Blog December 22, 2016

Photo Essay: Ghana--Celebration Sounds

<p class="p1"><span class="s1"><em>Borborbor </em>is a common community recreational music in the Volta Region of Ghana, </span><span class="s1">performed at festivals and celebrations especially around the Christmas holidays, when there are borborbor parties almost every evening. I attended a couple of borborbor parties in and around the small village of Kopeyia, near Denu-Aflao in the South Volta region. </span></p> <p class="p1"><span class="s1">Several hundred people are gathered in a clearing around a borborbor group. Even from a distance, you can hear the pounding drums and the brash call of the bugle.</span></p> <p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="wp-image-32942 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0055-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0055" width="640" height="428"> All photos by Morgan Greenstreet</p> <p class="p1"><span class="s1">The drummers face each other in a circle, communicating the frequent changes in rhythm, lifting the drums with their knees to alter the tone. </span></p> <p class="p1"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-32943 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0056-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0056" width="640" height="428"></p> <p class="p1">A large group of singers stand behind the drummers, and a bugle player and lead singer lean into the circle. In an open clearing in front of the drummers, a group of schoolgirls in matching dresses dance in a slow circle, waving handkerchiefs and bending deeply at the waist.</p> <p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-32936 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0042-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0042" width="640" height="428"></p> <p>The crowd pushes in on all sides, watching the dance, singing along, talking and laughing. On the outskirts of the circle, matronly vendors sell the goods that keep the party going for hours: smoked fish snacks, sweets and of course, <em>akpeteshi,</em> a strong, locally distilled alcohol.</p> <p class="p1"><span class="s1">In the town of Dzodze in the south Volta Region, I visited the Nunya Academy, a tuition-free school for children, founded by Dr. Kofi Gbolonyo, a Dzodze musician who now teaches at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. At Nunya Academy, children learn complex brass band music from Kofi's brother Prosper, and teacher Benzola Chistian Seke. </span></p> <p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-32955 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0014-1024x685.jpeg" alt="Nunya Academy, Dzodze, Volta Region, Ghana" width="640" height="428"></p> <p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-32964 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0030-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0030" width="640" height="428"></p> <p class="p1"><span class="s1">“Locally, we sing, and then we play drums on it,” Prosper told me. "</span><span class="s1">But we want to incorporate that into Western music, that’s why we’re using the wind instruments to play it." </span><span class="s1">Some of Nunya's arrangements were made by Pascal Yao Younge, another renowned music educator from Dzodze who now teaches at Ohio University. </span><span class="s1">"But most of them are my own arrangements, I listen to how it is performed in the traditional <em>agbadza</em> arena, and I arrange so you can hear the pentatonic harmony."</span></p> <p class="p1"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-32967 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0037-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0037" width="640" height="428"> <img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-32963 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0028-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0028" width="640" height="428"></p> <p><span class="s1">Unlike the lush south, the Northern Region of Ghana is hot and dry, especially during the winter Harmattan season. Tamale, the capital city of the Northern Region, formerly the Kingdom of Dagbon, is a bustling hub of commercial and cultural activity. The off-white minarets of the central mosque rise above streets packed with motorbikes, trucks and sometimes herds of goats and cows. Downtown, near the central market, is the red clay palace of the local chief, the Gulkpe-Naa. </span>Chieftaincy is a big deal in Dagbon, and traditional music is alive and well, because traditional musicians are griots who perform the lineage and praise names of chiefs. In Dagbon, there's a chief for everything! For example, I attended the funeral of the chief of the butchers of the neighborhood of Lamashegu, Tamale.<br></p> <p class="p1"><span class="s1"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-32974 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0004-1-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0004" width="640" height="428"></span></p> <p class="p1"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-32983 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0044-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0044" width="640" height="428"></p> <p class="p1">Chiefs made the rounds of the funeral compound on horseback, accompanied by musicians, crowds of supporters, and young men firing handmade muskets ceremoniously in the air.</p> <p><a href="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/LamasheFuneralRound1.mp4" target="_blank">WATCH THE VIDEO HERE.</a></p> <p>I<span class="s1"> also attended the important Damba festival in the small neighboring town of Yendi, home to the <em>Yaa-na</em>, the paramount chief of Dagbon. (For more on <a href="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/4869/world-damba-festival-showcases-northern-ghana-at-tufts-university/" target="_blank">Damba</a>.)</span></p> <p>A drummer's compound in Yendi.</p> <p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-32995 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0001-1-1024x685.jpeg" alt="A compound in Yendi" width="640" height="428"></p> <p class="p1"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-32999 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0034-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0034" width="640" height="428"></p> <p class="p1"><span class="s1">Every year, during Damba, all the subchiefs come to Yendi to pay homage, and with them come their musicians, singing and drumming their praises. </span></p> <p> </p> <p><a href="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DambaClip1.mp4" target="_blank">WATCH THE VIDEO HERE.</a></p> <p class="p1">As all the chiefs gather in the central square of Yendi, different groups of musicians and spectators converge; the result is a raucous and joyful noise!</p> <p class="p1"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-33000 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0035-1-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0035" width="640" height="428"></p> <p class="p1"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-33002 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0040-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0040" width="640" height="428"></p> <p class="p1"><span class="s1">Men fire handmade rifles into the air as chiefs dance through the packed crowd on horseback, the horses rearing and kicking up dust. </span></p> <p class="p1"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-33026 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0075-1-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0075" width="640" height="428"></p> <p class="p1"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-33023 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0064-1-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0064" width="640" height="428"> The Yaa-Naa and other chiefs.<img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-33027 size-large" src="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/migrated-uploads/2016/11/DSC0077-1-1024x685.jpeg" alt="_dsc0077" width="640" height="428"></p>