Colin Townsend is a cultural anthropologist and drummer who
published a study on the ways identity is constructed among a group of drummers
at Oyotunji Village , South Carolina .
Oyotunji Village
was founded by Oba Oseijeman I, born Walter King of Detroit ,
in 1970 with the purpose of providing African-Americans in the United
States with a geographical, political, and
cultural space to experience African culture. Modeled after Yoruba culture of
southwest Nigeria ,
members of the community practice a religion known as orisa-voodoo.
Throughout the year, festivals are held dedicated to various
orisa, "deities," in which the drummers play a crucial role in the
religious experience of the orisa-voodoo adherents. An essential part of Yoruba
culture, drumming acts as a musical bridge between humans and orisa, enabling
orisa-voodoo practitioners to petition the orisa for guidance and intervention
in their daily lives. Drumming traditions at Oyotunji
Village provide drummers with a
repository of cultural knowledge and practices from which to draw, while at the
same time offering them a creative outlet capable of reshaping and redefining
those very same traditions.
Townsend examines various processes of identity formation
among the drummers as part of their musical apprenticeship, during which they
learn not only how to play the instrument but also about Yoruba culture in
general. He employs an analytical framework involving a "subject-centered musical ethnography" within a
three-dimensional space of musical experience including time, location, and
metaphor. Read "Drumming for the Orisa: (Re)inventing Yoruba Identity in Oyotunji Village."
To learn more about African drumming, I highly recommend Sule
Greg Wilson's informative book, The Drummer's Path: Moving the Spirit with Ritual and Traditional Drumming. Wilson
provides a useful introduction to the many different styles of traditional
African drumming. This is an intriguing work that shows the relationship
between drumming, spirit and health. His writing offers an interesting insight
into the physical, metaphysical and spiritual aspects of drumming.
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