Pueblo music

Indigenous music of North America:
Topics
Native American/First Nations
Chicken scratch Ghost Dance
Hip hop Native American flute
Peyote song Pow wow
Tribal music articles
Arapaho Blackfoot
Dene Innu
Inuit Iroquois
Kiowa Kwakwaka'wakw
Navajo Pueblo (Hopi, Zuni)
Seminole Sioux (Lakota, Dakota)
Yaqui music Yuman
Related topics
Music of the United States - Music of Canada

Pueblo music includes the music of the Hopi, Zuni, Taos Pueblo, San Ildefonso, Santo Domingo, and many other Puebloan peoples, and according to Bruno Nettl features one of the most complex Native American musical styles on the continent. Characteristics include common use of hexatonic and heptatonic scales, variety of form, melodic contour, and percussive accompaniment, melodic range averaging between an octave and a twelfth, with rhythmic complexity equal to the Plains Indians musical sub-area.

Nettl cites the Kachina dance songs as the most complex songs and the music of Hopi and Zuni as the most complex of the Pueblo, while Tanoan and Keresan music is simpler and intermediate between the Plains and western Pueblos. The music of the Pima and Papago is intermediary between the Plains-Pueblo and the California-Yuman music areas, with melodic movement of the Yuman, though including the rise, and the form and rhythm of the Pueblo. (Nettl 1956, p. 112-113)

Work songs are found in Pueblo music, but are otherwise mostly unknown among Native American folk music (Nettl, 1965, p. 152).

One well-known melody from the Zuni people is Zuni Sunrise or The Sunrise Call, a song frequently played on Native American Flute[1]. This melody was initially collected by Carlos Troyer and published in an arrangement for voice and piano in 1904[1].

References

Sources