- Kwela
Kwela is a happy, often
pennywhistle based, street music from southern Africa with jazzy underpinnings. It evolved from themarabi sound and broughtSouth Africa n music to international prominence in the 1950s.The music is rooted in
Africa , but later adaptations of this and many other African folk idioms have permeated Western music (listen to Graceland byPaul Simon ) and give modern South African music, particularlyjazz , much of its distinctive sound and lilting swagger.One reason for the use of the pennywhistle is that it is cheap and portable, but it also lends itself as a solo or an ensemble instrument. The popularity of the pennywhistle may have been based on the fact that
flute s of different kinds have long been traditional instruments among the peoples of the more northerly parts of South Africa, and the pennywhistle thus enabled the swift adaptation of folk tunes into the new marabi-influenced music.The word "kwela" is taken from the
Zulu for "get up", though in township slang it also referred to the police vans, the "kwela-kwela". Thus it could be an invitation to join the dance, as well as serving as a warning. It is said that the young men who played the pennywhistle on street corners also acted as lookouts to warn those enjoying themselves in theshebeen s of the arrival of the police.Artists such as
Lemmy Mabaso were renowned for their pennywhistle skills, andSpokes Mashiyane was one of the most prominent with his kwela pennywhistle tunes.References
*"Pennywhistle Kwela: a Musical, Historical and Sociopolitical Analysis". Lara V. Allen, MA (Natal-Durban). 1993.
External links
* [http://www.last.fm/tag/kwela Kwela] at
Last.fm
* [http://www.kwela.co.uk/ The Kwela Project - website about playing kwela]
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