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美国纽约大都会艺术博物馆展品查阅
美国纽约大都会艺术博物馆展品查阅
美国大都会艺术博物馆中的24万件展品,图片展示以及中文和英文双语介绍(中文翻译仅供参考)
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品名(中)索拉·恩戈尼(辛宾戈)
品名(英)Sora Ngoni (Simbingo)
入馆年号1889年,89.4.493
策展部门乐器Musical Instruments
创作者
创作年份公元 1801 - 公元 1900
创作地区几尼(Guinea)
分类合唱竖琴(Chordophone-Harp)
尺寸88厘米 x 31厘米 x 27厘米
介绍(中)这种猎人的竖琴,或称sora-ngoni,来自西非的曼德地区,指的是曼德帝国(公元1235-1469年)的地理阴影,包括今天的马里、塞内加尔、几内亚、几内亚比绍和冈比亚。在马宁卡语中,猎人的音乐家被称为sora(也称为sewa、sera、serewa或dewra)。恩戈尼是这类竖琴的总称

这把猎人竖琴展示了西非竖琴常见的五个结构部件:首先,它的琴颈装有调谐环;第二,它有一个葫芦作为谐振器;第三,它有一个由动物皮制成的声音表;第四,它有一个直立的绳架或桥;最后,也许是Mandé地区最独特的,它是一把尖刺竖琴,这意味着乐器的颈部一直延伸穿过谐振器,并从底端突出。尖刺竖琴和带有直立弦架或琴桥的竖琴都被认为是西非本土的

对猎人作为曼德社会基础的重视不容低估。从广义上讲,索拉或猎人是一个历史悠久的职业群体nyamakala的一部分。nyamakala人与他们的horon(贵族出身)和jon(奴隶,现在基本上已经不复存在)对应者的区别在于dalilu,或精神力量,通过fasiya或patriceline传承,他们能够使用nyama或危险的力量。具体来说,索拉是森林中猎人和超自然力量之间的中介。例如,通过索拉之歌对猎人和他的杀戮的赞扬抵消了死亡中释放的nyama。Mandé口头传统中大量提及猎人,最著名的是在Sunjata史诗中,simbon或猎人大师被认为是故事英雄的直系祖先

在曼德世界,狩猎社会内部几乎没有社会差异,这导致马里学者优素福·西塞得出结论,狩猎社会早于"马林克社会的僵化结构"和伊斯兰教的传播(1964:176)。尤其是亨特的竖琴,不依赖铁匠的铁工具,因此可能早于公元前一千年中期西非开始金属加工,也就是在曼德地区依赖农业作为食物来源后不久。在干旱和/或饥荒的情况下,狩猎可能对生存至关重要,从而使猎人成为英雄(Cissé1964:189;Bird 1972:276和Charry 2000:67)。因此,猎人音乐家的实践可能是在对农业的依赖变得普遍后不久发展起来的,这使他们的实践成为最古老的实践之一,不仅出现在大都会艺术博物馆的曼德乐器收藏中,而且至今仍在曼德地区实践

这把猎人的竖琴有一个细长的脖子,可以刺穿一个小葫芦的一半。葫芦上覆盖着一层用木栓固定的兽皮。四块木头支撑着隐藏的声音表:在桥的两侧,两块平行,两块垂直于乐器的颈部。该乐器的六根缠绕在琴颈上的琴弦穿过桥上十二个孔中的一半。然后将它们绑在葫芦底部的铁环上,铁环上还绑着一块布。琴桥由一种与琴弦相匹配的缠绕材料固定在适当的位置,并系在乐器底座的布环上。葫芦的侧面有一个三角形的音孔

所有这些特征加在一起,这种乐器与几内亚/几内亚科纳克里地区发现的猎人竖琴最为相似。具体来说,它很可能是几内亚洛马(也有洛霍马、卢马、洛马或托马)的猎人竖琴(Huchard 2000)。洛马人是一个少数民族,主要生活在几内亚和利比里亚。他们在社会和历史上与门德人关系密切,尽管他们的语言与曼德语的西南分支有关。尤其是洛马竖琴,就像这种乐器的情况一样,它的特点是桥上有比琴弦更多的孔,因为琴弦要么是串起来的,要么不是串起来的。(Althea SullyCole,2022)

参考文献:

Bird,Charles S.1972。《曼德拉猎人的英雄之歌》,非洲民间传说,理查德·多森主编。布鲁明顿:印第安纳大学出版社:275-93。2000年,曼德音乐:西非马宁卡和曼丁卡的传统和现代音乐。芝加哥:芝加哥大学出版社

西塞,优素福。1964年,《马林克社会笔记》,《非洲学杂志》第34期,第2期:175-226页。

Huchard,Oussmane Sow。2000年,拉科拉。达喀尔:达喀尔大学出版社。
介绍(英)This hunter’s harp, or sora ngoni, comes from the Mandé region of West Africa, which refers to the geographical shadow of the Mandé empire (1235-1469 A.D.), including present-day Mali, Senegal, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, and the Gambia. In the Maninka language, a hunter’s musician is called sora (also sewa, sera, serewa, or dewra). Ngoni is the generic term for these kinds of harps.

