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Tuk Music Tradition in Barbados (Hardcover, New Ed)
Loot Price: R3,976
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Tuk Music Tradition in Barbados (Hardcover, New Ed)
Series: SOAS Studies in Music
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Barbados is a small Caribbean island better known as a tourist
destination rather than for its culture. The island was first
claimed in 1627 for the English King and remained a British colony
until independence was gained in 1966. This firmly entrenched
British culture in the Barbadian way of life, although most of the
population are descended from enslaved Africans taken to Barbados
to work on the sugar plantations. After independence, an official
desire to promulgate the country's African heritage led to the
revival and recontextualisation of cultural traditions. Barbadian
tuk music, a type of fife and drum music, has been transformed in
the post-independence period from a working class music associated
with plantations and rum shops to a signifier of national culture,
played at official functions and showcased to tourists. Based on
ethnographic and archival research, Sharon Meredith considers the
social, political and cultural developments in Barbados that led to
the evolution, development and revival of tuk as well as cultural
traditions associated with it. She places tuk in the context of
other music in the country, and examines similar musics elsewhere
that, whilst sharing some elements with tuk, have their own
individual identities.
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