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  • 1
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    IWF (Göttingen)
    In:  (Jan. 1966)
    Language: Undetermined , Undetermined
    Pages: 594MB, 00:09:59:08 (unknown) , Originalton ohne gesprochenen Text , Original sound, no spoken text
    Angaben zur Quelle: (Jan. 1966)
    Keywords: music (ethnology) ; clothing ; spezielle Kleidung ; material culture ; Lebenslauf ; Djonkor ; noise instruments ; death cult, death custom ; Gesellschaft ; singing ; mourning garments ; Encyclopaedia Cinematographica ; Bräuche ; Chad ; cultural studies ; materielle Kultur ; Ethnologie/Kulturanthropologie ; Djonkor ; burial ; Tod ; custom / circle of life ; ethnology/cultural anthropology ; death ; arts (ethnology) ; Brauchtum / Lebenskreis ; wailing women ; Trauer ; Musik (Ethnologie) ; Kulturwissenschaften ; Totenkult/Ahnenkult ; Totenkult, Totenbrauchtum ; Diongor ; Afrika ; song of mourning ; Kleidung ; grief ; Künste (Ethnologie) ; Beerdigung ; Singen ; Trauerkleidung ; Musiker ; society ; musicians ; customs ; special clothing ; Africa ; course of life ; cult of the dead/ancestor worship ; Lärminstrumente ; Klagefrauen ; Gesang ; Tschad ; Klagelied
    Abstract: Im Dorf Mukulu singen vier Klagefrauen in traditioneller Trauertracht, Spatenblätter aneinanderschlagend, ihre Gesänge. Die Vorsängerin singt zunächst eine Strophe vor, die von den anderen wiederholt und mit einem Refrain versehen, nachgesungen wird. In einer Pause trinken sie Hirsebier.
    Abstract: Shows excerpts of mourning songs as performed by the wailing women of the Mukulu tribe in Chad. They begin the songs soon after the death and sing intermittently until the burial. Of the four women shown here, two have shaved their heads as a sign of mourning. The singers strike iron hoe blades together for rhythmic accompaniment.
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  • 2
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    IWF (Göttingen)
    In:  (Jan. 1966)
    Language: Undetermined , Undetermined
    Pages: 493MB, 00:09:32:16 (unknown) , Originalton ohne gesprochenen Text , Original sound, no spoken text
    Angaben zur Quelle: (Jan. 1966)
    Keywords: music (ethnology) ; arts (ethnology) ; Musik (Ethnologie) ; Kulturwissenschaften ; Tanz / Tschad ; Diongor ; Afrika ; Tanzstile ; music groups ; Tanz (Ethnologie) ; Djonkor ; Dambio ; group dance ; festive dance ; Feste ; Künste (Ethnologie) ; Gesellschaft ; singing ; Gruppentanz ; Singen ; Encyclopaedia Cinematographica ; Musiker ; Chad ; dance (ethnology) ; dance / Chad ; society ; cultural studies ; musicians ; Ethnologie/Kulturanthropologie ; Djonkor ; Africa ; styles of dance ; Singen / im Chor ; dambio ; Gesang ; Musikgruppen ; Tschad ; Festtanz ; singing / chorus ; ethnology/cultural anthropology ; feasts
    Abstract: Im Haddad-Dorf Maroki tanzen und singen Gäste aus dem Mukulu-Stamm in einer Kreisformation, vorwiegend ältere Frauen sowie einige Männer. Einzelne Tänzer treten in den Kreis, tanzen mit ihren jeweils rechten Nachbarn und treten wieder zurück, während die Nachbarn wiederum mit ihren rechten Nachbarn tanzen.
    Abstract: The dambio dance is performed at the annual feast of the margai for this clan in Chad. Mostly women participate in the dance, but it is evident that they have drunk millet beer before the performance. Eventually the dancers lose the rhythm, some quarreling takes place, and the dance dissolves in part.
