables of tunings for xylophones, harps, mbiras and such like instruments
The music of Africa is so different from our own music that we are unable to appreciate it until we ...
This paper proposes the theory that Tswana pipe melody is not initially conceived as melody at all, ...
A primer of practical suggestions for field research for the Codification and Textbook Project has r...
An important aspect of music research in Africa is the measurement of indigenous scales and the ulti...
The purpose of this paper is twofold: firstly to explain a method of transcribing African instrument...
The musical scale of the Sena people of Southern Malawi can be characterised as an equidistant hepta...
It would appear from the evidence of certain writers on African music that there still remains much ...
The Xylophone, found in many tribes in South, Central, East and West Africa, is often a very rustic...
This proposal presents TARSOS, an easy-to-use platform for automated pitch analysis especially desig...
In the last issue of this Journal there was an account of a traditional instrumentalists’ course con...
The recordings on which this analysis is based, were made between July 24th and August 7th, 1961, in...
Writing in 1591, Pigafetta relates the experience of a Portuguese explorer, Duarte Lopez, in what is...
The kalumbu or musical bow is probably found more often than any other indigenous instrument in Zamb...
This study discusses selected problems of music and music education in Nigeria. It also gives sugges...
In our present study, we intend to show that a systematic analysis of the music of black Africa reve...
The music of Africa is so different from our own music that we are unable to appreciate it until we ...
This paper proposes the theory that Tswana pipe melody is not initially conceived as melody at all, ...
A primer of practical suggestions for field research for the Codification and Textbook Project has r...
An important aspect of music research in Africa is the measurement of indigenous scales and the ulti...
The purpose of this paper is twofold: firstly to explain a method of transcribing African instrument...
The musical scale of the Sena people of Southern Malawi can be characterised as an equidistant hepta...
It would appear from the evidence of certain writers on African music that there still remains much ...
The Xylophone, found in many tribes in South, Central, East and West Africa, is often a very rustic...
This proposal presents TARSOS, an easy-to-use platform for automated pitch analysis especially desig...
In the last issue of this Journal there was an account of a traditional instrumentalists’ course con...
The recordings on which this analysis is based, were made between July 24th and August 7th, 1961, in...
Writing in 1591, Pigafetta relates the experience of a Portuguese explorer, Duarte Lopez, in what is...
The kalumbu or musical bow is probably found more often than any other indigenous instrument in Zamb...
This study discusses selected problems of music and music education in Nigeria. It also gives sugges...
In our present study, we intend to show that a systematic analysis of the music of black Africa reve...
The music of Africa is so different from our own music that we are unable to appreciate it until we ...
This paper proposes the theory that Tswana pipe melody is not initially conceived as melody at all, ...
A primer of practical suggestions for field research for the Codification and Textbook Project has r...