In 1969 Gerhard Kubik chanced to encounter a Mozambican labor
migrant, a miner in Transvaal, South Africa, tapping a "cipendani,"
a mouth-resonated musical bow. A comparable instrument was seen in
the hands of a white Appalachian musician who claimed it as part of
his own cultural heritage. Through connections like these Kubik
realized that the link between these two far-flung musicians is
African-American music, the sound that became the blues.
Such discoveries reveal a narrative of music evolution for
Kubik, a cultural anthropologist and ethnomusicologist. Traveling
in Africa, Brazil, Venezuela, and the United States, he spent forty
years in the field gathering the material for "Africa and the
Blues." In this book, Kubik relentlessly traces the remote
genealogies of African cultural music through eighteen African
nations, especially in the Western and Central Sudanic Belt.
Included is a comprehensive map of this cradle of the blues,
along with 31 photographs gathered in his fieldwork. The author
also adds clear musical notations and descriptions of both African
and African American traditions and practices and calls into
question the many assumptions about which elements of the blues
were "European" in origin and about which came from Africa. Unique
to this book is Kubik's insight into the ways present-day African
musicians have adopted and enlivened the blues with their own
traditions.
With scholarly care but with an ease for the general reader,
Kubik proposes an entirely new theory on blue notes and their
origins. Tracing what musical traits came from Africa and what
mutations and mergers occurred in the Americas, he shows that the
African American tradition we call the blues is truly a musical
phenomenon belonging to the African cultural world.
Gerhard Kubik is a professor in the department of ethnology and
African studies at the University of Mainz, Germany. Since 1983 he
has been affiliated with the Center for Social Research of Malawi,
Zomba. He is a permanent member of the Center for Black Music
Research in Chicago and an Honorary Fellow of the Royal
Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, London.
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