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Guernsey Schools Music Service

Madinda

Displaying 1 to 2 of 2 resources labelled with 'Madinda'

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Track 12 from Saydisc "Percussion Around the World" - notes from Maureen Hanke.

'Bunyoro Madinda' was recorded in Uganda, 1969. It is a social piece played on the madinda by a group of fishermen.

The madinda is a log xylophone. Twelve keys are placed across two banana stems and separated by tall sticks driven into the stems. The keys, in this case canoe boards, are tuned higher in pitch by cutting the lower edges of the boards and tuned lower by increasing the depth of a hand made notch in the middle of the under surface.
Formerly the instrument was played only for the important and wealthy and traditionally on the first performance a goat or cockerel was sacrificed.

The whole piece is made of many short repeated patterns. ( In a music session listen to the overall effect: a very rich overlapping texture of rhythm and pitch. )

Official classification: Percussion, Timbre, Ostinato, Cyclic patterns, Audio, Key Stage 3, Uganda, Madinda, East Africa, Saydisc Records, Saydisc/Charanga World Music

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Track 4 from Charanga / Saydisc / Christine Richards project - 'Listen to this' for Key Stage 1. Mandinda music from Uganda from Saydisc album 'Spirit of African Sanctus' (1'37")
Main feature: rhythmic and melodic ostinatos.

This music of the Bunyoro tribe, Uganda, is played on a homemade madinda, a Ugandan xylophone. The learning track of the Track Explorer focuses on features of the music.

Official classification: Listening, Ostinato, Interactive Activities, Key Stage 1, Uganda, Percussion, Madinda, Track Explorer, Curriculum support, Charanga, Saydisc Records, Saydisc/Charanga World Music

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Displaying 1 to 2 of 2 resources labelled with 'Madinda'