Native American Music
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Transcript Native American Music
Native American Music
Chapter 11
By: Hannah Gregor
Ceremonial
Native American
Traditions
Societies
Past
Songs in Native American
culture are very short, like a
nursery rhyme or hymn
In ceremonies, songs are placed
in large groups to perform
Religious ceremonies last hours,
or even days
Example: Yeibechi (“Night
Chant”)of the Navajo
requires nine days and nights
to perform
Even in secular performances,
songs are grouped together to
perform
Example: performance of
Stomp Dance
Each tribe had its own musical
culture, repertory, musical style, uses
of, and ideas about music
1,000-2,000 individual tribes in North
America, each with a distinct
language
Present
Some tribes still maintain their
individuality
Others have been forced to share
reservations with other tribes, and
have developed a unified culture
Some ceremonies are intertribal
Most Native Americans have
conformed, but in music and dance,
they express their roots and culture
Native American Music
Similarities
Native American music is almost
always monophonic and mostly
vocal
There are many distinct vocal styles,
but they all share a tense sound and
the pulsation on longer notes
Three types of forms dominate
Strophic songs – like folk songs or
hymns, a stanza is repeated many
times
Very short songs consisting of one or
two lines repeated many times
Two contrasting sections alternate
Almost all singing is accompanied
by percussion
Differences
Each tribal group has its own
unique repertory, and musical style
Even neighboring tribes differ from
each other
Seven music areas
Plains
Eastern United States
Yuman (Southwest United States
and parts of Southern California)
Athabascan (Navajo/Apache, also
Southwestern US)
Pueblo (Papago, Southwestern US)
Great Basin (Nevada and Utah)
Northwestern Coast (Washington,
Oregon, and parts of Alaska)
Ideas About Music
What is it and what
does it do?
Why are the songs so short?
Oral traditions make it difficult to
pass on complex compositions
If you listen carefully, the music is
complex on a microscopic scale
Native American music is judged
using different values than
Western music
Music has supernatural power in
Native American cultures, so
every ceremony has an
appropriate song
Songs that come in dreams have
special power
Music reflects culture
A Blackfoot singer said, “The right
way to do something is to sing the
right song with it.”
Women had a smaller and
separate repertory, but may join in
men’s songs
Women have a different singing
style – more nasal and smoother
with pulsations being ornaments
rather than rhythmic references
Musical Instruments and
Singing
Most music is vocal and almost all instruments are percussive
(idiophones)
Solo drumming is rare
Most widely used melodic instrument is the flute
Some reeds and trumpets are used on the North Pacific Coast
The musical bow is similar to a hunting bow but is used as a
musical instrument
Songs do not necessarily have words nor do need to be
elaborate
COMPLETE texts of two Blackfoot songs:
“Sun says to sing” – from Song of the Sun Dance ceremony
“It is spring, let others see you” – sung at the beginning of a medicine
bundle opening ceremony, prior to the bundle being opened
Native American Musical
History
Little direct evidence, but circumstantial information allow
reasonable deductions
Since Native American music shares traits with Asian music,
scholars deduce that Native Americans arrived from Asia in
waves beginning at least 14,000 years ago
South American and North American Native American music
share some aspects, but differ in others
Shared: forms and singing styles are similar, as are ideas about
music
Different: in South American Native American culture, women
participate more heavily than in North American, as well as more
instrumental music
Native American Music in
the Present
Since the coming of white people, Native American musical culture has been
greatly reduced
As Native Americans were relocated and epidemics swept through their
populations, most ceremonies and songs were lost
Some Native Americans adopted the idea that music is composed by humans
and are not supernatural, and the idea of music as entertainment was accepted
Other Native Americans began to use music to fight against the oppression and
to preserve their culture
The Ghost Dance songs enriched the Plains Indians’ music
The songs of the peyote religion (peyote is a drug from cacti) are easily
recognized and aspects of the music have come from different tribes
There are Christian hymnals with Christian songs in the traditional Native
American style
Powwow style music began in the late 20th century from Plains music and
traditions
Part of the powwow repertory are 49 songs with mildly amusing and romantic
English lyrics
Women in
Native
American
Music
• Women’s roles in music differed from tribe to tribe
• In some tribes, women were not permitted to sing in public
• In others, women played important roles in ceremonies
• Women often know the music repertory better than men
• Women have become more prominent in Native American
musical culture
Native American Popular
Music
“Indian rock music” genre combines Native American
traditional tunes, percussive sounds, and texts from or referring
to Native American culture
Some Native American artists performed Western music that
discussed Native American issues
Most of the modern Native American popular music speaks to
environmental issues due to the fact that their land is
threatened by pollution, factories, mining, etc.
Much of the Native American popular music does not differ in
sound from Western popular music, but instead deals with
issues faced by Native Americans