- Rainer Polak
Rainer Polak is a ethnomusicologist and
djembe drummer who has done extensive research in the field ofWest African celebration music performances and wrote important contributions in the field ofethnomusicology .Biography
Dr. Rainer Polak studied
social anthropology ,African liguistics ,Bambara language , andHistory of Africa from 1989 to 1996 atBayreuth University (Germany ), and jenbe music performance from 1991 until today inBamako (Mali ). All of his studies and work inBamako were accomplished with the help of the musically outstanding, yet rather locally and traditionally minded drummers whose playing is presented in this book and the corresponding CD.Polak has worked as a professional jenbe player in
Bamako for one year in 1997/98, performing at well over a hundred traditional weddings, spirit possession dances and other celebrations on the basis of being hired by the lateJaraba Jakite , most of the times, and occasionally by the lateYamadu Bani Dunbia , byJeli Madi Kuyate , and byDrissa Kone . The ethnomusicological dissertation and book he wrote on that experience won the academic prize of theGerman African Studies Association in 2003/04. Polak ranks as an outstanding jenbe soloist inGermany . As a teacher he has specialized in giving focussed classes on micro-timing, and master-classes in jenbe solo performance.Publications
* (in Vorbereitung): West African Percussion. One World–Many Musics, vol. 6 (DVD). Rotterdam: Codarts / Hogeschool voor de Kunsten.
* 2004 Festmusik als Arbeit, Trommeln als Beruf. Jenbe-Spieler in einer westafrikanischen Großstadt. Berlin: Reimer.
* 2007 »Performing Audience: On the Social Constitution of Focused Interaction at Celebrations in Mali«. In: Anthropos 102.2007/1: 3–18.
* 2005 »A Musical Instrument Travels Around the World: Jenbe Playing in Bamako, in West Africa, and Beyond«. In: Post, Jennifer (ed.), Ethnomusicology: A Contemporary Reader. NY: Routledge Press, 161–185. [Erstveröff. 2000 in The World of Music]
* 2005 »Drumming for Money and Respect. The Commercialization of Traditional Celebration Music in Bamako«. In: Jansen, Jan and Stephen Wooten (eds.), Wari Matters: Ethnographic Explorations of money in the Mande World. LIT Verlag, pp. 135–161.
* 2004 »Die Kommerzialisierung der Hochzeitsfestmusik in Bamako«. In: Beck, Kurt, Till Förster und Hans Peter Hahn (Hrsg.), Blick nach vorn. Festgabe für Gerd Spittler zum 65. Geburtstag. Köln: Köppe, S. 235–249.
* 2003 »City rhyrhms: The urbanization of local drum/dance celebration music in Bamako«. In:Jansen, Jan (ed.), Experts in Mandé. Leiden: Nederlandse Vereniging van Afrika Studies, pp. 1–24.
* 2001 »Festmusik: Zur Ethnographie musikalischer Gattungen in Westafrika«. In: Marianne Bröcker(Hrsg.), Berichte aus dem ICTM-Nationalkomitee Deutschland IX/X. Bamberg: Universitätsbibliothek, S. 19–50.
* 2000 »A Musical Instrument Travels Around the World: Jenbe Playing in Bamako, in West Africa, and Beyond«. In: The World of Music 42/3: 7–46.
* 2000 »Ein Musikinstrument geht um die Welt. Zur Verflechtung lokaler, nationaler und internationaler Kontexte im Bamakoer Jenbe-Spiel«. In: Bauer, Ulrich, Henrik Egbert und Frauke Jäger (Hrsg.), Interkulturelle Beziehungen und Kulturwandel in Afrika. Beiträge zur Globalisierungsdebatte. Frankfurt a.M.: Peter Lang Verlag, S. 291–312.
* 1998 »Jenbe Music in Bamako: Microtiming as Formal Model and Performance Practice«. In: Iwalewa-Forum 2: 24–46.
* 1997 »Bewegung, Zeit und Pulsation. Theorierelevante Aspekte der Jenbemusik in Bamako«. In: Jahrbuch für musikalische Volks- und Völkerkunde 16: 59–70.
* 1999 »Andreas Meyer: Afrikanische Trommeln«. In: The World of Music 41/1.
* 1999 »Gilbert Rouget: Guinée. Musique Malinké«. In: The World of Music 41/2.
* 1999 »Thomas Hale: Griots and Griottes«. In: The World of Music 41/3.External links
* [http://tcd.freehosting.net/djembemande/bibliography.html MANDING BIBLIOGRAPHY] Compiled by Rainer Polak
* [http://tcd.freehosting.net/djembemande/microtiming.html Jenbe Music: Microtiming] Article aboutMicrotiming
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