1st Edition

Tracing the Mbira Sound Archive in Zimbabwe

By Luis Gimenez Amoros Copyright 2018
    144 Pages
    by Routledge

    144 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Tracing the Mbira Sound Archive in Zimbabwe analyses the revitalisation and repatriation of historical recordings from the largest sound archive in Africa, the International Library of African Music (ILAM). It provides a postcolonial study on the African sound archive divided into three historical periods: the colonial period offers a critical analysis on how ILAM classifies its music through ethnic and linguistic groups; the postcolonial period reconsiders postcolonial nationhood, new/old mobility and cultural border crossing in present Africa; and the recent period of repatriation focuses on the author’s revitalisation of the sound archive.



    The main goal of this study is to reconsider the colonial demarcations of southern African mbira music provided by the International Library of African Music (ILAM). These mbira recordings reveal that the harmonic system used in different lamellophones (or mbiras) in southern Africa is musically related. The analysis of sound archives in Africa is an essential tool to envision the new ways in which African culture can be directed not only from postcolonial notions of nationhood or Afrocentric discourses but also for the necessity of bringing awareness of the circulation of musical cultures from and beyond colonial African borders.

    Introduction



    PART ONE: RECONSIDERING THE COLONIAL ARCHIVE



    Chapter One: The mobilization of Shona musical identity during colonial times



    Chapter Two: Reconsidering the colonial creation of Shona musical identity in the sound archive





    Chapter Three: An attempt to link colonial and postcolonial narratives in the sound archive: Tracey´s "Shona chord cadence" and Afropolitanism beyond colonial borders





    Chapter Four: Colonial and postcolonial interpretations of the Shona-mbira recordings from the International Library of African Music (ILAM)



    PART TWO: RECONSIDERING THE POST-COLONIAL ARCHIVE



    Chapter Five: The centralisation of Great Zimbabwe and the multiple versions of chaminuka in the sound archive





    Chapter Six: Chimurenga music and the sound archive: The homogenisation of Shona mbiras





    Chapter Seven: The third chimurenga for the land reform as another reflection of southern African Afro-politanism versus customary laws





    PART THREE: THE REVITALISATION OF THE SOUND ARCHIVE IN ZIMBABWE





    Chapter Eight: Revitalising the repertoire through Zimbabwean musician





    Chapter Nine: The sound repatriation in the place of the recordings





    Chapter Ten: Curricula transformation in the African academy through the sound archive



    References



    Discography



    Filmography



    Interviews



    Index

    Biography

    Luis Gimenez Amoros is a research fellow at the Centre for Humanities Research (CHR) at the University of the Western Cape. Previously, he has served as an Ethnomusicology lecturer at the University of Fort Hare and as a Postdoctoral fellow in the Unit of Zimbabwean Studies at Rhodes University in South Africa.