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Journal of Musical Arts in AfricaPublication details, including instructions for authors and subscription information:http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=t911470575
Sounding place in the western Maputaland borderlandsAngela Impey
Online publication date: 10 November 2009
To cite this Article Impey, Angela(2006) 'Sounding place in the western Maputaland borderlands', Journal of Musical Artsin Africa, 3: 1, 55 79
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http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=t911470575http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/18121000609486709http://www.informaworld.com/terms-and-conditions-of-access.pdfhttp://www.informaworld.com/terms-and-conditions-of-access.pdfhttp://dx.doi.org/10.2989/18121000609486709http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=t9114705757/28/2019 IMPEY, Angela. 2010. Sounding Place
2/26 2007 University of Cape Town ISSN: 1812-1004
Sounding place in the western Maputaland
borderlands1
Angela Impey
Abstract
This article draws on research conducted in western Maputaland, a remote region in the
borderlands of South Africa, Mozambique and Swaziland. It argues that sound and the affect of
music-making represent a much under-utilised research resource in Africa, particularly in contexts
of social and spatial rupture. As discursive modalities, they provide constructive entry points for
understanding how personal and social identities are negotiated, how spaces or landscapes are
constructed, and the ways in which these processes interrelate in the making of place. Building
upon narratives inspired by the revival of the jews harp and two mouthbows once widely
performed in the area as walking instruments, but remembered now by elderly women only
the research utilises musical memory as a method to chart hidden geographies in a changing
landscape. In so doing, it aims to raise the level of the voices of a people whose livelihoods and
sociality may be at variance with broader environmental development processes in the region.
Introduction
Fambile Khumalo laughs as she remembers uKhisimusi(Christmas) as a child:
The men would return from Johannesburg with sweets and bread in cardboard boxes. We
would cross the Usuthu River and visit our families in Mozambique. We used to eat very well!
We ate meat and goats and chickens. We even ate rice and tea! I remember when they brought
back the first gramophone. [She sings:]
Baleka webaleka, siyafa, ijubane Run away, we are dying, run fast
Wemntanakhe Baba Child of my father
Gijimumqinise! Run fast!
Ah, that song really makes me remember! (Khumalo 2004)
Fambile Khumalo grew up in Banzi Pan, a vast area of shallow flood plains and low Acacia
scrubveld located on the border of South Africa and Mozambique. Banzi had long been
2
1 This research was made possible by a joint grant from the National Research Foundation of South Africa
(NRF) and the Research Council of Norway (RCN).
2006 University of Cape Town ISSN: 1812-1004
JOURNAL OF THE MUSICAL ARTS IN AFRICA VOLUME 3 2006 , 5579
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inhabited by Zulu, Swazi and Tembe-Thonga people who lived by hunting, fishing and
cultivating crops in the rich alluvial soils deposited by the annual flooding of the Pongola
River.2
As the area is predisposed to extreme heat, drought and flooding, survival dependedon both rootedness to land as well as the establishment of kinship networks that extended
deep into the coastal regions of southern Mozambique and west into Swaziland to support
a system of in- and out-migration during times of environmental stress, the outbreak of
diseases and warfare (Bruton & Cooper 1980; Harries 1994).
In 1924 Banzi and the surrounding pans were formally declared a protected area by the
South African government. Originally established for the protection of the hippopotamus,
the area was subsequently fenced and stocked with other large species and thus established
as a compensatory wilderness for a rapidly urbanising white population. Cleared of all
its residents by the early 1970s, Ndumo Game Reserve, as it became known, was duly
refashioned into a pristine, timeless space in nature; a space outside history.The timelessness inscribed in the image of the game reserve has, however, become
memorialised as a critical moment of loss for the Banzi people:
They came as if they were coming to fence the hippos in the pans. They said that they were
going to fence the pans because people were destroying nature, but the animals were destroying
our fields. After a while they didnt fence only the pans; they fenced the whole area. They made
the herd boys graze the cattle outside the fences. The boys removed the cattle while the families
were still in the park, working their fields. They started to say that we must not kill the birds. We
were not even allowed to kill a snake if it entered our houses. We were not allowed to touch the
antelope. If they found you catching a cane rat, you would be arrested and taken to the policestation in Ingwavuma. When you returned, they would chase you away from the park.
After some time, the police came and burned down the houses of all the people who were
still inside. If they were not home at the time, all of their things were removed. When they
came back from their fields, they found all of their things in the yard and their houses burned.
They told us that we had to collect our children and leave. We didnt know where to go. They
brought tractors and picked us up, put our last chickens and goats in the trailers, and dumped
us outside the fences. The old people had to clear spaces under the trees for their sleeping mats.
That was it: the park was closed and no one was allowed to return. (Sibiya 2003) 3
Once removed, the Banzi families settled on land in various wards along the periphery
of the game reserve where they pledged allegiance to local chiefs, built new houses and
prepared new fields. During the ensuing decades, a singular lament emerged amongst
them. Informed partly by the recollections of those who had been removed, and partly
re-imagined in response to emerging opportunities for economic redress, it is a lament
that without variation conflates environmental conservation with a profound sense of
dispossession:
2 Tembe-Thonga is a distinct cultural-linguistic group who inhabit regions of south-eastern Mozambique and
north-eastern KwaZulu-Natal. Historically, the Zulu referred to all people living in this eastern district as
Thonga (Tsonga) or Ronga; a more generalised designation for non-Sotho or Nguni-speaking people
consisting of the Konde, Maputa, Tembe-Thonga, Matolo, Mphumo, Mabota, Mazwya, Chiranda and
Manyisa tribes (Junod 1962:1617 in Kloppers 2001:56).
3 MaSibiya and her family were removed from the Ndumo Game Reserve in the late 1960s.
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There we were rich: we ate bhatata [sweet potato], banana, madumbe[root vegetable], idombolo
[cassava] and pumpkins. We drank from the Usuthu River. Today that river is reserved for the
hippos and crocodiles while our children die from drought. The wild fruits are left to fatten themonkeys, and the rhinos graze on the graves of our ancestors. (Sibiya 2003)
Today, Ndumo Game Reserve is one of many protected areas in South Africa that struggles
under the legacy of fortress conservation.4 Although current environmental paradigms have
begun to embrace an integrated conservation-with-development trajectory, the people and
parks relationship remains politically contentious. As a borderland area, western Maputaland
falls within the Usuthu-Tembe-Futi Transfrontier Conservation Area (TFCA) . TFCAs, known also as Peace Parks, have been designed to replace
national barriers with conservation corridors, herein linking protected areas across borders
under a unified management system and establishing regional strategies for the economic
upliftment of borderland communities. Driven by large international environmental donor
organisations, it has been argued that TFCAs are no more inclusive of local participation than
were previous conservation regimes (Wolmer 2003), and greater consideration needs to be
given to the diverse cultural and economic histories, and spatial practices of the communities
within these areas , (Kloppers 2001; Jones 2005, 2006).
Sound, social memory and spatiality in western Maputaland
This article focuses on narratives of place in the western Maputaland borderlands asinvoked through sound and music-making. It investigates womens evocations of place
in particular, arguing that womens experiences of spatial rupture through conservation
expansion have been different to those of men. While the loss of access to adequate land
and resources through their removal from the Ndumo Game Reserve forced many men
to seek wage labour elsewhere, women had to assume principal livelihood responsibilities
in their capacity as farmers, water conservators, and collectors of edible and medicinal
plants. The article therefore focuses on narratives associated with those for whom land
has carried essential responsibilities for survival, whose working with the land has linked
them functionally, affectively and sensually with place, and for whom loss of land has beenexperienced as overwhelmingly threatening.5
The article draws on research whose objectives were underwritten by two fundamental
questions:
4 Fortress conservation refers to a colonial preservationist paradigm managed according to a principle of
fences, firearms and laws. This approach undermined local peoples control over the environment and
criminalised their access to natural resources and game. New approaches based on sustainable use are
attempting to place communities back into the conservation scenario by empowering them to manage
environments and include them in conservation-based economic development (see Murphree 1991;
Murombedzi 1998; Metcalfe 1999; West, Igoe & Brockington 2006).5 For further discussion on womens uses and perceptions of the environment in relation to land-use policy,
see Ardner (1981) and Leach (1992).
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Figure 1: Map of the Usuthu-Tembe-Futi Transfrontier Conservation Area
What can be learned from sound, song and performance with regard to how
experiences are constructed, negotiated and reinvented in the context of spatial and
social rupture? In what ways can the act of remembering and disclosure through music-making
contribute towards the empowerment (re-voicing) of marginalised people?
The first is an analytical question that draws on mainstream ethnomusicological concerns
regarding how music is imagined, performed and made meaningful in relation to broader
socio-political developments. The second is motivated by an interest to contribute
actively towards processes of social transformation or redress. It is central to what may be
more generally referred to as advocacy ethnomusicology; its intention is to use research
towards practical social or development outputs. Drawing on participatory methodologies
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promulgated by Paulo Freire (1995) and Robert Chambers (1997; 2006), it seeks to use
music as a medium of self-empowerment, and to encourage dialogue between communities
and development agencies in the attempt to realise more integrative and culturally appositeapproaches towards livelihood development and environmental sustainability.6
This article presents an overview of my research in four sections: the first focuses on a
description of the jews harp (istweletwele) and two mouthbows (umqangala and isizenze)
in western Maputaland. Once performed by young women to accompany walking, these
instruments are now remembered by elderly women only. The second section explores the
revival of these instruments as a participatory methodology, linking sonic, kinetic and spatial
memories to memories about self in place and time. In the third section I examine the
jews harp and mouthbow repertoire as historical text, tracking changes in lyrical content to
broader socio-economic and spatial changes in the region. I conclude by reflecting on waysin which the act of remembering through sound and performance has produced insights
and activities that may have more widespread development potential for the region.
Nguni womens mouthbows: umqangala andisizenze
As mouth-resonated sounds are relatively faint, they have been generally overlooked by writers
in the past, but, heard in the kraal in the stillness of early evening, they ring out unmistakably,
and, combined with the fundamental sounds, produce an effect which has a unique character
and beauty all of its own. (Kirby 1968 [1934]:225)
In his comprehensive study of musical instruments in southern Africa in the 1930s, Kirby
notes that the simple mouthbow was widely played throughout the southern African
region. At the time the umqangala (referred to also as umqengeleamongst certain isiZulu
speakers) was played by Swazi, Zulu and Shangana/Tsonga people,7 thus suggesting that the
instrument had been widely practised in the area of my research for some time.8
The umqangala is constructed from a length of a river reed (umhlanga) and a single string
(usinga) once made from sinew, hair or a fibrous plant (Kirby 1968 [1934]:220) but replaced
now with a light-gauge nylon fishing line. A reed is more pliable than wood, and allows one
to pull the string in as tight as required, producing a slight arch and preventing the stringfrom vibrating against the stave. Further, the hollow centre of the reed produces a resonance
which helps to amplify the harmonics. The instrument is generally constructed by the
performer herself, the reed length being measured against the length of her arm. Should
6 This research is also informed by the Unesco Local and Indigenous Knowledge Systems Links Project
whose mission is [to build] dialogue amongst local knowledge holders, natural and social scientists, resource
managers and decision-makers to enhance biodiversity conservation and secure an active and equitable role
for local communities in resource governance. For further details, see .
7 Shangana/Tsonga in this instance refers to the language group resident in the Tzaneen and Pietersburg
district of what was then known as the Northern Transvaal (Northern Province). For information aboutShangana/Tsonga mouthbows, see Johnston (1970).
8 See also Rycroft (1982) and Dargie (2001).
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the performer prefer a deeper sound, she may cut the stave slightly longer. The string is
attached to the tips of the reed stave by means of a slip-knot, producing a taut thread that is
plucked with a reed plectrum.The end of one side of the stave is positioned into the corner of the mouth between the
upper and lower lips without touching the teeth. The other end is held by the index finger
of the left hand, while the thumb is used to stop the string. The string is plucked very close
to the mouth with the right hand (see Figure 2).
Figure 2: Mrs Minah Mkize plays umqangala mouthbow9
The isizenze is a more complex mouthbow, historically associated with the Tembe-
Thonga in the coastal region of north-eastern Maputaland and southern Mozambique.
This instrument is less well documented by Kirby, who refers to versions of it amongst
the Transvaal Thonga (Shangane/Tsonga) as isizambi; the Venda as tshizambi; the Chopi,
Tswa and Ndau in Mozambique as chivelani; and the !Kung San in Botswana as nxonxoro
(Kirby 1968 [1934]:235).
9 All photographs were taken by photographer and field assistant, Mduduzi Mcambi .
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Made from the pliable wood of the usiphanetree (Grewia occidentalis), the isizenzeconsists
of a solid wooden stave, thinned and bent up sharply at both ends. A single flat string, made
from a strip of ilala palm leaf(Hyphaene coriacea), is attached to each end. A series of smallcorrugations are incised into the outer centre of the stave; the performer will rasp these
corrugations with a small wooden stick causing the instrument to vibrate powerfully.10
Unlike the umqangala, whose harmonics are amplified by placing the tip of the stave into
the mouth, the isizenzeplayer will place the palm leaf between her lips, positioning her
mouth near the stave end, but not on it. She holds the bent stave more or less in the crook of
her left arm, using the thumb and the third finger to stop the string (see Figure 3).
Figure 3: Mrs Nyanyisile Gumede plays isizenzemouthbow
10 Kirby suggests that a rattle stick was used by the Shangana/Tsonga to create additional percussive effect
when rasping (1968 [1934]:236). I found no evidence of this in Maputaland, however.
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Interestingly, Kirbys documentation of the complex mouthbow in other parts of
southern Africa suggests that these instruments were performed by adolescent males. In my
research, however, both umqangala and isizenzemouthbows are unambiguously associatedwith women. They were used as walking instruments, performed to accompany love songs
or songs that commented on the behaviour of friends, neighbours and family members.
While generally practised as solo instruments, they were occasionally played in responsorial
format, the bow melody providing a short solo phrase, while fellow female travellers sang
the chorus.
The jews harp in southern Africa
The jews harp is a small, mouth-resonated instrument that appears in various shapes andsizes throughout the world. Constructed from bamboo or metal, it is generally a lyre-shaped
instrument with a central lamella that is struck to produce vibration. Often mistaken for
a toy, it is an instrument with rich melodic and rhythmic potential, capable of elaborate
punctuation as well as subtle variation.11
Almost no research has been undertaken to date on the jews harp in southern Africa.
Known most commonly as isitolotolo, and in the area of my research as istweletwele, it is
assumed that the instrument was readily adopted by young Nguni women as its construction
and performance practice were similar to those of existing mouthbows. Like them, the jews
harp exploits the physical properties of the mouth both to produce a melodic phrase and
to resonate and amplify a wide range of harmonics. Jews harps were similarly used by
young women as walking instruments, much of the performance repertoire becoming
interchangeable with that of mouthbows.
Examples 1 and 2 illustrate two basic motifs that are played on the jews harp (istweletwele).
The melody line represents the harmonics that are isolated from the fundamental note by
the careful manipulation of the mouth cavity. The notes indicated below the melody line
represent the fundamental note which operates as a drone throughout. These songs are
cyclical, and once the basic phrase is established, the performer will begin to explore more
elaborate possibilities with harmonics, thus establishing a complex polyphonic relationship
between the fundamental melody and its overtones. The D given in the bass clef is not the
fundamental, but the first sounding harmonic of the D fundamental.
11 The etymology of the term jews harp has been widely debated. It is agreed, however, that the term does
not refer to Jewish people, nor to any known musical practices associated with Jewish culture. Rather, it islikely to be a misnomer of the Old English term gewgaw, a later term, jewes trump or the French word
jouer (to play). For details on the history of the term, see and .
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Example 1: uNomadlozi unjenjengamalakhe(Nomadlozi is my name)
Example 2: Ndabazophela emalowini(All stories end in the home)
There is evidence to suggest that the jews harp has been played in the region for a number
of centuries. Jews harp historian, Frederick Crane, suggests that the earliest mention of the
jews harp or trumps in southern Africa may be found in the travel diaries of Monsieur
Francois LeVaillant, a hunter and amateur zoologist, who was based in the Cape of Good
Hope in the 1780s (Crane 1994):
I had a little box brought to me, which I placed on my knees. I opened it; never did any
charlatan put as much adroitness and mystery into his act. I pulled out of the box that noble
and melodious instrument, perhaps unknown in Paris, but rather common in several provinces,
where one sees it in the hands of almost all schoolboys and of the people in brief, a trump.
When I had had enough of my leisurely pleasure, I seized the nearest of my men, and equipped
him with my marvelous lute. I took much care in teaching him the manner of its use; when
he had reached a reasonable degree of skill, I sent him back to his place. I strongly suspected
that the others would not be happy until each also had one of his own. So I passed out as
many trumps as I had Hottentots in my company, and, joining together, some of them playing
well, others badly, and others still worse, they regaled me with a music fit to terrify the furies.
(Translated in Crane 1994:3839)
By the mid- to late 1800s the jews harp had been thoroughly adopted by young Nguni
women in the KwaZulu-Natal region. A vital clue to this is contained in a photograph
lodged at the Marianne Hill Monastery Archives in Durban, South Africa.12 This image,
12 Other photographs from this collection may be located in the Killie Campbell Africana Library, University
of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban.
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dated 1900-1908, includes two Zulu women, one of whom is wearing a jews harp on a
string around her neck. The other is holding an umqangala mouthbow. According to the
Catalog of the F. Crane Trump Collection: Part 1, the jews harp, clearly distinguishedby four up-turned metal arms welded onto the outer frame, is identified as an English
Baroque model (No. 129), first manufactured in the early 1800s by the Troman family in
the West Midlands.13
The export of jews harps from England to Africa preceded this photograph by some 200
years, however. With the global expansion of English trade at the end of the 16th century,
these instruments were amongst a variety of objects that were used as barter goods, as is
illustrated in The life and achievements of Sir John Popham (15311607):
[] yet if they would bring him hatchets, knives, and lewes harps, he bid then assure me, he
had a Mine of gold, and could refine it, & would trade with me: for token whereof, he sent me
3. or 4. Croissants or halfe moones of gold weighing a noble a piece or more, and two bracelets
of silver. (Rice 2005:110)14
Jews harps were likely to have been made available locally by way of a number of routes.
Firstly, weekly advertisements published in the Zululand Times from 1907 reveal that
commercial music stores such as Jackson Bros., Durban, traded musical instruments of
every description. While jews harps may not have been specifically mentioned in their
copy, these advertisements provide evidence of a vigorous trade of musical instruments
from England, Europe and America to South Africa at that time.Secondly, trading stores became important distributors of Western instruments in more
remote rural localities. Jews harps were purchased from salesmen who travelled throughout
southern Africa on behalf of wholesale companies in Durban, Johannesburg and Port
Elizabeth. Here, they were often mounted on display boards and positioned next to the
cash till where they were traded as cheap trinkets or impulse buys. According to the
women with whom I worked, the main suppliers of jews harps in western Maputaland
were the trading stores in Swaziland and the town of Ndumo:
We grew up with our mothers playing istweletwele[jews harps]. These songs were there before
we were born. Then we were able to buy them. They were only a tickey or half a cent, andbread was also a half cent. And sugar. We bought them at KwaMatata [store] in Swaziland and
Ndumo. (Nkomonde 2003)
Finally, concession stores on the gold mines on the Witwatersrand played an important
role in the introduction and dissemination of jews harps throughout the sub-region.
13 Jews harp historian, Michael Wright, has located the same instrument in the catalogues of Rudolph
Wurlitzer, Cincinnati and Chicago, dated 1913-1930: Here it has been noted as No. 3078: 2 inch iron
fancy lyra model, lacquered, with tempered tuning plate, shipping weight, 3 oz. Price $0.10. - 1913 (cost in
1920 - $0.15.; 1922 - $0.25; 1930 - $0.20). (Wright & Impey 2007:2)14 The quote is taken from a document sent by Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, to Captain Popham while on
a voyage of discovery of Trinidad and Guiana. See also Wright and Impey (2007).
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Run mostly by Jewish immigrants from Lithuania, these general dealerships-cum-eating
houses catered mainly to migrant labourers, amongst whom were men from Swaziland,
Mozambique and Maputaland (cf. Sherman 1987, 2000). Men purchased for themselvesguitars, concertinas, harmonicas and gramophones; for their girlfriends and daughters, they
bought jews harps which they presented as gifts when they returned home on annual leave
(cf. Sherman 1987, 2000).
It appears that the importation of jews harps into southern Africa was dramatically
reduced in the early 1970s. This may be attributed to a decrease in demand for the
instrument as a result of the popularisation of radios and cassette players, as well as to an
increase in the price of the instrument brought about by the alleged use of superior metals
and finishes at that time. What remains clear is that both the jews harp and mouthbows
stopped being performed in the western Maputaland borderlands around this time; a
period marked also by the final wave of forced removals of communities from the Ndumo
Game Reserve, by increased participation by men in the migrant labour system, and by
intensified militarisation of the national borders because of civil war in Mozambique.
Figure 4: Women in Usuthu Gorge play istweletwele(jews harp)
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Reading the jews harp and mouthbows as social and spatial practice
Western Maputaland has had a complex history of ethnic, social and political fissure andfusion (Felgate 1982; Harries 1983; Webster 1991; Kloppers 2001). As a borderland region,
it is typically characterised as not quite Mozambique, South Africa or Swaziland, but a place
in-between. Historically, this in-betweenness has facilitated the development of widespread
kinship, ethnic and political allegiances, negotiated largely to support an economic system
based on shifting agriculture. Despite this, oral testimonies collected from local residents
suggest that social memory has been distilled into a singular narrative of dispossession and
humiliation, the complexities of the distant past having been obscured by the trauma of
forced removals and the systematic partitioning of the area by fences, laws and a public
culture of racial exclusion.In the following section I focus on the re-introduction of the jews harp and mouthbow
as an activating modality to recover narratives about self and community in place and time.
I argue that sound and music-making operate as mnemonic systems that evoke times,
places and events that have the potential to elaborate, bypass, or even contradict collective
memory. Furthermore, I suggest that the creative revitalisation of musical practices after
a period of hiatus has the potential to transact memories in a more dramatic way than
would memories evoked from a continuous performance tradition. Drawing on Climo and
Cattell, who suggest that [] social memory as song achieves meaning through a process
of enactment and becoming real in the bodies of individuals (2000:20), I have extended
the notion of enacting memory to one of transacting memory, using an economic model
of exchange in the process of bringing ethnomusicology into the world of advocacy
and development. The material recovery of historical experiences, as documented and
reperformed in sound, body and place, makes new forms of transaction possible, and sets
them in motion by reviving memories and affects, by cultivating an empowered sense of
place, and by providing evidence in the form of songs and their associated narratives.
The conceptual connection between sound, memory and spatiality was, in fact, made for
me when I first met Fambile Khumalo in Ezphosheni, Maputaland, at the commencement
of my research, as is demonstrated in the following excerpt from my field recordings:
Put it on your teeth but not between them, Fambile instructed me when we first met and
I asked her how to play istweletwele (jews harp). Hold your tongue far back in your mouth.
First you need to have a song in your head. What is your song? You start singing from your
heart and then you sing quietly with your fingers. She listened for some time and said, Right,
you are beginning to get it! Now, what can you remember?15
Fambiles question came as a surprise as it pre-empted any attempt, on my part, to discuss
associations with the instrument and its sounds. By asking me what experiences I associated
15 The perceived interconnection between language, song and mouthbow melody is such that I refer hereafter
to mouthbow songs.
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with istweletwele, she had taken for granted that sounds carry referential functions; that they
index experiences, feelings and places associated with musical performance. Her assumptions
resonate with Ingolds notion of dwelling in which he suggests that sounds, like othersensual landmarks such as smell and sight, are spatially and temporally meaningful; through
the act of doing they gather to form a sense of place (Ingold 1994:338).16Extending the
analysis of spatiality as social practice to a place-based ethnomusicology, Solomon suggests
that musical performance is a practice for embodying community identity, inscribing it on
earthly landscapes as well as in the landscapes of the mind (Solomon 2000:258).
Over the following two years I worked with 20 women ranging in age from 45 to
80 years. We explored a variety of participatory methodologies, including collective
experimentation with sounds and performance techniques; recounting individually and
in groups lives and stories associated with songs, and, most importantly, performing whilewalking.17 Soundwalks generated a particularly rich body of information, as the women
would stop en routeto point out a tree whose bark they would use to cure stomach pains; a
bird that they would follow in order to locate honey; or a pathway that led to the graves of
their ancestors. They read the land with a corporeal knowledge, each cue prompting songs
relevant to it, and the songs, in turn, elaborating their stories.18
As walking instruments, mouthbows provide a particular range of experiences that
are pertinent for the recovery of social and spatial information. Firstly, sounds emitted
from mouthbows are predicated upon kinetic memories of the diaphragm, the throat, the
mouth cavity and the epiglottis. In this regard, they are experienced as of the body, the
mouth used as a resonating chamber from which melody and overtones are produced and
amplified. However, as walking instruments, mouthbows are made meaningful in open
spaces, played into or against the wind, and shaped by their acoustic potential.
A second factor linking sound to place is elaborated in language. Mouthbow melodies
are essentially derived from language; shaped by the tonal inflections or contours of a
spoken phrase. In addition, some performers will purposefully select words that contain
clicks in order to emphasise particular rhythmic or textural qualities in their song.
As borderland people who straddle three languages i.e. Zulu, Swazi and Tembe-
Thonga performers would use different languages to connote different activities and
their appointments in the landscape. Although further analysis of this issue would require
16 Rodaway (1994) uses the term phenomenological topography to refer to being in the world. This concept,
which may be otherwise described by terms such as situatedness, spatiality, being in place and belonging,
combines the experiential with the physical/spatial, thus reflecting a geographical understanding of
experience. See also Revill (2000), who likewise analyses ways in which musical meanings are intimately
and inextricably bound into the spatial formations, practices and processes by which music is performed.
17 Not all of these paths are accessible to the women today. We did, however, obtain permission from park
authorities to return to certain areas in the game reserve that had been inaccessible to them for more than
30 years.
18 The act of listening and responding while walking (i.e. soundwalking) has been embraced as amethodology by ethnomusicologist, Steven Feld, by acoustic ecologists such as Peter Cusack (2004), and by
sound artists such as Hildegard Westercamp (2001 [1974]).
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in-depth linguistic research, the following language-use pattern began to emerge in my
research. Ceremonial songs, such as wedding songs, would be performed in Zulu, reflecting
the inclination among Zulu men in the area to marry women from other regions in orderto maintain geographically widespread kinship networks.19 Songs associated with walking
west to the trading stores in Swaziland, and thus relating to travel and commerce would
be sung in Swazi. Finally, songs referring to the domestic sphere, and to the activities of
women or children in particular, were sung in Tembe-Thonga, connecting women north-
east to their familial homes in Mozambique.20
The interaction between sound and the environment in jews harp and mouthbow
songs is significant both in relation to sound production and to overall communicative
intent. Although most mouthbow songs generally refer to relationships and moral issues,
women also linked them sonically and iconographically to the environment, and to frogsin particular:
The song I have been playing is a song of frogs. We copy their sounds. As you play this thing
you cant explain what it means, but you will recognise that it is the sound of frogs. The frogs
are happy when it is raining. Thats when they start calling. (Gumede 2003)
This connection is recognised by similarities in the way that frogs manipulate the mouth
and throat to create sound, in the equivalent sound envelopes created through attack and
decay, as well as in behavioural equivalence, that is, in the way that frogs use sound to attract
a mate or assert their presence:
We would play when we walked to the river with a clay pot on our heads. If a boy wanted to
proposition a girl at the river, he would wait for her there. We would play and dance and our
amahiya [cloth] would swing open. In this way a girl would become attractive. A boy would be
very excited to hear a good player. (Khumalo 2004)
In their references to frogs, womens mapping of place through sound becomes iconically
linked to both locality (river) and to the social practices related to that locality (courting).
This recalls Rosemans descriptions of the way that the Temiar of the Malaysian rainforests
inscribe in their songs crucial forms of knowledge of the landscape in a manner thatserves to map and mediate their relationships with the land and each other (Roseman
1998:111).
Such references to zoomorphic iconicity also recalls research conducted by Steven Feld
in the Papua New Guinea rainforests, in which he similarly explores the way sound and
19 This is particularly well illustrated in the song, Induku enhle igawulwa ezizweni(A good stick is found far
away). Here, the stick is a metaphor for a woman/wife, and refers specifically to firewood, which is
customarily collected by women and represents the hearth of the home.
20 An example would be the song Kukhona okunyakaza esinyeni ingani(Something is moving in the womb;it is a child). For further information regarding gender, ethnicity and language in Maputaland, see Webster
(1991).
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sounding by the Kaluli links the environment and musical experience and expression.
Important in this association is that Kaluli spirit cosmologies are rooted in a range of
natural features (especially birds) and their manifestation in sound is enhanced by theacoustic potential of the rainforest to echo and reverberate; to construct particular kinds
of presences, and thus to invoke certain kinds of emotive responses. The relationship of
mouthbows to environmental space in western Maputaland is less acoustically intense or
enclosed than may be Felds descriptions of Kaluli poetic songs and funerary rituals; their
soundings not reliant on dense forest canopy and echo, but on projection and flow produced
by wind across open savannah plains. The social function of jews harp and mouthbow songs
was to make public womens commentaries in such a way that they could be transported
and enunciated through space. Songs were used to flirt, to announce social encounters, to
question moral behaviour, to greet and to remember. Songs were created, shared, exchangedand reshaped. However, as jews harps and mouthbows are relatively quiet, and the spaces
in which they are performed vast, messages were broadcast not through dramatic effect,
but more as evocation or inference; a subtle positioning or voicing of oneself in social and
environmental place.
Analysing the jews harp and mouthbow repertoire as historical text
Although it is difficult to date jews harp and mouthbow songs, the repertoire deals with a
range of experiences that reflect particular historical moments in the western Maputaland
borderlands, and falls loosely into four socio-spatial phases:
1) songs of emplacement;
2) songs of longing and dislocation;
3) songs of enclosure and restriction;
4) loss of songs altogether.
The first phase constitutes simple greeting songs, proverbs or moral commentary. These
songs are remembered as having been played when walking to the river to collect water;
across the flood plains to visit relatives in Mozambique, or over the Lebombo Mountains
to the trading stores in Swaziland to buy cloth and sugar. They are considered to be old,
inherited from mothers and sisters; songs described as those that were there before. As
they pre-date the women with whom I worked, they reflect social conditions in western
Maputaland prior to the 1950s; a period characterised by spatial mobility and a sense of
being in place.
The following four examples represent the short ostinato phrases that comprised the
main body of a song. Once established, a performer would improvise around the phrase, or,
if walking in the company of others, would present the phrase as a solo part to which her
friends would respond with an appropriate chorus:
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Sawubona Mayoyo sawubona Hello Mayoyo hello
Deda endleleni, Nkolombela Move off the pathway, Nkolombela
Ngubane lowo owagana esimncane? Who is that person who married so young?
Izindaba zophela emalawini All stories end in the home
These songs comment on social encounters, on love and marriage, and on social discord
that necessarily finds resolution within the family. Their focus is family or community: a
named greeting being an acknowledgment of a known individual; a proverb drawing on
mutually understood references and cultural form; a moral assertion referring to mores and
customs that shape social relations and cultural practices.
Most notable in many of the songs of this phase is the extent to which land and nature
are made meaningful through their associations with people. In them land, nature and
kinship are often mutually implicated, and it is through this insinuation that notions of
physical space and culturally constructed place emerge. The following example is both
performed on istweletwele and also occasionally sung to the accompaniment of the
umakhweyana gourd-bow:21
Aayi imbombosha Hey, little cattle egret
Wemaganazonke You who marries
Wemalanda nkomo You who fetches cows
Wemalanda nkomo You who fetches cows
In it, the cattle egret is used as a metaphor for a young woman. If successful in marriage,
she will bring cows to the home of her father as marriage dowry (lobola). The sooner she is
able to accomplish this, the sooner her duty to her family will be complete, a feat imagined
herein as the early setting of the sun.
While jews harp and mouthbow songs were one way of fixing relationships and of
rooting them in a material historicity, as walking songs, they were also a way of transporting
knowledge. One of the most prevalent memories evoked by this category of song is of
the now extinct event known as isigcawu. Isigcawu was an important night-time event that
attracted young people from all over the region, who would congregate to sing, dance,
exchange gifts and ultimately seek a marriage partner. Isigcawu was significant, therefore,
in the role it played in facilitating the development of new kinship networks through
marriage, and by extension, in linking women to new spatial associations:
Isigcawu was so important to us in those days. When we walked to esigcawini22 we would walk
playing our instruments. When we got there, the boys would dance on one side and the girls
21 The umkhaweyana gourd-bow is more readily associated with Swazi women in western Maputaland and,although rare, is more widely practised today than are the istweletweleand mouthbows.
22 Esigcawini: to the place ofisigcawu
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would be on the other. When we were tired of dancing, we would come together and make
a fire and we would cook birds and eat honey. When the aloes were in flower, the boys would
catch many birds.23
There were no schools then, so isigcawu was a place where we learnedthings. It was our backbone (umgogodlo wetu); everything started from there. We learned about
our culture, istweletweleand songs. We would choose a big tree or a place near the homesteads.
People would come from Mbondweni and Ezphosheni. They would walk on the pathways
through the bush when the moon was full. Many of us met our husbands at esigcawini.
(Gumede 2004)
The concept of pathways with reference to isigcawu is revealing: referred to as izindlela
yesiZulu (Zulu pathways), the term lays claim to an internally defined spatial organisation.
Paths begin in one place and lead towards other places, hereby signifying social
connectedness and intentionality.24 Pathways were the main context associated with theperformance of jews harps and mouthbows, and where themes and motivations were
woven across and into each other in the landscape. As with Aboriginal songlines, izindlela
yesiZulu become graphic representations depicting different spatial distributions of locales
transacted and elaborated in song.25
The pathway is also used metaphorically in many of the songs, such as in Deda endleleni
Nkolombela (Move away from the pathway, Nkolombela). In it, the bow-player asks the
young man, Nkolombela, to move off the path to allow her to collect water from the
river. Since the pathway to the river is also the traditional site where a man would wait to
proposition a woman, by asking him to move away, the singer is symbolically refusing theadvances of the man.
For the women of western Maputaland, pathways are conceptually differentiated from
roads, which are referred to as umgwaqo or i-Teba, named after the mine recruitment
agency that constructed the roads in the 1930s to provide access into the area by bus.26
Roads became a symbol of modernisation, of spatial demarcation imposed from the
outside. They, like state barriers and the fences of the game reserve, cut through families
and fields, bringing new flows of influence (Bunn & Auslander 1998) and generating new
expressive responses. Roads led the men away to the mines and forced women to take on
greater responsibility for their families in their capacity as farmers. Roads brought churches
and schools. Accordingly, songs become absorbed in a sense of longing and dislocation,
framed herein as a second phase in the history of jews harp and mouthbow practice.
Migrancy directly affected the women with whom I worked and most songs that we
collected in this category were composed by the women themselves during the 1950s
23 Aloe marlothiiis prevalent in the area and the sticky sap from its flowers is used by young boys to trap small
birds.
24 Werlen (1993) and Ingold (1994) both argue that spatial arrangements are the consequence of human action
and processes rather than the cause. See also Lee (2004).
25 For a detailed explanation of Aboriginal songlines see Morphy (1995) and Morphy & Flint (2000).26 TEBA (The Employment Bureau of Africa) was the official recruitment agency established by the South
African Chamber of Mines in the 1920s to secure migrant labour from various localities in southern Africa.
SOUNDING PLACE IN THE WESTERN MAPUTALAND BORDERLANDS 71
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and early 1960s. These songs constitute a fairly large component of the overall repertoire,
shaped by short, repetitive phrases, and represented as laments or meditations rather than
songs used to provide rhythmic impetus for long-distance walking.
O-Diya Diya Wami Oh my dear, my dear
Woza lapha dali-wami Come to me, my darling
Ayibosala bekhala ubaba nomama
Yabaleka indoda
They will be left crying, mother
and father
The man has left
Kubuhlungu inhliziyo My heart is painful
Kulomuzi kaBaba noMama
Kukhanyisubani lomlilo ovutha entabeni?
Kukhanyisubani?
In the house of my father and
motherWho is burning a fire on the
mountain?
Who is burning?
The third category of songs, which emerged in the late 1960s to early 1970s, reflects social
and spatial rupture more dramatically brought about by the final wave of forced removals
of the Banzi families from the Ndumo Game Reserve and the increased participation of
men in the migrant labour system. Oral accounts of this period focus particularly on the
image of the fence, for instance, which in western Maputaland became an icon of whiteintervention, of restriction and patrol.27 Containment enforced through fencing affected
women in particular who were thus denied access to the Usuthu River their main water
source and which restricted the spatial spread necessary for shifting agriculture. Pressure
on women to support their families on ever-decreasing portions of land forced them into
new forms of cash labour such as clearing roads for the Provincial Roads Department
or selling sugar cane, and many of them embarked on the illegal brewing and selling of
alcohol. Songs that emanate from the third phase thus depict women as fugitives from place,
encircled by new laws, regulations and the fear of imprisonment:
From Ndlalenis house we walked all the way to Makanyisa, playing istweletwele. Thats what we
were doing when we were going to eat sugar [at the trading store in Ndumo]. We were singing
Nalivani because the police were giving us problems. They wanted us to pay for dompas.
(Mkhize 2003)28
27 For further discussion on the image of fences in black South African oral narrative, see Hofmeyr (1993).
28 Dompas refers to the identity book (or pass book), which all black South Africans were obliged to carry
during the apartheid era. Being caught without it was a criminal offence.
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The following songs are typical of the third phase. They are more elaborated than the
songs of the previous phases, often performed collectively and sung as an act of defiance or
protest:
Nalivani Bakithi nalivani There is the van, my people, there is the
van*
Nalivani Bafana nalivani Run away boys, there is the van
Balekani Bafana nalivani There is the van, boys, there is the van
Lizonibopha! They will arrest you!
Dela baba ngoba imali You are happy father because the money
Bayifaka ebhokisini They put it in the box
Jabula (mapoyisa) ngoba imali Happy (police) because the money
Bayifaka ebhokisini They put it in the box
Balekani nonke Run away everyone
Kukhona okuzayo Something is coming
Gijimani nonke Run away
Kukhona ukuzayo Something is coming**
Baleka mfana lashona ilanga Run boy, the sun is setting
Gijima mfana Run boy
Awekho amanzi There is no water
Awekho amanzi asemfuleni There is no water, it is in the river
* The van refers to the police patrol vehicle.** Something refers to a man nicknamed Umthanathana (the one who talks contemptuously) who
oversaw the eviction of the families from the game reserve.
The fourth phase of jews harp and mouthbow practice is traced to the early 1970s, afterwhich the instruments lost their social role and spatial context, and ceased being played.
Reflections on ethnomusicological research as advocacy
It is my contention that sound and the affect of music-making represent a much under-
utilised research resource, particularly in contexts of social and spatial rupture. Furthermore,
I propose that the sonic qualities of physical spaces and the affective aspects of sound and
music-making influence how experiences are remembered at particular historical and
geographical junctures. While jews harp and mouthbow songs may not comment on
land, locality and displacement, song and text together provide a highly-situated body
of evidence about experiences in relation to senses of emplacement and patterns of
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displacement. Reading song as oral testimony in western Maputaland draws attention to
the varied nature of peoples experiences by invoking everyday actions and exchanges,
and by describing the changing nature of relationships between people and their world.These inflections challenge the singular representation of self, community and history that
has emerged in this region, and produce new understandings that may have relevance to
emerging land-use policies implemented under the TFCA programme.
