|
|
Funeral Festivities
Filmmaker Name:
|
Hugo Zemp
|
Film Length:
|
80 min
|
Film Year:
|
2001
|
Duration:
|
76-90 min
|
Decade:
|
2000s
|
Series:
|
Masters of the Balafon series
|
Color:
|
color
|
Subject:
|
Music, Dance & Theater
|
|
Among the Senufo people of northern Côte d'Ivoire, the balafon (xylophone with calabash resonators) is an emblematic musical instrument.
This film shows balafon orchestras playing in five villages during the two principal days of funeral festivities, celebrations that include the most important rites, ceremonies and rejoicings in the life of the Senufo. During dialogues with Sikaman, a young musician who acted as research assistant for this film series, the master balafonist Nahoua gives the key to understanding how this marvelous music comes into being, and what it means.
This DVD includes the extra features:
Blacksmith's Music and Masks (10 min)
"La Clé" Balafon Music (15 min)
Films in the Masters of the Balafon series
Balafon is the name given in French-speaking West Africa to a xylophone with calabash resonators. This instrument is emblematic of the Senufo people of the Côte d'Ivoire (the former Ivory Coast). The balafon is played under differing circumstances and in combination with different groups of instruments. Not for nothing do the peoples of the Côte d'Ivoire call the northern part of their country "the land of the balafon."
Filmed in long sequences to preserve the integrity of the music and speech of the musicians, this series of four documentaries introduces the audience to the fascinating world of a living musical tradition. Each documentary can be viewed independently, as a whole, or in sections indicated by chapter titles. The complete series lasts nearly 4 ½ hours (including extras), providing a full account of a sophisticated African musical tradition.
|
|
|
The
Shopping Cart
is currently empty
|