Music Acquisition of Children in Rural Zimbabwe: A Longitudinal Observation.
Kreutzer, Natalie Jones
Abstract. Children in sub-Saharan Africa have been observed to
participate in their society's music as fully competent musicians
by the age of 5. This study provides a qualitative description of the
behaviors that bring children to musical competency in the Nharira
Communal Lands. The narrative focuses on demographics of the area and on
the community's people, musical influences, musical interactions of
individual children with caretakers and peers, and caretakers'
musical belief systems. The three villages observed are composed of
multiple extended family groups. Their main income is from crops and
livestock. The primary caretakers of the children studied are
grandmothers and mothers. The majority of fathers have jobs away from
home and visit only rarely. Musical influences in the communities are
the European-style music of the churches and schools; the Shona-language
songs from the pre-European oral tradition, including many
children's educational game songs; and the modern-day commercial
music styled "Afro -pop," heard occasionally on radios or
brought to the village by urban relatives. Music is a central factor in
social communication in the Nharira Communal Lands. Musical interactions
occur in live performances conducted for ritual, in celebration, and to
pass leisure time. All of the adults interviewed believe that every
person is able to sing and dance. The majority observed that children
can sing as well as adults by age 5. They hold music to be a powerful
force for comfort and happiness in their lives.
In Piaget's model of cognitive development, the transition
between the sensorimotor and preoperational stages is marked by the rise
of the semiotic function. "Semiotic function" describes the
use of symbols to retain in memory the abstract images of environmental
stimuli (Flavell, 1985). For most children, this symbol-using capacity
arises at the age of 18 to 24 months and is signaled by observable
activities, such as deferred imitation, symbolic play, drawing, and use
of language. Piaget (1977) considers acquisition of language the prime
accomplishment of this stage of development. Music is another
symbolic-representational skill that begins to appear at the same time.
Although music and language are different systems in obvious ways, a
case can be made that the cognitive schemes for language and music
develop simultaneously. Allusions to this possibility can be found in
the literature on linguistic and musical development and cognitive
psychology (Anisfeld, 1984; Dowling, 1988; Gardner, 1982; Winner, 1982).
Most of the research on cognitive processing of musical information
has been carried out with children from European or Euro-American
cultures (Davidson, McKernon, & Gardner, 1981; Dowling, 1984, 1988;
Gordon, 1990; Moog, 1976; Moorhead, & Pond, 1978). The findings have
not been corroborated or contradicted by similar studies in non-Western
traditions. Few ethnomusicologists have reported on children's
musical behavior, perhaps because adults have tended to judge
children's play as insignificant. Most ethnographies focus on adult
musical performance, with observations of children limited to their
preparations for initiation rituals or their peripheral participation in
events of the adult society. Among researchers who have examined
children's music, the emphasis is on representative repertoire, not
on individual musical efforts (Addo, 1996; Blacking, 1967; Ribeiro,
1996).
The literature of musical development includes four major
longitudinal studies. Moorhead and Pond (1978) carried out a landmark
analysis of young children's natural musical production in Santa
Barbara, California, from 1937 to 1940, observing between 12 and 27
pupils each year. Sponsored by the Pillsbury Foundation, this work
focused on the self-initiated music of children between 1-1/2 and 8-1/2
years of age. Both learned and spontaneous songs were transcribed and
categorized. A generation after the Pillsbury study, during 1960-61,
Moog (1976) conducted a large-scale study on children's musical
development. The core of the research project was a series of musical
tests that were played for 500 German-speaking preschool children. Their
responses were observed, their attempts at singing recorded, and their
parents were interviewed for information on general development and the
musical environment of the home.
More recent research in children's song acquisition has
examined tonal production and perception from what has been called the
symbol system approach (Hargreaves, & Zimmerman, 1992). Begun at
Harvard in 1978, Project Zero was a longitudinal study of the
development of competence across seven diverse symbolic domains,
including language, dance, music, and visual arts. Subjects were nine
first-born children from middle-class families observed from the age of
12 months to 6 years. As a check on idiosyncrasy, 70 other children were
also followed cross-sectionally. Results were reported as trends became
evident (see Bamberger, 1978; Bamberger & Brody, 1984; Davidson,
1982; 1985; Davidson & Scripp, 1988; McKernon, 1979).
