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Encyclopedia > Music of Easter Island
Polynesian music
Easter Island
Fiji
French Polynesia: Marquesas and Tahiti
Hawaii
New Zealand: Cook Islands - Maori - Niue - Tokelau
Samoa
Tonga
Tuvalu
Wallis and Futuna

Easter Island is located in the Pacific Ocean. Though its earliest inhabitants are ethnically Polynesian, the island is controlled by the South American state of Chile. Polynesia is a group of island chains spread across much of the Pacific Ocean, and includes many countries and territories. ... Prior to the arrival of Europeans, the music of Tahiti was dominated by festivals called heiva. ... Hawaiian music refers to the musical style native to the Hawaiian Islands of the United States. ... The Maori are the native peoples of New Zealand. ... Easter Island and its location Easter Island (Polynesian: Rapa Nui (Great Rapa), Spanish: Isla de Pascua) is an island in the south Pacific Ocean belonging to Chile. ... Polynesia (from Greek, poly = many and nesi = island) is a large grouping of over 1,000 islands in the central and southern Pacific Ocean. ... South America South America is a continent crossed by the equator, with most of its area in the Southern Hemisphere. ...


Traditional music from the island consists of choiral singing and chanting, similar to Tahitian music. Families often performed as choirs, competing in a hotly-disputed annual concert. They were accompanied by a trumpet made from a conch shell and a percussive dancer jumping onto a stone which is set over a calabash resonator. Other instruments include the kauaha, the jaw bone of a horse, upaupa, an accordion, and stones, which are clapped together for percussive effect. Prior to the arrival of Europeans, the music of Tahiti was dominated by festivals called heiva. ... Trumpeter performing with the United States Air Forces in Europe Band The trumpet is the highest brass instrument in register, above the tuba, euphonium, trombone, sousaphone, and french horn. ... Species See text The genus Strombus is made up of the true conches under the family Strombidae. ... Percussion instruments are played by being struck, shaken, rubbed or scraped. ... Dance (from Old French dance, further history unknown) generally refers to human movement either used as a form of expression (see also body language) or presented in a social, spiritual or performance setting. ... Binomial name Lagenaria siceraria (Molina) Standl. ... Most musical instruments include parts that vibrate with and amplify the sound of the instrument. ... The jaw is either of the two opposable structures forming, or near the entrance to, the mouth. ... An accordion is a small portable free-reed wind instrument with a keyboard, the smallest representative of the organ family. ...


Due to ongoing contacts with Chile and elsewhere in South America, Latin American music has had influences on the music of Easter Island. Tango, for example, has spawned an Easter Island style called tango Rapanui, characterized by a simple guitar accompaniment instead of the frenetic bandoneon. Latin American music, is sometimes wrongly called Latin music. ... Argentine tango music is traditionally played by an orquesta tipica, which often includes violin, piano, guitar, flute, and especially bandoneon. ... The classical guitar typically has 3 nylon and 3 nickel-wound strings. ... The bandone n is a free-reed instrument instrument particularly popular in Argentina. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Music of Easter Island - Definition, explanation (210 words)
Easter Island is located in the Pacific Ocean.
Though its earliest inhabitants are ethnically Polynesian, the island is controlled by the South American state of Chile.
Traditional music from the island consists of choiral singing and chanting, similar to Tahitian music.
Chile: Easter Island Music - Sound Clip - MSN Encarta (136 words)
Inhabitants of the mysterious and isolated Easter Island are believed to be of Indonesian and Polynesian ancestry.
Although the island's native language, Rape Nui, is nearly lost, some clues about Easter Island are found in a few remaining traditional songs such as this one, "Tapea I Rato", sung by a local family.
Tapea I Rato performed by Julio A. Hotu and Family, from Songs from Easter Island (Cat.# Buda 92533-2) (p) Buda.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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