Kuvunga: Timbre, interlocking, and composite melodies in Zambian Luvale ngoma

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2021-12-16

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Ohio State University. Libraries

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

This paper is an attempt to explicate the concept of "kuvunga," an important term to Zambian Luvale drummers. Drums kuvunga when they produce a composite melody. While these composites have long been understood as vital to African percussion, the processes that create them – both performed and perceived – have been relatively ignored. To help illustrate these processes, I introduce new analytic terminology that organizes rhythms along timbral lines. When these types of rhythms interact in specific ways, the drums kuvunga. In this study I will explain how Luvale musicians achieve this interlocking resultant by manipulating timbre through technical control. I combine research on auditory stream segregation, African musicology, and ethnographic methods to show that making drums kuvunga involves performed and perceived attention to timbre. Ultimately, my analysis draws attention to the vitality of timbre in African percussion, explicates the emergence of an important perceptual construct, and provides a new set of analytic tools.

Description

Keywords

timbre, Luvale, perception, percussion, Zambia

Citation

Future Directions of Music Cognition (2021), pp. 262-266