List of Oceanic and Australian folk music traditions explained

This is a list of folk music traditions, with styles, dances, instruments and other related topics. The term folk music can not be easily defined in a precise manner; it is used with widely varying definitions depending on the author, intended audience and context within a work. Similarly, the term traditions in this context does not connote any strictly-defined criteria. Music scholars, journalists, audiences, record industry individuals, politicians, nationalists and demagogues may often have occasion to address which fields of folk music are distinct traditions based along racial, geographic, linguistic, religious, tribal or ethnic lines, and all such peoples will likely use different criteria to decide what constitutes a "folk music tradition". This list uses the same general categories used by mainstream, primarily English-language, scholarly sources, as determined by relevant statements of fact and the internal structure of works.

These traditions may coincide entirely, partially or not at all with geographic, political, linguistic or cultural boundaries. Very few, if any, music scholars would claim that there are any folk music traditions that can be considered specific to a distinct group of people and with characteristics undiluted by contact with the music of other peoples; thus, the folk music traditions described herein overlap in varying degrees with each other.

Oceania and Australia

width=30pxCountryElementsDanceInstrumentationOther topics
White Australianbush ballad - country musicbush dancelagerphone - wobbleboard
Indigenous Australian[1] Wangga dancedidgeridoosongline
Cook Islander[2] imene metua - imene tukikoauau - paatere - purerehua
Easter Islanderkauaha - upaupa
Fijimeke i wau - meke iri - meke wesi - seasea - vakamaloloderua - slit drum
Hawaiian[3] [4] [5] [6] hula - kepakepa - mele - olihulaipu - pahu - puniu - rattle
Maorihaka - poi
Marquesas Islanderhaka puaka
Marshall IslanderJebua
Papua New Guinea[7] [8] string bandgaramut - kundu - rattle - susaphaus tambaran - sing-sing
Samoanhiva usufa'ataupati - ma'ulu'ulu - sasa - siva Samoalali - logo - nafa - pandanus - pateali'i - fiafia - tulafale
Solomon Islanderpanpipe
Tahitihimene tarava'aparima - 'ote'aslit drum
Tonganaction-song - hiva kakala - kava papalangilakalaka - me'etu'upaki - 'otuhaka - ulaconch - lali - nose-flute - nafafaikava - fiafia - hulohula
Tuvalufatele

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Breen, Marcus, "The Original Songlines" in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 8 - 19
  2. Linkels, Ad, "The Real Music of Paradise", in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 218 - 229
  3. Manuel, Popular Musics, pp. 237 - 239
  4. Cooper, Mike, "Steel and Slide Hula Baloos", in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 56 - 62
  5. Lornell, pp. 79 - 80
  6. http://www.worldmusiccentral.org/staticpages/index.php/glossary World Music Central
  7. Manuel, Popular Musics, p. 242
  8. Feld, Stephen, "Bamboo Boogie-Woogie", in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp. 183 - 188