Music of Papua New Guinea: Difference between revisions

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Some of the pictures are clearly Indonesian Papua, not PNG
 
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[[Image:Children-in-Papua-New-Guinea.jpg|thumb|right|240px|Children dressed for a ''[[sing-sing]]'' in 2003]]
The music of [[Papua New Guinea]] has a long history.
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By the end of the 1970s, a local recording industry had appeared and artists such as [[Sanguma]] and later [[George Telek]] began mixing native and Western styles like rock and jazz.
 
===Sing-sing photos and traditional instruments===
Below are pictures from Papua New Guinea and Papua Indonesia.
<gallery>
File:Penabuh Tifa dalam Suling Tambur.jpg|Tifa drummers, part of a tambur-flute ensemble. Such a group can include several tifa drummers, several flute players, and one leader of the line
File:Siap Tempur.jpg|Tifa drummer
File:Pemimpin Barisan di Suling Tambur.jpg|Leader of the line of a suling tambur (flute drum) combination.
File:Suling Tambur.jpg|[[Suling]] (flute)
File:Musicians of Papua New Guinea.jpg|[[Kundu (drum)|Kundu]] drummers
File:Penari tifa papua.jpg|Tifa drum
File:Peniup Suling Tambur.jpg|[[Suling]] (flute) player of the [[Raja Ampat Islands]], off the western end of [[New Guinea]].
File:Paris - Musée du quai Branly - Tambour horizontal à fente - 72.1963.14.1 - 001.jpg|[[:de:Garamut|Garamut]] slit drum
File:PNG Rattle QM-r.jpg| A dance rattle from [[East Sepik Province]] in Papua New Guinea. Rattles like these may form part of traditional dress, tied to the ankles of people dancing in traditional ‘singsings’
File:PNG Pipes QM r.jpg|Wooden pipes made of thin bamboo are used for music making and ceremonies. [[New Ireland Province]].
</gallery>
 
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By the beginning of the 20th century, Christian hymns, [[work song]]s and [[gold rush]] songs were popular, some in native languages and some in English or German. By the 1920s, recorded music had become popular and radio broadcasting of western [[popular music]] appeared by the late 1930s. A few years later, Allied soldiers and sailors during World War II popularized the guitar and [[ukulele]] while stationed in the [[Philippines]] and [[Hawaii]]. [[String band]]s became very popular by the early 1950s, and soon dominated the pop landscape. In the late 1960s, rock bands like the Kopikats had appeared in cities, while string bands like the [[Paramana Strangers]] had become well- known internationally. This was followed by the importation of [[Bamboo music|bamboo band]]s, a style of music from the [[Solomon Islands]] using bamboo tubes played by hitting them with sandals.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|author= Feld, Steven |entry= Bamboo Boogie-Woogie |date= 2000 |encyclopedia= World Music (volume 2 Latin & North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific) |volume= 2 |pages= 183–188 |publisher= Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books|isbn= 1-85828-636-0}}</ref> It first arrived in the area of [[Madang]] in the mid-1970s, and soon spread throughout the country.
 
==Reggae music==
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==Hip hop/rap==
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[[O-shenShen]] was one of the first to blend hip hop with reggae,. theThe culture soon spread as many local underground talents surfaced, likesuch as Naka Blood with their first hit "Pom Pom City" followed by "Time is Now". Another group surfaced later by the name of 3KiiNgZ, tooktaking PNGPapua New Guinea by storm with the hits "High Groove Theory", "Kanaka Walk", and "One Sound" (featuring Sprigga Mek from the hip hop collective Naka Blood.) Sprigga Mek of Naka Blood went solo and released "Sweet Mekeo", rapping in his local [[Mekeo language|Mekeo]] dialect, and later released "Pasin Kanak;" whichthis is now known as the unofficial national anthem of the PNGPapua New Guinea [[Kanaka (Pacific Island worker)|Kanakas]]. Papua Gong Native with his Kanaka rhyming skills is one of the best-known local rappers rapping in [[Motu language|Motu]] dialect. As the 21st century progressed, technology and influence from the outside world caused an exponential growth of recording artists and 'Pacific-style' music. Artists such as Wild Pack (Tasik Yard), Daniel Bilip, Ragga Siai, Tarvin Toune, Saii Kay and Tonton Malele began to create their own mixture of modern and traditional music sung in Tok Pidgin, English and local tribal languages. This style of music by these popular artists now dominate music scene in PNG.
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==Papua New Guinea musicians==
*[[O-ShenAnslom Nakikus]]
*O-Shen
*Kande Dwayne
*Maltech Citizen Boyz
*Tasik Yard (Wild Pack)
*Ragga Siai
*Daniel Bilip
*Tarvin Toune
*Saii Kay
*Uralom Kania
*Sir Lister Serum
*Gedix Atege
*Archie Tarzy
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
*Feld, Stephen. ''"Bamboo Boogie-Woogie".'' 2000. In: Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.), ''World Music, Vol. 2: Latin & North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific'', pp 183–188. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books. {{ISBN|1-85828-636-0}}
 
==External links==
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080820011131/http://www.pnginusa.org/radio/ Sampling of PNG music online]
 
{{Culture of Oceania}}
{{Oceania topic|Music of}}
 
[[Category:Music of Papua New Guinean musicGuinea| ]]