zaragenca wrote:it is not the point that some Moslem people at one point would have entertain the idea of going around trying to learn to play Bata,
zaragenca wrote:..I have all the knowledge,and all the jurisdiction provided to me by my ancestors,Godfathers and ultimately the Orichas..
Berimbau wrote:1.
I think that it is a terrible mistake to project one's culture assumptions and values onto another culture.
I completely reject the idea that any African culture is somehow mired in a sonambulatory stasis. Ditto for the Diaspora! The dynamism of African cultures continually astounds me, and one should enjoy the richness of surprise and meaning within it's profoundly beautiful expressions. As such the organological diversity of bata drums should be studied on a case by case basis, and any value judgements based on any other cultural artifact should be avoided. Cultural comparison may be entered into, but with great care.
2.
... The third bata I've encountered in Brasil is exactly like the Cuban bata, either manufactured by LP or some other US firm, or by the growing number of Brasilian craftsmen who have copied those designs. This last case is a conscious attempt of adopting something seen as fundamentally "African" by the Brasilians, who increasingly prize such things.
..I must add that the first bata I described probably does go back to the influx of slaves during the Yoruba wars.
3.
..are these young Brasilian guys ordering any product from Bembe?
Berimbau wrote:1.
Now as to what may or may not materially constitute a bata drum for an individual in one culture should never be projected onto another culture.
2.
...but if the culture bearer conceptualizes that chordophone as a bata drum, then we might want to understand just how and why that happened.
3.
...I do think that in some terreiros there is music that has a 100 year plus history, irregardless of the reinterpretations of the young generation.
zaragenca wrote:Ok brother Facundo,these are the facts,this picture isn't an ancient picture,it is a modern picture witn african dressing in modern clothing styles,(with european influence),the Bata that my ancestors brought from Africa were a well made Batas and that happened many years before this picture could even be taken,(and they were member of the society which was dedicated to perform this retuals,and that's the reason they knew how to properly made those drums,and the people in charge of the ceremonies were part of the society in charge of the ceremonies in Africa,and that's the reason that they knew the songs and everything in relation to those ceremonies ok,I don't have to accept any story less than that...You could take the picture of those Muslim in Africa which you said are Babalawos and them I would do a research to see if they are Muslims,and are Babalawos,that's the way I work,(and trust me there are around here a lot of Muslims and real Yorubas to make research)...Let me tell you something else my brother Facundo long,long before I came to this country...I have all the knowledge,and all the jurisdiction provided to me by my ancestors,Godfathers and ultimately the Orichas to know is somebody,( and I repeat Facundo,..if somebody is real or, is fake).Dr. Zaragemca
Berimbau wrote:I think that it is a terrible mistake to project one's culture assumptions and values onto another culture. This has reached epedemic proportions in some African and African diasporan studies.. .. .. .....
Now I completely reject the idea that any African culure is somehow mired in a sonambulatory stasis. Ditto for the Diaspora! The dynamism of African cultures continually astounds me, and one should enjoy the richness of surprise and meaning within it's profoundly beautiful expressions. As such the organological diversity of bata drums should be studied on a case by case basis, and any value judgements based on any other cultural artifact should be avoided. Cultural comparison may be entered into, but with great care. This regreatabley seldom happens as a consequence of various political and psychological factors, both of which are on ample display here.
To David - the Brasilian bata are manifested in three seperate organological traditions. One is a concical bimembranophone, made of wood but NOT hourglass shaped, with two skin heads laced together with rawhide. . . . .. . . . . . .
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