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  • 3
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    AV-Medium
    IWF (Göttingen)
    In:  (Jan. 1966)
    Language: Undetermined , Undetermined
    Pages: 337MB, 00:05:40:00 (unknown) , Originalton ohne gesprochenen Text , Original sound, no spoken text
    Angaben zur Quelle: (Jan. 1966)
    Keywords: musical instruments / membranophone ; music (ethnology) ; Musikinstrumente ; Trauertanz ; Lebenslauf ; musical instruments ; Blasinstrumente ; music groups ; Tanz (Ethnologie) ; occasional dances ; Flöte ; Djonkor ; Schlaginstrumente ; death cult, death custom ; Gesellschaft ; drum ; anlaßbezogene Tänze ; Encyclopaedia Cinematographica ; Bräuche ; Chad ; dance / Chad ; cultural studies ; Ethnologie/Kulturanthropologie ; Trommel ; Djonkor ; percussion instruments ; Musikgruppen ; burial ; Tod ; custom / circle of life ; ethnology/cultural anthropology ; death ; arts (ethnology) ; Brauchtum / Lebenskreis ; Trauer ; Musik (Ethnologie) ; Kulturwissenschaften ; Tanz / Tschad ; Totenkult/Ahnenkult ; musical instruments / aerophone ; Totenkult, Totenbrauchtum ; Diongor ; Afrika ; orchestra ; grief ; Künste (Ethnologie) ; Orchester ; flute ; Beerdigung ; festive orchestra ; Musikinstrumente / Membranophone ; funeral dance ; wind instruments ; Musiker ; dance (ethnology) ; society ; musicians ; customs ; Festorchester ; Africa ; course of life ; cult of the dead/ancestor worship ; Tschad ; Musikinstrumente / Aerophone
    Abstract: Im Dorf Mukulu spielt das traditionelle Festorchester, bestehend aus fünf Flötenspielern, von denen drei auch Rasseln betätigen, drei Trommlern und einem Bläser eines sakralen Blasinstrumentes, den Trauertanz Ombre kunto. Vor dem Orchester tanzen ein Mann und drei Frauen.
    Abstract: The orchestra of the Mukulu tribe (Djonkor-Gera) is arranged in traditional formation. Five flute-players, three of them also shaking rattles, make up the right, three drummers the left wing. In the middle stands an old man holding the sacred wind-instrument parri which is used only on cultic occasions (cf. also Fuchs [20]). The orchestra plays the traditional mounring-dance ombre kunto. In front of the orchestra dance a man armed with a spear and three women. The mourning-dance is characterized by sequences of stamping steps.
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  • 4
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    IWF (Göttingen)
    In:  (Jan. 1966)
    Language: Undetermined , Undetermined
    Pages: 417MB, 00:08:12:05 (unknown) , Originalton ohne gesprochenen Text , Original sound, no spoken text
    Angaben zur Quelle: (Jan. 1966)
    Keywords: musical instruments / membranophone ; music (ethnology) ; Unterhaltungstanz ; Musikinstrumente ; Araber ; hairdress ; musical instruments ; Tanzstile ; Tanz (Ethnologie) ; Schlaginstrumente ; Religion ; Gesellschaft ; singing ; drum ; Hemat-Araber ; Encyclopaedia Cinematographica ; Körper ; Chad ; religious practices ; dance / Chad ; religion ; cultural studies ; Ethnologie/Kulturanthropologie ; Trommel ; am haraba ; sacred activities ; percussion instruments ; Arabs ; Gebete ; Gestik ; ethnology/cultural anthropology ; individual ; gesture ; arts (ethnology) ; Musik (Ethnologie) ; eulogy ; Kulturwissenschaften ; Tanz / Tschad ; Afrika ; group dance ; prayer ; Künste (Ethnologie) ; Hemat Arabs ; Musikinstrumente / Membranophone ; Preisgesang ; Individuum ; religiöse Praktiken ; Gruppentanz ; Singen ; sakrale Handlung ; Musiker ; dance (ethnology) ; society ; musicians ; Haartracht ; Africa ; styles of dance ; Gesang ; Tschad ; body ; songs of praise ; entertainment dance ; Am haraba
    Abstract: Im Dorf Ambasanda tanzen mehrere, in Reihen stehende Gruppen von Mädchen, Frauen und Männern zum Rhythmus zweier Trommeln und zum Gesang der Frauen, wobei sich Frauen- und Männergruppen teilweise gegenüberstehen.
    Abstract: The "am haraba"-dance was originally a war dance of the Sudan-Arabs, but since the failure of the warfare it has become a highly popular entertainment dance, performed mainly at great festivals and in honour of persons of high rank. The "am haraba"-dance presented in this film was performed by the Hemat-Arabs inhabiting Ambasanda village at the foot of the Gera Massif in eastern Tchad. A cylindrical double membrane drum (nugara) and a wooden mortar are attached to a pole on the dancing-place of the village. The drum is beaten by two boys, while a third boy uses the wooden mortar as a drum. To the rhythm of the drums the women sing songs in praise of the several rich and famous men of the country. For dancing the women form into different groups, each group forms in a line, and all the women perform the swaying movements ("bounce") characteristic of the "am haraba"-dance. In the beginning of the dance the different groups of women are composed according to the dancers' social status. The male dancers form also different groups, three or four men dance together in a line, holding in their hands a stick, a sword or a knife. Each group of men dances in front of a group of women, men and women move towards one another, and the figure ends with a kind of mutual bow, the women swinging their plaits. At irregular intervals the men change their partners and pass over to another group of women. In the sequel the dance becomes a little confused because the groups partly dissolve and other groups are formed. In the course of the film, the women's chorus sings two different songs. The film presents about three thirds of the dance.
