The Water music of Vanuatu
ORAL
Abstract
Female musicians from the northern islands of Vanuatu (within larger Polynesia) use the water surface as an instrument to create a variety of unique sounds. Water music is often made by a line of performers standing side by side, waist deep in clear island waters. Accompanied by singing, the women work in unison exhibiting several percussive techniques, which include striking the water surface and throwing handfuls of water which scatter into droplets before impacting the surface. Each interaction produces a unique acoustic response corresponding to the air-water-hand interaction. We highlight the connection between water interaction, cavity shape and the resulting sound which was discovered by these people through their own experimentation.
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Authors
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Tadd Truscott
Utah State University, Department of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering, Utah State University
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Randy Hurd
Utah State University
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Jesse Belden
Naval Undersea Warfare Center, NUWC Newport, Naval Undersea Warfare Center, Newport
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Nathan Speirs
Utah State University
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Andrew Merritt
Utah State University
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John Allen
University of Hawaii