Jaiva

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Worldbeat
Stylistic origins World music
Traditional music
roots music
Pop rock
Indie rock
Cultural origins Mid 1980s, United States, United Kingdom
Typical instruments Widely variable, though drums or percussion are constant
Subgenres
Afrobeat
Fusion genres
Afro-Cuban jazz – Afro-juju – Bhangragga – Biguine moderne – Burger highlife – Calypso-style bailaCampursariCanto livre – Canto nuevo – Chicha – Chutney-bhangra – Chutney-hip hop – Fuji – Hip life – LambadaLatin jazzMerenrapMor lam sing – Nueva cancion – Punta rockRai popRapso – Reggae highlife – Salsa – Sevillana – Slack-keySongoZamrockZoukBouyon
Other topics
World music – folk music

Jaiva or Township Jive ("TJ") is a sub-genre of South African township music and African dance form[1][2] which has influenced Western break dance[3] and emerged from the shebeen culture of the apartheid era townships.

Influences and particularity

While closely associated with umbaquanga, Township Jive more broadly incorporates some influences from mariba and kwaito[4] rather than umbaquanga, neither of which is it synonymous. To the extent mariba influences TJ, it may be somewhat sanitised as TJ broke into the international commercial arena.[5]

Emergence in world music circles

Also featured on the Graceland album were The Boyoyo Boys, who received additional press coverage when Malcolm McLaren allegedly plagiarised their song "Puleng" and released it as the hit "Double Dutch", capitalising on the emergence of breakdance and hip-hop.[6]

Additional momentum for world beat attention to South African music developed as a result of international attention to the demise of apartheid and Nelson Mandela's 70th birthday concert in Wembley Stadium, London in 1988.[citation needed]

History

According to Ambrose Ehirim, a US-based Nigeria specialist,[6] township music traces to the 1950s when it was proscribed by South African police.[7] This is contradicted by the assertion of anti-apartheid activist/musician Johnny Clegg,[8] that "by the 1960s, the development of umbaqanga hadn't even really started". Umbaquanga or Mbaqanga has been characterised as urban pop music "with high-pitched, choppy guitar and a powerful bass line" influenced by "funk, reggae, American R&B, soul and drawing on South African Marabi, gospel music".[9] It draws on both kweli and maribi.[10]</ref>

Township Jive is closely associated with the development of baquanga, umbaquanga or m'baquanga but is distinguished in that it is more closely associated with emergent international trends and not as insular and rooted in tradition as umbaquanga.[11] Christopher Ballantine traces the "shift from imitating American jazz to localizing the sound with African features. This he connects to the emergence of the ideology of New Africanism".[12] While the international market was absorbing Township Jive under the swirl of commercial activity culminating in the McLaren copyright infringement lawsuit and the subsequent release of triumphant BBoy's new album was preferred amongst a more elite listening audience closely associated with the black diasphora consciousness movements.[13]

Globalization

The homogenisation of Township Jive with US and UK culture, due to globalisation, is viewed by African artists as a threat to the preservation of their local tradition and credibility. Thus, artists focus on maintaining an emotional link between customer and brand. This explains why transnational corporations are much less interested in homogenising or Americanizing kwaito music because true kwaito represents and dictates South African experience.[14] Americanizing kwaito, as is many artists' opinion, can potentially dilute the substance kwaito was originally based on.[15]

On the upside, critical awareness of TJ has enhanced appreciation of fusion artists and others influenced by its style. For instance, Vibration Bookings bills its artist Nomfusi as a proponent of "a new style where South African Township Jive ("Jaiva") meets Motown".[16] And the Boyoyo Boys have, subsequent to the copyright scandal, signed by Rounder Records which released TJ Today in 1998.

See also

External links

  • Audio track Soweto Jive Zambia Association of Musicians website[17]
  • Township Jive clips on web radio [18]
  • "Jaiva" clip of dance competition in English and Zulu; note "kwaito" context[1]

Additional scholarly references

  • Charles Hamm (1987). Review of David B. Coplan 'In Township Tonight! South Africa's Black City Music and Theatre' Popular Music, 6, pp 352–355 doi:10.1017/S0261143000002427
  • THE SOCIAL HISTORY OF CAPE TOWN Cape Town: The Making of a City: An Illustrated Social History. Edited by NIGEL WORDEN, ELIZABETH VAN HEYNINGEN and VIVIAN BICKFORD-SMITH. Cape Town: David Philip, 1998. Pp. 283. Rand 250 (ISBN 0-86486-435-3). Cape Town in the Twentieth Century: An Illustrated Social History. Edited by NIGEL WORDEN, ELIZABETH VAN HEYNINGEN and VIVIAN BICKFORD-SMITH. Cape Town: David Philip, 1999. Pp. 255. Rand 225 (ISBN 0-86486-384-5).
  • David Copeland| Cape Town| 1994: operation and impact of Musical Action for People's Progress in disadvantaged communities in the Cape Flats
  • David Copeland| 1985 in township tonight! South Africa's black city music and theatre. London ; New York: Longman ; Johannesburg: Raven Press, 1985. (French edition, published in 1990 by Karthala)
  • Barbara Browning (1998) Infectious Rhythm: Metaphors of Contagion and the Spread of African Culture [Paperback] Routledge
  • Louise Meintjes' Sound of Africa (2003)
  • Gwen Ansell's Soweto Blues (2004).

References and notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Jaiva". YouTube. 
  2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xykC1IP6odU|Tina and Mvuyisi jiving at the Ikamva Lethu centre in Kayamandi South Africa
  3. band=Wozani |title= Township Jive |http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-pdj9oC_5s&feature=related
  4. Stone, Ruth (1998). Garland Encyclopedia of World Music: Vol. 1. New York: Garland Pub. 
  5. 6.0 6.1 Ambrose Ehirim|Sunday, 9 December 2007|The Boyoyo Boys and Township Jive Today |http://magazine.biafranigeriaworld.com/ambrose-ehirim.html
  6. Ehirim, Ambrose (9 December 2007). "Amazano Music: The Boyoyo Boys and Township Jive Today". Samakamusic.blogspot.com. 
  7. "Johnny Clegg". Everything2.com. 27 October 2002. 
  8. "Everything2". Everything2. 
  9. "mbaqanga (thing) by StrawberryFrog". Everything2.com. 9 January 2002. 
  10. Louise Meintjes (1996). Review of Christopher Ballantine 'Marabi Nights: Early South African Jazz and Vaudeville', Popular Music, 15, pp 245–247 doi:10.1017/S0261143000008187
  11. Christopher Ballantine|Christopher Ballantine 'Marabi Nights: Early South African Jazz and Vaudeville|xxxx|xxxx
  12. Louise Meintjesa1. "Cambridge Journals Online – Popular Music – Abstract – Marabi Nights: Early South African Jazz and Vaudeville. By Christopher Ballantine. Johannesburg: Raven Press, 1993. xii + 116 pp., taped examples". Journals.cambridge.org. 
  13. Magubane, Zine. The Vinyl Aint Final "Globalization and Gangster Rap: Hip Hop in the post-Apartheid City". 220
  14. Swartz, Sharlene. "Is Kwaito South African Hip Hop? Why the answer matters and who it matters to". May 2003
  15. "Nomfusi, Manou Gallo, Ernestine Deane, Layori, Batucada Sound Machine – Delicioustunes booking- concerts- management". Vibrationbooking.com. 
  16. http://zamonline.com/browse_vidfeeders.php?tag=jaive&keyword=Movies
  17. "Township jive music – Listen free at". Last.fm. 15 January 2013. 
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.