Balafon: Cameron musical instrument
The balafon is resounded flame, wooden keyed percussion idiophone that is found in Africa. It is tuned percussion instrument as well. Soun...
https://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2013/12/balafon-cameron-musical-instrument.html
The balafon is resounded flame,
wooden keyed percussion idiophone that is found in Africa. It is tuned
percussion instrument as well. Sound is manufactured from this instrument by
striking the tuned keys using two padded sticks. This musical instrument is
believed to have been developed independently of the southern Africa and
southern America that is now called the marimba. Story told histories of this
percussion instrument have been traced back to at least the rise of the Mali
Empire in the 12th century CE. The balafon is a Manding name,
although differences exist across West Africa with Sierra Leone and the Gvil of
the Dagara, lobi and the Gurunsi that are from Ghana, Burkina Faso, and ivory
coast inclusive. Analogous instruments are played in parts of the central
Africa with the old kingdom of Kongo knowing the instrument as ‘palaku’.
source: streamafrica.com
This musical instrument can either be
a fixed-key or free-key. In the fixed-key, the keys are stung over a fixed
frame, normally with a calabash resonator beneath. In the free-key, the keys
are placed alone on any padded surface. The balafon normally possess about 17
to 21 keys that are tuned to a tetratonic, pentatonic or heptatonic scale,
depending much on the culture and tradition of the player.
The musical instrument keys are
traditionally produced from the “bene wood” that is slowly dried over a low
flame and then tuned by removing the bits of wood from the underside of the
key. The wood is taken off the middle to make the key flat or to the end to sharpen
the key. In a fixed-key balafon, the keys are hanged by leather straps just
above a wooden frame under which graduated-size calabash gourd resonators are
suspended. A small hole in each of the gourd is covered with a membrane
traditionally of thin spider’s egg sac filaments to make the featured
nasal-buzz tone quality of the musical instrument that is often played with
two-rubber-wound mallet while the player is seating on a low stool.
As the culture of the instrument
differs across the West Africa, so does the approach to the instrument, in many
areas, the balafon is played singly in a ritual context and in others, it is
used as part of a group. In Guinea and Mali, the musical instrument is often
used as part of group of three, low pitched, medium and high pitched as well.
In Cameroon, six balafon of differing size plays together in an orchestra that
is known as “komenchang”. An Igbo variation exists with just one tuned key for
each of the players. While in most cases a single player hits the multiple keys
with two mallets, some other traditions keep two or more players at each
keyboard.
The balafon has seen strengthening
since the 1980s in the growth of African roots music and the world music as
well. Most prominent of this exponent is the rail band that is led by Salif
Keita. Even when the instrument is not played the popular sound and traditional
pattern has been transferred to the western musical instruments. Maninka, which
is found in the Guinea region play a kind of guitar music that took the playing
style of balafon to the imported musical instrument.
During the 1950s, bars came up across
Cameroon’s capital to oblige an arrival of new inhabitants and soon became a
sign for the Cameroonian identity in the face of colonialism. Balafon
orchestras, made up of 3 to 5 balafon and many percussion instruments became
popular in these bars. Some of these orchestras like Richard Band de Zoetele
became more famous in spite of disdain from the European elite.
The middle of the 20th
century made sure that the instrument was made popular of a native folk music
known as the bikutsi. The bikutsi is based on a war rhythm that was played with
many rattles, drums and the balafon. The balafon orchestras had remained famous
all through the 1950s in Yaoundé’s bar scene, although the audience asked
modernity and the popular style at the time was not able to cope with the
demand.
The Susu and Malinke people of Guinea
are tightly identified with the musical instrument, also the other Manding
people of Mali, Senegal and the Gambia, also Chat, Cameroon and even the
nations of the Congo Basin has a history with this musical instrument. In the
Malinke language, Balafon is a combination of two words: “Balan” is a name of
the instrument and “fo” is the verb that means to play. So balafon really means
“the act of playing the bala”. Bala is still used as the name of a large bass
balafon in the Kolokani and Bobo Dioulasso regions. These bala have
exceptionally long keys and huge calabash for the amplification of the
instrument. Balani is then used as the name of a small balafon that has small
calabash and short keys and is pitched high.
During the 1950, bars came up across
Cameroon’s capital to take an influx of new inhabitants and soon turned to a
symbol for Cameroonian identity in the face of colonialism. Balafon orchestras
that are made up of three to five balafons and other percussion instrument was
made common in these bars.
The balani is carried with the use of
a strap and often has about 21 keys while the number of keys on a bala differs
from region to region and sometime the musician. The balafon, kora and the
ngoni are three musical instruments that are much more linked with griot
tradition of West Africa. Each is more closely linked with the region where
they are found, although all the instruments are played together in the groups
throughout the region. In some culture, the musical instrument was and is still
a sacred instrument that is playable by only trained religious caste members
only at the ritual activities such as the festival, royal and funerals and also
some marriage celebrations. Here the musical instrument is kept in a temple
storehouse and can only be brought out and played after undergoing some series
of purification activities. Specific instruments may be carved to be played for
the particular rituals and repertoire. Young skilled persons are not trained on
the instrument that has been made sacred but on the free key pit balafon.