This hunter’s harp exhibits five structural components common to West African harps in general: first, its neck is fitted with tuning rings; second, it has a gourd as a resonator; third, it has a sound table made from an animal skin; fourth, it has an upright string holder or bridge; and finally, and perhaps most unique to the Mandé region, it is a spike harp, which means that the neck of the instrument extends all the way through the resonator and protrudes from the bottom end. Both spike harps and harps with upright string holders or bridges are considered indigenous to West Africa.

The emphasis on hunters as foundational to Mandé society cannot be understated. Broadly speaking, sora, or hunters, are part of a historic occupational group called the nyamakala. The nyamakala are distinguished from their horon (noble-born) and jon (slave, now a largely defunct category) counterparts by dalilu, or spiritual powers, passed down through fasiya, or patrilineage, through which they are able to wield nyama, or dangerous forces. Specifically, a sora acts as an intermediary between hunters and supernatural forces in the forest. For example, praise of both the hunter and his kill through sora song neutralizes the nyama released in death. References to hunters abound in Mandé oral traditions, most notably in the Sunjata epic, where simbon, or master hunters, are cited as the immediate ancestor to the story’s hero.

In the Mandé world, there is little social distinction within hunter societies, leading Malian scholar Youssouf Cissé to come to the conclusion that they predate the “rigid structure of Malinke society” and the spread of Islam (1964: 176). Hunter’s harps, in particular, do not rely on the iron tools of blacksmiths, and therefore may predate the beginnings of metalworking in West Africa in the mid-first millennium B.C.E., not long after reliance on agriculture as a food source developed in the Mandé region. In the event of drought and/or famine, hunting may have been critical to survival, resulting in the elevation of hunters as heroes (Cissé 1964: 189; Bird 1972: 276 and Charry 2000: 67). It is possible, therefore, that hunter’s musicians’ practices were developed not long after reliance on agriculture became widespread, making their practices one of the oldest not only represented in the Met’s collection of Mandé instruments but which is also still practiced in the Mandé region today.

This particular hunter’s harp has a long, straight neck that pierces half of a small gourd. The gourd is covered with an animal hide that is secured by wooden pegs. Four pieces of wood hold up the hide sound table: on either side of the bridge, two parallel and two perpendicular to the instrument’s neck. The instrument’s six twisted strings, which are looped onto the neck, pass through half of the bridge’s twelve holes. They have then been tied to an iron ring attached to the bottom of the gourd, around which a cloth is tied as well. The bridge is held in place by a wound material that matches the strings and is also tied to the cloth loop at the instrument’s base. There is a triangular sound hole cut in the side of the gourd.

All of these characteristics put together, this instrument most closely resembles hunter’s harps found in the Guinea/Guinea-Conakry region. Specifically, it is likely a hunter’s harp of the Loma (also Loghoma, Looma, Lorma or Toma) of Guinea (Huchard 2000). The Loma are a small ethnic group that live primarily in Guinea and Liberia. They are socially and historically closely related to the Mende people, although their language is related to the Southwestern branch of Mandé languages. Loma harps in particular, as is the case with this instrument, feature bridges with more holes for strings than there are strings, which are either strung or not for symbolic reasons. (Althea SullyCole, 2022)

References:

Bird, Charles S. 1972. “Heroic Songs of the Mande Hunters.” In African Folklore, edited by Richard Dorson. Bloomington: Indiana University Press: 275-93.

Charry, Eric. 2000. Mande Music: Traditional and Modern Music of the Maninka and Mandinka of West Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Cissé, Youssouf. 1964. “Notes sur les sociétés de chasseurs malinké.” Journal des Africanistes 34, no. 2: 175-226.

Huchard, Ousmane Sow. 2000. La Kora. Dakar: Presses Universitaires de Dakar.
  大都会艺术博物馆,英文 Metropolitan Museum of Art,是美国最大的艺术博物馆,世界著名博物馆,位于美国纽约第五大道的82号大街。
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