The Shantu music of the Harims of Nigeria

Authors

  • Mercedes MacKay

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21504/amj.v1i2.255

Keywords:

Music -- Nigeria, Folk music -- Nigeria, Songs, Hausa -- Nigeria, Women, Hausa -- Music, Women musicians -- Nigeria

Abstract

Perhaps the most fascinating of all Nigerian music is the Shantu music and soft rhythmical singing which comes from the women’s courtyards of the Muslim Harims. I do not know of any other music either in Africa or the world which can be compared to it. Recently I have been able to obtain a tape recording of this music, which is a very difficult thing to come by because the songs themselves are of a very private and intimate nature, and it is impossible for a man to gain access to the women’s quarters. The wife of a student anthropologist managed this however, and I believe that this recording (not very good, alas) is unique.

Author Biography

  • Mercedes MacKay
    Well known as a writer and broadcaster on West African music and musical instruments: she has done much to encourage West Africans to take pride in their indigenous music and Europeans to acknowledge its worth.

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Published

1955-11-30

How to Cite

“The Shantu Music of the Harims of Nigeria”. 1955. African Music : Journal of the International Library of African Music 1 (2): 56-57. https://doi.org/10.21504/amj.v1i2.255.

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