Gordon (1990) systematized a music learning theory for children
that is based on the developmental literature and his own long-term
testing of children for music aptitude, using the instruments he
devised--the Primary Measures of Music Audiation (PMMA), and the
Intermediate Measures of Music Audiation ( IMMA). His outline of
observed stages of music acquisition provides a useful synthesis.
Evidence from these longitudinal studies and from a handful of
smaller-scale observations points toward cognitive internalization of
musical structure before age 5 (see also Davies, 1992; Dowling, 1988).
Children as young as 6 have demonstrated the ability to utilize mental
schema for the organization of musical sound on a level nearly equal to
that of older children and adults. The mode of this cognitive
organization is postulated to be through tonal material.
A synthesis of the major production-based longitudinal studies of
music acquisition among children outlines the following broad
developmental stages (Davidson 1985; Davidson, McKernon, & Gardner,
1981; Dowling, 1984; Gardner, 1982; Gordon, 1990; Moog, 1976; Moorhead
& Pond, 1978):
1. Children imitate tonal patterns of language and match pitch at a
better-than chance rate during their first year.
2. Around age 1-1/2, after a period of creating undulating waves of
vocal sound, children begin to use repeated fragments of rhythmically
patterned discrete tones.
3. By age 3, children seem to have mastered the outline of song
form.
4. Between the ages of 3 and 4, children produce structured songs
with an approximation of their broad contours; the pitches of early
songs seem to float within the vocal range; intervals, although correct
in direction, are often compressed to be smaller than those in the
correct rendition; and finally, children at this age do not reproduce
the wider skips.
5. At age 4, children begin more accurate production of discrete
pitches in songs; intervals are increasingly precise.
6. Most 5-year-olds can sing a recognizable version of a learned
song.
7. Productions exhibiting a consistently stable tonal center and
scalar organization generally do not occur until age 5 or after (66
months, according to Gardner, 1982).
The author conducted a study (Kreutzer, 1997) to see if the
age-related stages of music acquisition described in the literature
could be observed in children of non-Western cultures. She observed over
200 children in the Nharira communal lands of central Zimbabwe over a
year's time. She video-recorded vocal productions of six subjects
for each of the six-month age categories between birth and age 7, and
followed their musical development by recording the same productions
four to six months later. Data analysis was conducted with feedback from
community members and Zimbabwe music specialists. Input on the level of
performance was given, based on whether children were advanced or
delayed for their ages. In conjunction with these holistic assessments,
the researcher's detailed analysis of each production quantified
accuracy of intervals, the direction of melody, the end points of
musical phrases, and vocal ranges used. Capabilities of children deemed
average for their age were charted and assessed. The analysis of these
Zimbabwean case studies revealed a common sequence in the development of
song among Nharira children that parallels the age-related phases
observed in children of other cultures (Davidson, McKernon, &
Gardner et al., 1981; Moog, 1976; Moorhead and & Pond, 1978). The
milestones of development coincide with those listed above.
Purpose
Childhood music specialists concur that the optimal environment for
early music acquisition is one in which personal music as opposed to
music recorded or performed for an audience, is as accessible as
language for children's imitation (e.g., Gordon, 1990; Kalmar and
& Balasko, 1987). In choosing a site for fieldwork in Zimbabwe, the
author looked for a place where music was functional in daily routines,
where music was performed by people instead of media, and where there
was a population large enough to provide a pool of children between
birth and age 7. In order to attain in-depth familiarity with musical
behavior in the children's environment, a single locale was needed
for the data collection, rather than several sites across the country.
Because the focus was on children's musical enculturation within
their own community, no specific musical tradition was deemed preferable
to another. A place was needed where people would allow the author to
conduct research without arousing suspicion.
