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SAMOA MUSIC

The Polynesians are natural musicians and the Samoans are no exception. They love to hear
and sing good music. Robert Louis Stevenson once said that the Samoans composed a song
for every trivial occasion. . . Song is almost endless. The boatman sings at the oar, the family
and evening worship and the workman at his toil. No occasion is too small for the poets and
the musicians; a death, a visit, the day's news and pleasantries will be set to rhyme and
harmony.

Older style dancing motions are slow, swaying and interpretive. Chants and old poems are
sung and recited on special occasions. They are often referred to in speeches and debates.
They are also used to figure the time of past historical events. The faataupati (clapping in
syncopation dance) is accompanied by ancient war songs and drums.

Dancers and musicians performing


the traditional Samoan sword dance.

Ancient and modern Samoan dances do not use songs in three-four tempo. Most of the songs
composed for single or group dancers are in four-four and two-four tempos. Drums have often
been used to accompany the ancient dancers.

The arrival of the first missionaries marked the awakening of Samoa to the use of church
hymns as basic melodies in composing. The only musical instrument known to the natives
before the arrival of the white man was the bamboo flute. Instead of fingering six small holes
as in a piccolo or flute, they used three and sometimes four holes beside the larger one for the
mouthpiece. These bamboo flutes were never used for accompaniment, they were only used
by experts to sound a pitch or give interludes for chants. They are mostly played at bed time.
Large wooden drums (lali) of hollowed log are popular in the villages. They can be heard
from a distance of several miles. They are used in many ways as village signal stations and for
calling chiefs to assemble for emergency cases, or to announce a death or the arrival of village
guests.

According to history some high chiefs used the lali to notify their servants living in distant
villages to come with food to the guest house for his guests who have just arrived. In addition,
these island-made drums are often used to beat the tempo desired for village group and sword
dances. In boat races these drums mark the speed desired for the strokes of the oarsmen.

The beautiful and traditional Samoa siva dance.

In the traditional siva dance the musicians seat themselves on one side,
and proceed to beat a wooden drum at the sound of which the guests start
to assemble. When the audience is assembled the musicians beat a sharp
tattoo on the drums, and to the sound of applause and clapping of
hands, dancers appear from behind a screen and take their places in the
open space. The handsome brown bodies of the dancers glisten with
coconut oil and their hair is decorated with shells, white and scarlet
flowers and each is clad in a very short lava lava of about the size of a
large pocket handkerchief. Over this is a fringe and tasselled girdle made
of pandanus fibre and dyed in brilliant colours and each wears round the
neck and falling over the breasts a wreath of strongly scented flowers.

Lamps are now placed upon the edge of the mats and the girls set
themselves in a line facing them. One will begin singing in a shrill high
pitched voice, and the others in turn take up the strain, the four voices
blending in harmony to which the beating of the drums and the deep bass
voices of the musicians make an effective accompaniment. As the girls
sing, their bodies sway from side to side, the arms wave gracefully in
perfect time, while the music, which commences slowly, gradually
quickens, until arms, bodies, and voices are going at lightning speed; then
they gradually slow down again and the song dies away in a soft tender
whisper.
All the compositions of the Samoan musicians are original with their inspirations and
philosophies based on their everyday lives. They aim at fitting the music to the words
appropriate for the occasion and the blending of the singers' voices. They may not know the
different positions of notes that form the chords, but they can quickly detect any discord that
may be present.

Practically all of the love songs that are popular in the islands are expressed dreams of the
lovers, who never intend to make the song popular for commercial purposes. The figurative
speech and flowery language of the chief is often used by the composers. Indeed, many of the
historical love songs of long ago were composed by known princes and princesses. They are
still popular and sung with reverence in remembrance of the island nobility.

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