Comparing Timeline Rhythms in Pygmy and Bushmen Music

Combining theories of African rhythm from ethno/musicology and findings from anthropological research and population genetics with musical analyses based on transcriptions and computational phylogenetic techniques, this article compares rhythms used in Pygmy and Bushmen music in an attempt to provid...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Adrian Poole
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Ohio State University Libraries 2018-06-01
Series:Empirical Musicology Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://emusicology.org/article/view/5823
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spelling doaj-868589c1cbbd45ac99cd0966b00519142020-11-24T21:16:23ZengThe Ohio State University LibrariesEmpirical Musicology Review1559-57492018-06-01123-417219310.18061/emr.v12i3-4.58233995Comparing Timeline Rhythms in Pygmy and Bushmen MusicAdrian Poole0University College LondonCombining theories of African rhythm from ethno/musicology and findings from anthropological research and population genetics with musical analyses based on transcriptions and computational phylogenetic techniques, this article compares rhythms used in Pygmy and Bushmen music in an attempt to provide new perspectives on an old debate that these musical cultures may share a common heritage. To do this, the comparative analyses focus on timelines: foundational rhythmic features that provide the structural basis of the music. The findings suggest that Pygmy and Bushmen timelines are interrelated and that most are organised according to the principles of 'rhythmic oddity' and maximal evenness. Generative theory suggests that commonly used rhythmic cells, in particular the 3:2 pattern, form the structural basis of many Pygmy/Bushmen timelines as well as many other timelines featured in African and African-derived musics. Timelines are also multi-purpose musical devices used in various different social contexts and their structure appears to be resilient to radical change. Phylogenetic analysis of timelines provides no clear Pygmy/Bushmen ancestral timeline, although it is possible that foundational rhythms such as the 3:2 pattern may have featured in the music of a common ancestral group.http://emusicology.org/article/view/5823timelinesrhythmPygmy musicBushmen musicPhylogenetics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adrian Poole
spellingShingle Adrian Poole
Comparing Timeline Rhythms in Pygmy and Bushmen Music
Empirical Musicology Review
timelines
rhythm
Pygmy music
Bushmen music
Phylogenetics
author_facet Adrian Poole
author_sort Adrian Poole
title Comparing Timeline Rhythms in Pygmy and Bushmen Music
title_short Comparing Timeline Rhythms in Pygmy and Bushmen Music
title_full Comparing Timeline Rhythms in Pygmy and Bushmen Music
title_fullStr Comparing Timeline Rhythms in Pygmy and Bushmen Music
title_full_unstemmed Comparing Timeline Rhythms in Pygmy and Bushmen Music
title_sort comparing timeline rhythms in pygmy and bushmen music
publisher The Ohio State University Libraries
series Empirical Musicology Review
issn 1559-5749
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Combining theories of African rhythm from ethno/musicology and findings from anthropological research and population genetics with musical analyses based on transcriptions and computational phylogenetic techniques, this article compares rhythms used in Pygmy and Bushmen music in an attempt to provide new perspectives on an old debate that these musical cultures may share a common heritage. To do this, the comparative analyses focus on timelines: foundational rhythmic features that provide the structural basis of the music. The findings suggest that Pygmy and Bushmen timelines are interrelated and that most are organised according to the principles of 'rhythmic oddity' and maximal evenness. Generative theory suggests that commonly used rhythmic cells, in particular the 3:2 pattern, form the structural basis of many Pygmy/Bushmen timelines as well as many other timelines featured in African and African-derived musics. Timelines are also multi-purpose musical devices used in various different social contexts and their structure appears to be resilient to radical change. Phylogenetic analysis of timelines provides no clear Pygmy/Bushmen ancestral timeline, although it is possible that foundational rhythms such as the 3:2 pattern may have featured in the music of a common ancestral group.
topic timelines
rhythm
Pygmy music
Bushmen music
Phylogenetics
url http://emusicology.org/article/view/5823
work_keys_str_mv AT adrianpoole comparingtimelinerhythmsinpygmyandbushmenmusic
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