The music of Tiv
- Title
- The music of Tiv
- Type
- Text
- Language
- English
- Subject
- Music
- Folk Songs
- Musical instruments
- Tiv (African people)
- Africa
- Ethnomusicology
- History
- Criticism
- Dance
- Nigeria
- Musical Imitation
- African Music
- Abstract
- Bordering the Benue River, geographically bulging on either side, the Tiv people have developed a musical style which reflects the individuality of their customs and thought to an interestingly marked degree. A semi-Bantu people, the Tiv have combined the true essentials of the arts of their race with a highly developed sense of mimicry, not unlike that found in the shadow play of Java. This sense of mimicry has no time barriers, however, and in its ancient god-worship form carries with it the jerky rhythm patterns and sharp dancing movements, now moulded by the twentieth century and European contact, but still leaving the angular fingers and sharp percussion crying for favours from A’Ondo, their God of the heavens and the father of Tiv and Uke.
- Description
- pages: 12-15
- Created Date
- December 1, 1954
- Parent project
- International Library of African Music
- is funded by
-
Rhodes University
- Place of Origin
- South Africa
- Author
- Lane, Michael G. M.
- License
- CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0
- Access Rights
- Public
- DRE ID
- eaa-99-0018
- Identifier
-
220
Value Annotations
- Type
- Publisher, distributor, or vendor stock number
- WissKI URL
- 74570
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