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Version of Didgeridoo History by Ed Drury |
Introduction: Before I can begin to talk about the didgeridoo, I have to introduce some words that you may or may not already be familiar with. The first is Yolngu (pronounced Yol´nu). Yolngu is a group of languages spoken throughout Northeastern Arnhem Land, Northern Territories, Australia. The word literally means "people". It is the word which the indigenous people from that part of the land use to describe themselves collectively. These people, the Yolngu people, are the custodians of their land, art, songs and music. They are the "traditional" keepers of knowledge about these things and the traditional owners of whom I speak in reference to the didgeridoo. Their word for the didgeridoo is Yirdaki (pronounced Yi´dakee). When they speak of "Balanda", they are referring to people like myself who are not Yolngu, but rather of European heritage either culturally or genetically. That word comes from their earliest visitors, the Makassans. It is derived from the world "Hollander" - a more recent visitor to their lands, the Dutch explorers. When I talk about the history of the didgeridoo, I'm talking about the awareness of non-Aboriginal people of an instrument. The greater history is really only known by a relatively small number of people - the traditional owners. The traditional owners history is far older and can not be told by outsiders. It perhaps can be told to outsiders, but not by them. This is because the culture the didgeridoo comes from has its own way of keeping history and of passing on information. Our way is different, and in that different way I can only speak of what has been reported about the instrument since knowledge of it spread beyond the safe keeping of the traditional owners. I can speak of what is written in text books and taught in schools. This is the way my culture reckons history and passes on information. I don't believe for a minute that our way is better. It is, in fact , proven to be fallible and inaccurate. The Aboriginal way is proven over thousands of years, while our way has repeatedly found itself filled with contradictions, misunderstandings and political agenda. Information about the didgeridoo came to the world in stages or "waves." These waves were: discovery, anthropological studies, appropriation by contemporary musicians, instrument sales and finally, internet discussion lists and web pages. With each wave came different aspects or "spins" on the information which has taken on a life of its own. The Yothu Yindi Foundation, in a 1999 newsletter, eloquently expressed an Aboriginal perspective on the issue of appropriation of the instrument. "...Yet Yolngu people are concerned that the emergence of a global culture and the commercialization of the Yidaki [sic] has the potential to separate the Yidaki from its origins in the sacred stories which are at the heart of the songs. Ritual leaders of northeast Arnhem Land are calling for a new relationship with Balanda which recognizes the centrality of the Yidaki to the Aboriginal groups who by right and tradition have the Yidaki as one of the instruments of cultural expression." (Yothu Yindi Foundation Newsletter 1999)
The didgeridoo, as recently as 100 years ago, had a restricted distribution in Australia. Earlier researchers such as Elkin (1938) noted that it was "only known in Eastern Kimberley and the northern third of the Northern Territory". Although now played around the globe, traditional playing style and technique is confined to this region.
A tremendous body of documentation resulted from these studies which included descriptive texts, field recordings and musical transcriptions. This work continues today revealing subtle changes in the instrument's distribution, influences from current events and recording technology which has improved dramatically since the early days. Field recordings were made commercially available and drew interest from a broader audience, but a lot of the attention focused on the instrument known as the didgeridoo rather than the musical and cultural context in was in. The recordings often featured demonstrations of the sounds and rhythms of the didgeridoo rather than its role as an accompaniment. Intended to showcase the instrument's range of harmonics and rhythmic accuracy, often these demonstrations (or solos) where mistaken to be traditional works by listeners. The notion of the didgeridoo as an instrument of self expression began forming in western minds. Traditionally, a typical performance will consist of one or more singers (one of whom is the lead songman), each with a pair of sticks or something else percussive (at times makeshift) and one didgeridooist. Some genres of music do not use didgeridoo, but where used, only one is ever played at a time. If for some reason a didgeridooist is unavailable, the piece can still be performed.
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On the streets of cities throughout the world are performers playing didgeridoo with various levels of ability. One of the most fascinating acts I've seen is a man named Ted Watkins, who juggles whilst balancing the didgeridoo on his lips, eyes looking skyward and playing it! The didgeridoo has also successfully crossed genres into trance (Trance Mission), Celtic (Reconciliation), orchestral (Rencontres) just to name a few. But a few artists have also felt a need to identify their music with Australia and the indigenous population so strongly that they have put misleading statements in their liner notes or titles. Words like "Tribal" and "Traditional" are found on the covers of many CDs which have no traditional content. The sampling of traditional music and using those samples without permission or compensation has been done shamelessly, and for the most part gone without penalties. In the liner notes of many recordings you will find a "history" or story about the didgeridoo, so our history of the instrument is constantly being "invented" in yet another area: CD sales.
The vast majority of consumers want cultural information in so far as it validates their assumptions about that culture. What started out as an instrument primarily used by only a small group of indigenous people became associated with all Australian Aboriginals. These assumptions have placed the didgeridoo in the middle of an imagined spiritual realm. From the mid 1980s to the mid 1990s, the separation of yirdaki from the culture owning its traditions became enormous. The misunderstandings about the culture itself became homogenized in the popular press and media. Ideas about who the traditional owners are and what they are like was forged through assumptions about them rather than direct contact with them. But all that is in the process of changing.
Slowly, sites authored and maintained from within the Aboriginal Culture became available to anyone with web access. Connections are being made via email with people who have first hand knowledge about the music, the instruments and the culture in traditional lands of the didgeridoo. As traditional people became involved with the World Wide Web, their immediate reaction was one of shock and dismay over the gap between the instrument and the culture as they knew it to be. This should only serve to encourage more participation. I find it interesting that today there is more interest in traditional yirdaki than at any other time I can recall. The contemporary techniques of prolonged harmonic glides and wild vocalizations are easy enough to pick up from contemporary recordings, but the rhythmic power of traditional playing which prompted Trevor A. Jones to call the didgeridoo a "rhythm instrument par excellence" are much harder to realize, perhaps impossible, without first hand instruction. All of this has the didgeridoo community, if you'll indulge me one pun, abuzz.
In
1999, the Yothu Yindi Foundation launched an event which allows
participants to camp on Yolngu land and study yirdaki, matha (language)
and crafts in a five day immersion with the Yolngu people. The
Garma Festival is truly unique, but I think it will be seminal
in creating more opportunities to learn directly from traditional
people in much the same way as they have through generations of
their own people. This is the future and the history of the didgeridoo.
Rather than being simply co-opted from the culture and advanced
separately, it will surely lead non-aboriginal people closer to
understanding its source and its true history. Musicians, instrument
providers, educators and web authors who are in communication
with the Aboriginal people have everything to gain and nothing
to loose from the increasing voice of indigenous people. Those
who continue to insist that they are experts, pretend to speak
for a culture they are not part of, and make associations with
the culture that are fictitious, will become obsolete. There is
no reason for those practices. There never has been. Contemporary
didgeridoo playing is firmly established and very popular. But
the traditions of the Aboriginal people are not going to disappear.
They will express their human right to self determination and
the expression of their culture, language and knowledge in the
generations to follow. Ed Drury
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Ed Drury's
Recordings |
1998
Squael and Duet in D on Didgeridoo Planet II |
| NOTICE: Photos taken by Barry Martin of L.A.Outback and others, used here by permission. Please do not copy and/or distribute without permission. Thank you for your respect and consideration. |