Method
The Nharira Communal Lands of Midlands Province, Zimbabwe, provided
the research environment (see Figure 1). Observations centered on
festivals and church services, classrooms and informal gatherings in
three contiguous communities there--Hokonya, Chivese, and Madondo. Thus,
the researcher acquired a comprehensive view of the musical environment
that influences children's formal and informal learning.
Data were secured through oral interviews with teachers and
caretakers of the community. Information on subjects' lifespace
(e.g., household setting, radio ownership), caretakers' belief
systems concerning the nature of musical achievement and learning, and
the social context of musical interactions was gathered through
questions adapted from Slobin's (1976) outline for cross-cultural
linguistic studies. Answers were transcribed as field notes by the
researcher and the Shona-speaking translator. A synthesis of narrative
observations and field notes reveals the following.
Results
Demographics of Nharira Communal Lands The villages in the Nharira
Communal Lands surrounding the three primary schools--Madondo, Chivese,
and Hokonya--are composed of extended family units; new arrivals must
apply to a headman to be granted a plot of farmland and a place to
construct a house. Surrounding the cultivated fields are grazing lands
that are used cooperatively for cattle and goats belonging to individual
families. Maize is the major cultivated crop, often interplanted with
groundnuts. A few families raise sunflowers and rapoko, a small grain.
Household gardens provide table greens, tomatoes, pumpkins, and sweet
potatoes. Most families have chickens, but meat and eggs are a special
treat, since the hens are saved for production and most eggs are left to
hatch. The staple food is sadza (ground cornmeal) cooked over a wood
fire. Tea, sugar, cooking oil, and soap are the only necessities that
are purchased.
Some basic demographics of the area serve to describe the local
family structure and lifestyle, and thus the musical environment of the
children observed. For the 75 families of the 92 primary subjects, the
mean household contained 5.6 people, ranging from 2 to 13. Most families
had two or three children. In nine families, the father was dead or no
longer involved with the children. Slightly over half of the remaining
fathers worked at jobs away from the communal lands. They were builders,
drivers, security guards, machine operators; one was a miner, one a
photographer, one a veterinarian. Although the fathers may have sent
home money and come to visit during the holidays, the primary care of
the majority of children was in the hands of mothers or grandmothers. Of
these caretakers, 65% categorized their occupation as farming. Nine of
the women called themselves housewives. Eight of them supplemented their
income with sewing or crocheted handwork. Observation indicated that all
of these women farmed as well. T he caretakers included five school
teachers and four shopkeepers. The largest category of caretakers (19)
had completed Grade 7. Twenty-three had stopped at varying grades before
Grade 7; 24 had finished several grades more, including 12 women who had
completed Form 4 (approximately equivalent to the third year of
secondary school in the United States). One caretaker was a graduate of
a teacher education course.
Daily work for the families of Nharira includes travel to and from
the boreholes (wells) for water (or, during a drought, to the one
running river), and forays out into the bush for firewood. There is no
electricity in any of these households. However, 36% of the subjects
have, or had at one time, a battery-powered radio. The overwhelming
choice for a music station is a Shona-language station that plays
Zimbabwe pop, traditional, and religious music of several Zimbabwean
language groups, as well as American and European pop, including
country/western. The radios, if owned, are used sparingly. The author
heard them played on only four occasions.
The area is served by a large Roman Catholic mission, Assisi, and
nearly half of the families studied were Roman Catholic; 16% were
Methodist; 15% African Reformed (previously Dutch Reformed); 8%
Anglican; and 3% each Seventh Day Adventist, Apostori, and Zioni. Only
three families claimed no church affiliation. Thus, the music of the
church is a strong influence in the area. At community funerals and
weddings, songs from all the churches are sung. One informant observed
that most children like the Roman Catholic choruses best because they
are so singable.
Musical Influences
Four major types of music influenced the vocal productions of
Nharira children: a) the religious: sung in the churches, reflecting a
dual tradition, or sometimes a blend of Western hymnody and indigenous
African elements; b) the didactic: songs for teaching in the British
tradition, learned by rote and with solfege syllables (do-re-mi, etc.)
in the schools; c) the pasichigare: the old-time traditional music of
Zimbabwe, passed down in the oral tradition by elders and performed
during certain rituals with mbira (metal keyed instrument), hosho
(rattles), and ngoma (drums); and d) the commercial popular: mostly
Shona-language songs, learned more often through oral transmission than
directly from the radio.
