La contramétricité dans les musiques traditionnelles africaines et son rapport au jazz

Item

La contramétricité dans les musiques traditionnelles africaines et son rapport au jazz
Anthropologie et Sociétés
38
105-137
2014/07
fre
1703-7921, 0702-8997
There are many aspects shared by traditional African music : movement of the body through dance when listening to music, existence of a regular beat underlying these movements and a tendency for musical events to be placed against this regular beat, a feature called « contrametricity ». The perception of the beat both has a physiological dimension (since movement of the body when listening to music seems to be universal) and a cultural one since contrametricity is developped to a high degree in African music. We will show how « contrametricity » contredicts theories of the perception of beats derived from Lerdahl and Jackendoff hypothesis. We will furthermore investigate the comparison between African music and jazz, and discuss aspects of jazz that are considered as different from African music, namely the existence of a hierachical meter, and will show that it is less distinctive that one usually admits.
1
as
10.7202/1025811ar
2019-11-13T01:37:42Z
DOI.org (Crossref)