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  • 5
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    IWF (Göttingen)
    In:  (Jan. 1966)
    Language: Undetermined , Undetermined
    Pages: 100MB, 00:08:09:15 (unknown) , Originalton ohne gesprochenen Text , Original sound, no spoken text
    Angaben zur Quelle: (Jan. 1966)
    Keywords: music (ethnology) ; Opi, Kosi ; Wirtschaft (Ethnologie) ; social problems ; Djonkor ; djapanda ; alcoholism and drugs ; narration, narrator ; habitation ; Gesellschaft ; singing ; work ; soziale Probleme ; tobacco ; Encyclopaedia Cinematographica ; estates and professions ; Chad ; cultural studies ; Ethnologie/Kulturanthropologie ; Djonkor ; Opi, Kosi ; fairy tales ; Gebäude ; Djapando ; pipe ; Gestik ; ethnology/cultural anthropology ; Märchenerzähler ; gesture ; arts (ethnology) ; Musik (Ethnologie) ; Kulturwissenschaften ; labor organisation ; Diongor ; Afrika ; buildings ; Arbeit ; Künste (Ethnologie) ; economy ; story / teller ; Alkoholismus und Drogen ; Singen ; Musiker ; society ; musicians ; Wohnen ; stimulant ; Pfeife ; Genußmittel ; Tabakspfeife ; smoking ; Africa ; tobacco pipe ; Gesang ; Tschad ; Rauchen ; Erzählung, Erzähler ; Arbeitsorganisation ; Tabak ; Stände und Berufe
    Abstract: Im Dorf Mukulu erzählt pfeiferauchend eine ältere Frau namens Kosi Opi das Märchen vom Waran Djapando in traditioneller Art mit gesungenen Passagen und bezeichnenden Handgesten.
    Abstract: Sitting on an inverted mortar in her homestead and smoking a pipe, the woman Kosi Opi tells the children gathered round her the story of the monitor Djapando, one of the most popular Djonkor-Gera fairy-tales. Kosi Opi tells it in a typical Djonkor-Gera manner, with songs woven in and with expressive gestures of the her hand. The film shows the story completely.
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  • 6
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    IWF (Göttingen)
    In:  (Jan. 1966)
    Language: Undetermined , Undetermined
    Pages: 113MB, 00:09:10:02 (unknown) , Originalton ohne gesprochenen Text , Original sound, no spoken text
    Angaben zur Quelle: (Jan. 1966)
    Keywords: music (ethnology) ; games ; arts (ethnology) ; Freizeitaktivitäten ; Kindertanz ; Musik (Ethnologie) ; Kulturwissenschaften ; Tanz / Tschad ; Spiel ; Spiele ; Afrika ; Künste (Ethnologie) ; leisure activities ; Gesellschaft ; singing ; Singen ; child's dance ; Kinderspiel ; Encyclopaedia Cinematographica ; game ; Musiker ; Chad ; dance / Chad ; society ; cultural studies ; musicians ; Ethnologie/Kulturanthropologie ; Dangaleat ; Africa ; children's game ; Gesang ; Tschad ; Dangaleat ; ethnology/cultural anthropology
    Abstract: Zehn Mädchen aus Korbo, im Alter von 3 bis 8 Jahren, ahmen sieben Tänze der Erwachsenen nach. Dabei singen sie und klatschen den Tanzrhythmus mit den Händen.
    Abstract: Imitating adult dances is one of the favorite games of Dangaleat children. The children imitate dances not only of their own ethnic group but also of the neighbouring Arabs and Dadjo. In the afternoon ten girls at the age of three to eight years have come together in a homestead. They clap out the rhythm of the dance and sing. The first two dances imitated by the children are Arab dances. The next two dances are imitations of Dangaleat dances, and the fifth dance is composed of figures of two different Arab dances. The sixth dance is again a Dangaleat dance, danced by the adults in couples. Naturally the girls dance the women's part. The seventh and last dance is once more an Arab dance: the girls repeat the second dance.
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