 | Native American music: Encyclopedia II - Native American music - Pan-tribalism
Native American music - Pan-tribalism
Pan-tribalism is the syncretic adoption of traditions from foreign communities. Since the rise of the United States and Canada, Native Americans have forged a common identity, and invented pan-tribal music, most famously including powwows, peyote songs and the Ghost Dance.
The Ghost Dance spread throughout the Plains tribes in the 1890s, and most still survive in use. They are characterized by relaxed vocals and a narrow range. Apache-derived peyote songs, sacred prayers in the Native American Church, use a descending melody and monophony. Rattles and water drums are used, in a swift tempo. The Sun Dance and Grass Dance of the plains are the roots of intertribal powwows, which feature music with terraced descent and nasal vocals, both Plains characteristic features.
John Trudell launched a new genre of spoken word poetry in the 1980s, beginning with Aka Graffiti Man (1986). The next decade saw further innovations in Native American popular music, including Robbie Robertson (of The Band) releasing a soundtrack for a documentary, Music for the Native Americans, that saw limited mainstream success, as well as Verdell Primeaux and Johnny Mike's modernized peyote songs, which they began experimenting with on Sacred Path: Healing Songs of the Native American Church. Waila (or the chicken scratch music of the Tohono O'odham) has gained performers like the Joaquin Brothers fame across Native American communities, while hip hop crews like WithOut Rezervation and Robby Bee & the Boyz From the Rez (Reservation of Education) have a distinctively Native American flourish to hip hop.
Native American music - Native American flute
Main article: Native American flute
The Native American flute has achieved some measure of fame for its distinctive sound, used in a variety of New Age and world music recordings. The instruments origins are unknown, but the theory that it was developed by the Ancient Pueblo Peoples based of Mesoamerican designs is the most common solution. Its music was used in courtship, healing, meditation and spiritual rituals.
The late 1960s saw a roots revival centered around the flute, with a new wave of flautists and artisans like Doc Nevaquaya and Carl Running Deer. Of special importance is R. Carlos Nakai (Changes, 1983), who has achieved some mainstream renown for his mixture of the flute with New Age and ambient sounds.
The Native American flute is the only flute in the world constructed with two air chambers - there is a wall inside the flute between the top (slow) air chamber and the bottom chamber which has the whistle and finger holes. The top chamber also serves as a secondary resonator, which gives the flute its distinctive sound. There is a hole at the bottom of the "slow" air chamber and a (generally) square hole at the top of the playing chamber. A block (or "bird") with a spacer is tied on top of the flute to form a thin, flat airstream for the whistle hole (or "window"). Some more modern flutes use an undercut either in the block or the flute to eliminate the need for a spacer.
The "traditional" Native American flute was constructed using measurements based on the body - the length of the flute would be the distance from armpit to wrist, the length of the top air chamber would be one fist-width, the distance from the whistle to the first hole also a fist-width, the distance between holes would be one thumb-width, and the distance from the last hole to the end would generally be one fist-width.
Modern Native American flutes are generally tuned to a variation of the minor pentatonic scale (such as you would get playing the black keys on a piano), which gives the instrument its distinctive plaintive sound. Recently some makers have begun experimenting with different scales, giving players new melodic options. Also, modern flutes are generally tuned in concert keys (such as A or D) so that they can be easily played with other instruments. The root keys of modern Native American flutes span a range of about three and a half octaves, from C2 to A5.
Native American flutes most commonly have either 5 or 6 holes, but instruments can have anything from no holes to seven (including a thumb hole). Various makers employ different scales and fingerings for their flutes.
Some modern Native American flutes are called "drone" flutes, and are two (or more) flutes built together. Generally, the drone chamber plays a fixed note which the other flute can play against in harmony.
Other related archives1852, 1890s, 1897, 1960s, 1980s, 1983, 1986, Alaska, American Indian music, American Midwest, American Southwest, Ancient Pueblo Peoples, Apache, Arapaho, Arapaho music, Athabaskan, Bass drums, Blackfoot music, British Columbia, Bruno Nettl, Canada, Changes, Cherokee, Drums, First Nations, Ghost Dance, Ghost Dance religion, Great Basin, Great Lakes, Greenland, Hawaiian music, Hopi, Inuit, Inuit music, John Trudell, Keresans, Kiowa, Library of Congress, Maritime Canada, Mesoamerica, Mesoamerican, Native American Church, Native American flute, Native Americans, Navajo, New Age, New England, North America, Northwest Territories, Nunavut, Pacific Northwest, Papago, Peyote songs, Pima, Piute, Pueblo, R. Carlos Nakai, Rattles, Rhythms, Robbie Robertson, Southeast, Strophes, Sun Dance, Tanoans, Taos Pueblo, The Band, Tohono O'odham, U.S. Mid-Atlantic, United States, Vocables, Waila, Yukon Territory, Zuni, ambient, antiphonal, antiphony, blues, call and response, choral, committee, courtship, cultural areas, documentary, end-blown flutes, falsettos, flutes, folk musical, gambling, hand drum, harmony, healing, heroes, hip hop, incomplete repetition, mescal, monophony, nasal, nasal vocals, octave, percussion, percussion instruments, peyote songs, polyphony, powwows, prayers, rattles, reggae, religious, rise, ritual dance, rock, roots revival, round dances, soundtrack, spoken word, tambourine, terraced descent, tetratonic, throat-singing, tribes, waila, world music
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Pan-tribalism", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |