Akan Civilization and History

African Musicological Inquiry and Positions

Autores/as

  • Kwasi Ampene Tufts University, USA Autor/a

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.71199/dqvsem34

Palabras clave:

Akan Civilization and History; Akan Culture; Sound Producing and Musical Instruments; Continuity

Resumen

Like most African societies, there is ample evidence that the Akan in West Africa developed sophisticated methods in the visual and musical arts (or expressive arts) for recording and storing historical experience, to express religious worldview and philosophy, and created societies with unique social values. The historicized texts of ivory trumpets, flutes, drums, songs, poetry of Kwadwomfoɔ (Chronicle Singers), and referential poetry of Abrafoɔ (the Constabulary), and Adinkra pictographic writing bear ample testimony to the undeniable presence of expressive arts in Akan socio-political and economic sophistication. In this paper, I use one of the texts of Fontomfrom Akantam (Oath Swearing) dance suite as a launching pad to respond to Kwasi Konadu’s (2015) disagreement with late nineteenth and twentieth century historians for not considering expressive arts as foundational to Akan civilization. To address the above questions and to complement the larger discourse in the socio-political and economic history of the Akan, I speculate on the formative processes of Akan musical development and the construction of sound producing as well as musical instruments, and the emergence of court music and verbal art forms, community-based vocal ensembles, drumming and dance genres from the Stone Age to the present. My assessment takes into account, the Stone Age from approximately 2000 BCE-500 BCE proposed by James Anquandah (1982), and Kenya Shujaa’s (2015) three broad chronological phases of Akan historical and cultural development namely, the Early Iron Age from 500 BCE-500 CE; the Middle Iron Age from 500 CE-1500 CE; and the Late Iron Age from 1500-1900.

Biografía del autor/a

  • Kwasi Ampene, Tufts University, USA

    Kwasi Ampene received his Diploma in Music from the University of Ghana, his Masters in Music Theory from West Virginia University, and his PhD in Ethnomusicology from the University of Pittsburgh. Ampene specializes in the rich musical traditions of the Akan people of West Africa. He has disseminated his research at national and international conferences and speaking engagements at major universities in Africa, United States, Europe, Asia, the Caribbean, and South America. He has provided expert advice for public engagement projects on Akan culture and music to the British Library, and Princeton University. Ampene's book publications include, Asante Court Music and Verbal Arts in Ghana: The Porcupine and the Gold Stool (2020). Asante Court Music is the winner of J.H. Kwabena Nketia Book Prize by the African and African Diaspora Music Section in the SEM for the best monograph on African music in 2022. Additional books include, Engaging Modernity: Asante in the Twenty-First Century (2016) and Female Song Tradition and the Akan of Ghana: The Creative Process in Nnwonkoro (2005). He is the leading editor of, Discourses in African Musicology: J.H. Kwabena Nketia Festschrifts (2015). He has published several articles in prestigious journals. Ampene is the producer of the film documentary, Gone To The Village: Royal Funerary Rites for Asantehemaa Nana Afia Kobi Serwaa Ampem II. Ampene is currently the President of Ghana Studies Association (an international affiliate of the African Studies Association); Chair of the Society for Ethnomusicology Council; a member of the Editorial Board of the SOAS Studies in Music Series at the University of London; and the past Chair of the African Music Section in the Society for Ethnomusicology.

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Publicado

2024-12-29

Número

Sección

Dossiê Etnomusicologia Negra: Caminhos, Contribuições, Pensamentos e Legado