Drums in Communication
Drums in Communication
Drums in Communication
Developed and used by cultures living in forested areas, drums served as an early form of long distance communication, and were used during ceremonial and religious functions.
Talking drum[edit]
While this type of instrument can be modulated quite closely, its range is limited to a gathering or market-place, and it is primarily used in ceremonial settings. Ceremonial functions could include dance, rituals, story-telling and communication of points of order. Some of the groups of variations of the talking drum among West African ethnic groups:
Tama (Wolof of Senegal) Gan gan, Dun Dun (Yoruba of Nigeria and eastern Benin) Dondo (Akan of central Ghana and Cote d'Ivoire) Lunna (Dagomba of northern Ghana; Mossi of Burkina Faso) Kalangu (Hausa of northern Nigeria, Niger, northern Ghana, Benin and Cameroon) Doodo (Songhai and Zarma of Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger)
In the 20th century the talking drums have become a part of popular music in West Africa, especially in the music genres of Jj(Nigeria) and Mbalax (Senegal).
Drum languages[edit]
In Africa, New Guinea and the tropical America, people have used drum telegraphy to communicate with each other from far away for centuries. When European expeditions came into the jungles to explore the primeval forest, they were surprised to find that the message of their coming and their intention was carried through the woods a step in advance of their arrival. An African message [2] can be transmitted at the speed of 100 miles in an hour. Among the famous communication drums are the drums of West Africa (see talking drum). From regions known today as Nigeria andGhana they spread across West Africa and to America and the Caribbean during the slave trade. There they were [3] banned because they were being used by the slaves to communicate over long distances in a code unknown to their enslavers. Talking drums were also used in East Africa and are described by Andreus Bauer in the 'Street of Caravans' while acting as security guard in the Wissmann Truppe for the caravan of Charles Stokes.
Smoke signal
The smoke signal is one of the oldest forms of long-distance communication. It is a form of visual communication used over long distance.
Examples[edit]
Native Americans[edit]
Lewis and Clark's journals cite several occasions when they adopted the Native American method of setting the plains on fire to [1][2] communicate the presence of their party or their desire to meet with local tribes.
Ymana[edit]
Ymanas used fire to send messages by smoke signals, for instance if a whale drifted ashore. The large amount of meat required [4] notification of many people, so that it would not decay. They might also have used smoke signals on other occasions, thus it is possible that Magellan saw such fires (which inspired him to name the landscape Tierra del Fuego) but he may have seen the [5][6] smoke or lights of natural phenomena.
[3]
Noon Gun[edit]
Noon Gun time signalling was used to set marine chronometers in Table Bay.
Australian Aborigines[edit]
Australian Aborigines would send up smoke to notify others of their presence, particularly when entering lands which were not their own. However, these were not complex signals; smoke simply told others where one was located.