Renewal of Ogu Musical Culture Through Jazz Intervention

This thesis instigates the discussion of the broad implications of cultural marginalization on Ogu music of Badagry, Lagos State Nigeria. Owing to the manner in which African States were carved out, without consideration for cultural boundaries, Ogu people were split through colonial delineation sch...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kunnuji, Joseph Olanrewaj
Other Authors: Bruinders, Sylvia
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20719
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-207192020-10-06T05:11:08Z Renewal of Ogu Musical Culture Through Jazz Intervention Kunnuji, Joseph Olanrewaj Bruinders, Sylvia Music This thesis instigates the discussion of the broad implications of cultural marginalization on Ogu music of Badagry, Lagos State Nigeria. Owing to the manner in which African States were carved out, without consideration for cultural boundaries, Ogu people were split through colonial delineation schemes with a minority within the Nigerian borders and the majority in Benin Republic. The same delineation process of the British and French administrations led to a multicultural Nigeria with over two hundred ethnic groups. In the ensuing battle for supremacy among the ethnic groups, in which number plays no minor role, the cultural integrity of the Ogu people began to wane. The complexity of social interactions in Nigeria witnessed the more populated and dominant ethnic groups casting their shadows on the smaller ones. The far-reaching consequence of such marginalization and social ostracism is cultural erosion and a xenocentric world-view of Ogu youths. Whilst elucidating the consequences of cultural marginalization, low self-esteem and the condescending mannerism of Ogu youths toward their traditional music, this thesis concomitantly discusses a possible method of forestalling the musical decay and restoring the integrity of Ogu music through the intervention of the jazz genre. Given the reality of globalization, mass transculturation, and the adoption of Western educational system by African States, musical syncretism cannot be evaded. Thus, this dissertation concludes by examining a method of documentation and reestablishment of Ogu musical integrity, which employs the adoption of jazz elements in creating a new Ogu musical style. Jazz is favoured as it is deemed with the potency of arousing the interest of the western-musicallytrained younger generation of Ogu people for whom jazz represents the highest level of harmonic complexity. 2016-07-25T11:34:30Z 2016-07-25T11:34:30Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MMus http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20719 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities College of Music
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Music
spellingShingle Music
Kunnuji, Joseph Olanrewaj
Renewal of Ogu Musical Culture Through Jazz Intervention
description This thesis instigates the discussion of the broad implications of cultural marginalization on Ogu music of Badagry, Lagos State Nigeria. Owing to the manner in which African States were carved out, without consideration for cultural boundaries, Ogu people were split through colonial delineation schemes with a minority within the Nigerian borders and the majority in Benin Republic. The same delineation process of the British and French administrations led to a multicultural Nigeria with over two hundred ethnic groups. In the ensuing battle for supremacy among the ethnic groups, in which number plays no minor role, the cultural integrity of the Ogu people began to wane. The complexity of social interactions in Nigeria witnessed the more populated and dominant ethnic groups casting their shadows on the smaller ones. The far-reaching consequence of such marginalization and social ostracism is cultural erosion and a xenocentric world-view of Ogu youths. Whilst elucidating the consequences of cultural marginalization, low self-esteem and the condescending mannerism of Ogu youths toward their traditional music, this thesis concomitantly discusses a possible method of forestalling the musical decay and restoring the integrity of Ogu music through the intervention of the jazz genre. Given the reality of globalization, mass transculturation, and the adoption of Western educational system by African States, musical syncretism cannot be evaded. Thus, this dissertation concludes by examining a method of documentation and reestablishment of Ogu musical integrity, which employs the adoption of jazz elements in creating a new Ogu musical style. Jazz is favoured as it is deemed with the potency of arousing the interest of the western-musicallytrained younger generation of Ogu people for whom jazz represents the highest level of harmonic complexity.
author2 Bruinders, Sylvia
author_facet Bruinders, Sylvia
Kunnuji, Joseph Olanrewaj
author Kunnuji, Joseph Olanrewaj
author_sort Kunnuji, Joseph Olanrewaj
title Renewal of Ogu Musical Culture Through Jazz Intervention
title_short Renewal of Ogu Musical Culture Through Jazz Intervention
title_full Renewal of Ogu Musical Culture Through Jazz Intervention
title_fullStr Renewal of Ogu Musical Culture Through Jazz Intervention
title_full_unstemmed Renewal of Ogu Musical Culture Through Jazz Intervention
title_sort renewal of ogu musical culture through jazz intervention
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20719
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