These strands mix and mingle in community life. A popular song,
"Chitekete" by Leonard Dembo, was the choice for urging on
school sports teams. Traditional children's games like "Amai
Varona" (Mrs. Varona) were played in juxtaposition to "Mombe
Five" (Five Cows)," a European counting tune, in the creches
(preschools). Children herding goats might sing a church chorus such as
"Johanne 14, verse 1." At a children's moonlight play in
Deshe Village, the researcher heard traditional planting and harvest
songs, as well as a Michael Jackson number.
In the communities observed, music functions in nearly all daily
and seasonal routines. It is transmitted by people rather than through
electronic media. Children in rural Nharira experience music in every
aspect of their daily lives. Adults sing while working and when they are
"just sitting." Families sing before and after meals. Singing
games are a favorite form of recreation whenever there is leisure time.
Interviewees reported that they sing when they are happy, when they are
bored, and when they are praying.
Musical Interactions
Mothers (or primary caretakers, who may be aunts or grandmothers)
are the ones who sing most often to children. The researcher asked 76
mothers/caretakers when they sing to their babies. The most frequent
answer was "when he cries." Some mentioned singing in the
evenings. The next most frequent answer was "any time". They
sing mostly songs they learned in church (N=33), from their parents or
grandparents (N=30), or from their friends and elders of the community
(N=14). A smaller number (N=16) said they acquired their songs from
school, books, or the radio. To the question "Who else sings to
your child?," the responses were brothers and sisters (N=29),
neighbor children (N=24), and grandmothers (N=10); then fathers, aunts,
adult neighbors, and uncles (see Table 1). Because the villages consist
of extended family groups, even a first-born child will encounter other
children as singing role models. Thus, musical enculturation begins at
birth (or arguably before) and continues with strong encouragement to
imitate family and peers. These informal processes are at work long
before a child attends school and is exposed to formal instruction.
The descriptions of children's music making that follow
illustrate seven categories of informal musical behaviors observed in
the Nharira community: interactions a) between mother and child, b)
between family and child, c) between extended family and child, d) among
peers, e) within the institutions of school or church, f) self-initiated
songs, and g) as a response to media. The events described feature
children in chronological order, from youngest to oldest.
Example 1. Mother and child: Yuvon Chikahe, 5 months. Amai (Mother
of) Yuvon elicits Yuvon's response to sounds. She claps and
vocalizes short percussive sounds. Yuvon appears startled at first, then
is curious and attentive, and finally reacts with laughter.
Example 2. Family--Aunt and siblings: Yuvon Chikahe, 11 months. In
their home, Yuvon sits on the lap of her aunt, who is singing "Kuda
kwa Baba" (Stay Near to God) along with other members of the
family. Yuvon is attentive and involved; she bounces, claps, and swings
her arms to the music. During pauses, Yuvon agitates for more music by
reaching for her siblings and humming. In the silence at the end of the
song, Yuvon stands, begins to bounce with a rhythmic pattern, and
attempts to create music of her own with clapping and humming. Her
clapping is not a steady beat, but rather comes in bursts of two or
three. Once, she accompanies her humming with eight claps in succession.
All present encourage her efforts with laughter and comments.
Example 3. Extended family: Tinashe Mutizwa, 20 months. Tinashe is
at home with his 10 siblings, his grandmother, and the next-door
neighbors, who have just sung the church chorus "Tipeiwo
masimba' (Give Us Strength). Sitting on his mother's lap,
Tinashe begins to sing softly, repeating a fragment of the text to a
five-note pattern that he starts most of the time on a consistent single
pitch. At his mother's instigation, he stands up and begins to clap
a beat. The assembled singers pick up the song to his steady clapping.
Tinashe responds to the group by singing with a rhythmic right- then
left-step alternation, punctuating the strong steps with a bentarm push,
elbow out, and clapping his hands once for every two steps. His
grandmother ululates encouragement, and he dances with even more vigor.
