
The performance group “Uganda Heritage Roots,” comprised of street children from Kampala, Uganda, perform the Bagandan ngoma “Baakisimba.”
by Julie Neumann
The music of a 90-year-old blind Ugandan thumb piano player fills the
room. The sound is so clear and full it gives the impression of a live
performance. But the aging artist is not giving a concert nor has he
ever set foot inside a recording studio. A fellow African musician,
using state-of-the-art field recording equipment, has collected 80
minutes of the thumb piano player in his own village, creating a CD
that is now being played in an office at the Blair School of Music.
This rare recording is the foundation for Blair’s new Music Archive of
Africa and the Americas.
“We are trying to approach music, in particular music of smaller
communities in Africa and America, on their own terms,” said Greg Barz,
assistant professor of ethnomusicology. “We want to empower other
communities, other countries, to record for themselves and make choices
on what they want preserved by Vanderbilt.”
Barz began to consider such an archive on a research trip to Africa
when he was approached by villagers concerned over the gradual
disappearance of their traditional music. Dennis Clark, director of the
Anne Potter Wilson Music Library, confirmed that they had both the
technology and expertise to set up a modern archive at Vanderbilt that
would act as a repository for indigenous music.
In May, Clark and Barz traveled to Uganda with high-level recording
equipment to begin collecting music for the archive. After establishing
a network in Africa, they turned over their equipment to Centurio
Balikoowa, a world-famous Ugandan traditional artist and close friend
of Barz who has visited Vanderbilt several times. Balikoowa agreed to
travel to rural villages and record music over the span of one year,
sending CDs back to Barz and Clark every month.
“We think we will get much more authentic and realistic recordings that
[way],” said Clark. “So it can be very proactive and very organic – it
can grow wherever it goes rather than us putting a predetermined
imprint on top of it.”
The archive is unique in that the artists provide written consent,
allowing Vanderbilt the freedom to license and share the music with the
world via the Internet. Similar archives generally do not provide such
broad access. Clark also foresees the release of CDs through a
University-run record label, with the creators of the music sharing in
the proceeds.
“There are tons of wonderful recordings in archives all around the
world that [you] can’t make copies of,” Clark said. “Some of them [you]
can’t even play, [because] the format is so fragile that playing it
would destroy it. We have committed to this process of not only having
it available for access but migrating to the next level of technology
in perpetuity.”
After Barz and Clark realized the potential importance of the archive,
they began to tackle the difficulties of making a top-quality recording
in rural Africa.
“We had to figure out the idiosyncrasies of making a field recording
with no electricity,” said Clark. “We used a direct-to-CD machine that
runs on a lead acid battery so you can take it into a village and make
a recording on CD in a place that does not have electricity, much less
the ability to play a CD.”
The equipment also had to travel well. Many East African villages are
inaccessible by car, so the entire recording platform had to fit into a
backpack that could be worn during bumpy motorcycle rides into the
countryside.
Clark viewed all of these technological hurdles as signs of progress.
“It is an experiment not only as a project of ethnomusicological
importance but also in the changing paradigm of the library,” he said.
“Libraries need to embrace this technology, to become proactive and
more niche-based to their user community.”
During their trip, Clark and Barz discovered that being proactive
archivists did not eliminate the possibility of gathering existing
recorded material. Though the focus of the research trip was on making
traditional music recordings, Barz began a side project of collecting
kandas, cassette tapes of popular music that are sold in kiosks and on
street corners throughout Uganda.
“As someone who has been working in Africa for a long time, I realize
cassettes are the reality of everyday music in Africa,” Barz said. “You
can’t buy them, you can’t just go on Amazon.com and find the cassettes
that are for sale in the villages and towns throughout Africa.”
Western music libraries and archives generally don’t collect these, rather collecting CDs of African music produced in Europe.
“It would be like us only collecting people who covered other people’s
music, which is ridiculous to even think about,” he said. “But when it
comes to other people’s cultures we very often will only trust
interpretations rather than going to the source.”
With help from young Ugandans and Barz’s research assistant, Vanderbilt
undergraduate John Dick, the research team collected hundreds of these
tapes in an effort to document the cassette culture and its affect on
other music. The result is the largest archive of popular African
cassette recordings in the world, truly representative of contemporary
Ugandan culture and music.
Building and supporting relationships between Africa and America is at
the heart of this project, and one of the most difficult moments for
the research team was leaving Uganda and the work they had begun in the
hands of others. But the first recordings they received proved beyond
all doubt that the new archive would be a success.
“Balikoowa has been traveling throughout East Africa taking this
project very seriously, collecting from the true culture bearers,” said
Barz. “The field recording made of the thumb piano player was a triumph
not only in the quality and importance of the recording, but it also
proved the importance of entrusting the recording process to the
culture itself.”
Balikoowa’s collection of 80 minutes of recorded materials of the
notable blind musician is probably one of the last links to a very old
playing culture, he said.
“I know how difficult it can be for a foreign researcher with limited
time to locate and record local African musicians in optimal recording
conditions,” Barz said. “The fact that Vanderbilt has a true partner on
the ground makes me realize that the archive is not only for
Vanderbilt. This is clearly of importance to Ugandans themselves.”
Posted 7/19/04