One of the more important insights drawn from the thematic changes in the jews harp
and mouthbow songs, for instance, suggests that the negative impact on women by the
reconfiguration of the western Maputaland borderlands through conservation expansion
has been experienced only partially through the loss of land and natural resources. Perhaps
as significant has been the effect on them of spatial rupture; of the obstruction of movement
that for centuries has facilitated migratory survival strategies, that have produced andsustained kinship networks; and that have facilitated an in-between borderland sociality.
With roads, fences and other forms of government intervention, so opportunities produced
by the in-betweenness of the borderlands have became harder to negotiate, producing
greater dependence on the centre (in this case, the South African state) from which they
have, ironically, become progressively remote.29
Such a socio-economic understanding of spatial rupture may be particularly significant
to the TFCA programme whose proposal to open up conservation corridors for the re-
establishment of traditional migratory routes of wildlife (elephants in particular) includes
a complicated plan to erect more fences around villages and agricultural areas for the
protection of people, thus potentially further impeding their mobility.
A further consideration is that while men have sought wage labour elsewhere,
their income has been unpredictable and has generally not relieved women of their
responsibilities as pr imary producers of the household. Women remain depended upon to
sustain the family by cultivating smaller fields as well as in engaging in other forms of wage
labour, yet they are provided with fewer of the security systems that had historically been
in place to manage the challenges of survival.
It is in this context that istweletweleand the other mouthbow practices lost their social
moorings. While women continue to participate in other forms of music-making, the
loss of mouthbows and the jews harp suggests that women lost a unique means by which
they situated themselves in their social and environmental localities. Singing and playing
these instruments had been an act of affirmation and an expression of entitlement. That
these walking songs had become dormant could therefore be interpreted as testimony to
a progressively corroded sense of emplacement by women; a symbolic consequence of a
more generalised loss of voice.
Analysis of jews harp and mouthbow practices calls attention to the increasing
29 This dependence has been exacerbated by the decline of the mining industry, which has affected household
income based on labour migrancy. This is corroborated by a study undertaken by Kloppers (2001), whichsuggests that 85% of people in the Maputaland region are dependent upon government pension, child and
HIV/AIDS grants.
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SOUNDING PLACE IN THE WESTERN MAPUTALAND BORDERLANDS 75
vulnerability of women over time, and highlights the importance of gender in the
analysis of land, identity and social rupture. Given the close association between gendered
experience, musical expression, ecology, and the historical and social dynamics of place anddisplacement, insights drawn from song and performance, such as that of the mouthbow
and istweletwele tradition, may contribute towards more culturally apposite processes of
redress in western Maputaland.
Already the act of remembering has stimulated practical action by the women bow
players in Maputaland. Attention drawn to the women and their musical heritage through
this research has been an empowering experience and has generated a greater sense of
community between them. One consequence of this has been the establishment of a
performance group called Omama Bazetweletwele(Mothers of the Jews Harps) which has
stimulated the revival of long-forgotten dances associated with the isicgawu gatherings, andwith old beading practices, considered necessary for their performance attire.
Figure 5: Omama Bazetweletwele(Mothers of the Jews Harps)
Performing at weddings, funerals, pension-day gatherings and school concerts has
encouraged the group both to reclaim their old repertoire and to compose new songs,
re-establishing herein their role as custodians of collective memory and commentators of
contemporary social issues. Among their new compositions, for instance, are songs that deal
with HIV/AIDS and others that celebrate ethnic diversity within the region:
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Safa ngenculazi sekutheni? Why are we dying of AIDS?
Siyafa, siyaphela We are dying; we are finished*
Yithi amaZulu, sesenza okwakithi
kwaZulu
We are Zulus, we do our Zulu things
Yithi eSwazini, sesenza okwakithi
seSwazini
We are Swazis, we do our Swazi things
Yithi KaNgwane, sensenza okwakithi
KaNgwane
We are KaNgwane, we do our
KaNgwane things**
Yithi amaZulu, sesenza okwakithi
kwaZulu
We are Zulus, we do our Zulu things
* Group composition, Omama Bazetweletwele, Ezphosheni/Maputaland (2003).** King Ngwane III was the name of the first Dlamini to rule Swaziland and KaNgwane was the name
he gave to his country. This song was composed by MaGumede, Ezphosheni/Maputaland (2003).
Significantly, these performances have begun to present new income-generating
opportunities for the women ofOmama Bazetweletwele.
Conclusion
In this article I have focused on music as an emplacing medium, exploring ways in which
past cultural topographies invoked through memories of sound and performance mayprovide insight into contemporary predicaments of place (Feld & Basso 1996). Music is
framed herein as both historical text and a form of agency, providing a focus for mobilising
collective evocations of self and place, and aimed at raising the level of the voices of a people
whose livelihoods and sociality may be at variance with broader social and environmental
processes. While the reconstruction of senses of place through sound, performance and
memory may not produce measurable indicators and quantifiable results, as may be required
by conventional development models and processes, they do contribute towards a deeper
understanding of the meaning of places, and of the symbolic and relational conditions that
support or drive economic practices and their outcomes.Examining the long-term social and cultural impacts of conservation expansion may
be especially judicious in the light of the re-landscaping that is presently taking place
under the TFCA process in southern Africa, whose gestures towards eco-regionalism are
rendering local people increasingly invisible, and whose attempts to transcend boundaries
through the creation of wildlife corridors and tourist super-destinations may be restricting
local people and women in particular to ever-diminishing bounded spaces.
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