Ethnomusicology of Africa - Resources

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This is a selective listing; for a more comprehensive resource page see African News, Arts, and Culture

General works about Africa

General works about Ghana

On Northern Ghana:

On African Music (with focus on Ghana)

Books

Websites

Audio

For more on Ghana click here.

Four excellent audio sources:


Smithsonian Folkways albums can also be purchased online via http://www.folkways.si.edu/ or (for less $) on http://emusic.com. Other albums can be purchased on emusic.com or itunes.com. If you like it, buy it and put it on your ipod or other music device.

Please read the liner notes while you listen! Ethnomusicology is all about music embedded in social context, and the sound itself rarely provides that context. Good liner notes do.


Smithsonian Folkways tracks (available online)

These tracks and albums are accompanied with liner notes:

Browse all African music tracks from Smithsonian Folkways

Contemporary World Music and other tracks (mostly available online)

Note that some of the links below may only function for those with University of Alberta library access (these links access the University of Alberta library database, Contemporary World Music). But using the publication information provided, you can locate these recordings online and purchase them, via iTunes, emusic.com, and other music download sites. Note that both audio and liner notes are available.

Browse all Contemporary World Music tracks from Africa


Awesome tapes from Africa

Awesome tapes represents the popular music traditions of Africa, since the advent of cassettes in the 70s.

Video

I've compiled a number of recommendations on the large resources site, here.

Other resources for ethnomusicological research

See the CCE site

African Literature

Like music, literature gives you the "flavor" of a culture; stories can also be used within your creative modules. Here are a few suggestions for Ghana (our country focus):

  • The Beautyful Ones are Not Yet Born by Ayi Kwei Armah (b. 1939), one of Ghana's most illustrious contemporary writers.
  • Nigerian Chinua Achebe (1930-2013) sadly passed away this year. His brilliant novel Things Fall Apart (1958), dramatizing the clash of colonialism, Western culture, and tradition in an Igbo village, is the most widely-ready book in modern African literature.
  • Ama: A Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade, by Manu Herbstein, is a sweeping historical epic that wonderfully links so many issues and themes in West African history and culture. It's on the long side (but very easy to read), so you might want to begin reading it before departing for Ghana. This book is perhaps outstanding less as literature than as historical fiction which links very nicely to our summer program.