1 P ag* Portland Observar Section II February 28. 1981 BLACK MUSIC AND ENTERTAINERS By Lots Yvonne Whaley Music has been an integral part o f the human ex­ perience since before recorded time. It is the language o f sound which expresses all levels o f the conditions under and into that which man was and is; and. as such, becomes a form o f communication which fits the needs o f the people who created it. Most early peoples attributed music to their gods, and the anonymous poets and singers can be said to have been music’s first historians. In Genesis, the firs t book o f the Old Testament. Jubal, a relative o f Cain, is said to be “ ...the father o f all such as handle the harps and organ.” Moses affirms this. The Greeks, through their legends and mythology, had a God and Goddess who "invented” music. Behind that ancient civilization came the Romans with their carbon copies. In the Sudan, the Dogans have eight kinds o f drums, each a different size, which correspond to their inter­ pretation ol the creation o f the world, from the birth o f the great M o n ito r (G od), symbolized by the Kunga drum; to the age when the human race began to increase and multiply-symbolized by the Barba drum. One might find an analogy in the Judeo-Christian interpretation o f the Creation. Music and religion, then, have been intimately inter­ woven since the Dawn o f Man. AFRICA According to some eighteenth and nineteenth century Am ericans, culture in A fric a was said to be non­ existent; however, reports belie this. Before the African was brought to the New World as a slave, his musicality was well developed and documented. The earliest published account was written by Richard Jobson, Esq. during a visit to Gambia in 1620 - 21. He observed the importance o f music in the A frica n's life, and stated that all “ .. .principan persons (that is, the Kings and Chiefs) do hold as an ornament o f their state, so as when wee come to see them, their musicks will seldome be wanting." The important rulers employed their own bands and the bandmaster, master drummer and royal hornblower had the highest status. The better band members and singers were also held in high esteem, o f­ ten receiving some form o f gratuity from the dancers and visitors. An important member o f every village was the bard. After having been identified as possessing possibilities lor such a career, he served an apprenticeship for many years. His responsibilities were m an ifold . As chief historian, he related all inform ation in song. Before a battle, he whipped the w arriors into a frenzy w ith music, continuing on into the battle: c couraging the troops with songs o f the glorious deeds o f their ancestors. He acted also as court jester, and often became the conscience o f the ruler. Some became wan­ derers o f intinerant minstrels and performed in religious ceremonies in addition to being the musical focus at social occasions. In the late eighteenth century, Olaudathe (Ibo) Equiano, one o f the first Africans to write in English wrote: B e are almost a nation o f dancers, musicians and poets. Thus every great event... is celebrated in public dances which are accompanied with songs and music suited to the occasion. Various European w riters in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries corroborated this. Music, therefore, was a functional part o f each per­ son’s life from birth to death. The Ashanti, according to Bowdich, thought it "...absurd to worship God in any other way than with chanting or singing." Music was used socially, recreationally, politically and, as stated earlier, as an act o f communication. A ll chores, com­ munity involvements, human conditions, contracts, and expressions were manifested in this form . Each song had a specific m otive fo r being instrum entalized, danced or sung. UWÜ i n u i v i e n I o — I in í X f f I i *> ¿ l ' l r l i r t r t ■ m «.a — - . --- -------A ■ ■ Harriet Tubman began her career as an army nurse in 1862, nursing the sick and wounded in South Carolina. Oregon Health Sciences Center School o f Nursing Salutes Black History M onth Photo the Schom burg Cohecho : a • The purpose of the project, "Recruitment of Minority Students for Careers in Nursing" is to: 1. Increase the number of potentially qualified ethnic minority or edu­ cationally disadvantaged students committed to pursuing a pro­ fessional career in nursing; 2. Increase the number of ethnic minority students seeking and gain­ ing admittance to prenursing programs and to the program at the UOHSC School of Nursing; 3. Reduce the attrition of ethnic minority and educationally disadvan­ taged students enrolled in the School of Nursing. WHO_DO I CONTACT FOR MORE INFORMA TION? F o r m o re in fo r m a tio n on the U O H S C S ch o o l o f N urs inq and its m in o r ity re c ru it m e n t p ro te c t c o n ta r t Proiect Director Recruitment of Minority Students for Careers in Nursing UOHSC School of Nursing Portland, OR 97201 or Phone 225 7574