The music specialist feedback group identified the dance step as one
from the Apostori sect. They noted that Tinashe changed styles during
the dancing, and they attributed his ability to "a feel from the
mother's pregn ancy."
Example 4. Peers-Neighborhood children: Melody Nhinhi, 27 months (2
years, 3 months). In the Hokonya tuck shop (a small dry-goods store),
Melody is surrounded by older children who are encouraging her to
participate. They are singing the call-and-response game song "Amai
zvipo," which requires clapping to the rhythmic vocables
"Ah-huh, ah-huh." Melody rocks and claps while she performs
the response, first with the other children, and then independently. The
spectators in the store laugh and applaud.
Example 5. Institutions-Church: Talent Tokoda, 53 months (4 years,
5 months). At the preschool, Talent performs the Roman Catholic
processional song "Panogara Yesu Kristu" (Jesus, Stay With
Us), imitating the graceful arm movements that she has observed the
older girls doing in church. She is aware that she is in the limelight
and sings with great poise, a strong voice, and long sustained phrases.
The researcher's outsider/watcher status inhibited many of the
children's natural musical behaviors. Some of the children in the
community were too shy to perform and had to be cajoled or even bribed
by their caretakers with sweets. Others were eager to show off and sing
the songs that they thought a murungu (white person) would want to hear
them sing-that is, religious songs in the European tradition. Therefore,
plans to record individual spontaneous song creations for each subject
were never realized. During times of 'just sitting" with
families, the researcher witnessed four events that could be labeled
improvisation. One production sparked debate in many feedback sessions
on whether or not it was music.
Example 6. Self-initiated music making: Mike Chidyiwa, 58 months (4
years, 10 months). Mike was waiting along with the other pupils at
Madondo School for the government-issued drought relief porridge to be
cooked. He had his dish -- a commercial plastic ice cream container --
and his spoon. He began pounding the plastic lid of the container with
the spoon in a steady beat. Then he began to speak, to the continued
accompaniment of the spoon and lid. The researcher perceived the words
as a chanting rhythm: "Dega dega zvangu (Give us ours) [three
duplet pairs]...[some-thing some-thing] wangu (mine) [another three
duplet pairs]..." The early childhood music specialists concluded
that the chant was not musical, because there was no relation between
the tapping and the talking. They said he was simply thinking out loud
about how happy he was that the children were getting food. Most of the
Shona-speaking informants concurred with that opinion. On the other
hand, if one accepts the most basic definition of music as patterned
sound, this production qualifies. In performances of learned songs, Mike
was judged to be far behind the average child of his age in terms of
musical development. He was rated lowest of all 92 in the subject pool.
If Mike's production could be considered music, however, it
illustrates that even the least musical child in Nharira can respond to
an inner urge to create song.
Example 7. Media: Prince Muchena, 62 months (5 years, 2 months).
Prince imitates a guitar sound with repeated vocables
"ta-t'na," performing a harmonic line from the
instrumental interlude of a popular song, "Gomo m'sina
muchero" (Hill Without Fruit). He follows with another tune,
"Ndourayiwa," from the same album, Boterekwa, by the Zimbabwe
artist Simon Chimbetu. It is likely that Prince learned the songs he
performed by imitating the album, because his family once had a
radio/tape player, before it was stolen. The fact that he sang two songs
from the album in tandem supports the probability. However, he may have
picked up the sequence by imitating others in the family who learned it
from the commercial version.
The commercial songs sung in the Nharira community are not
generally learned directly from recorded renditions; rather, they enter
individuals' repertoire mediated by human transmission. Nearly all
adults and children in Madondo's Deshe Village could sing a variant
of Leonard Dembo's urban pop song "Chitekete." Recorded
and disseminated electronically, the song might have been heard
occasionally at the beer hall and in the few homes with radios. It was
made popular in the communal lands by itinerant community members --
those employed in the cities who return kumusha (to the home village)
for holidays and special occasions. They sang the song for the people at
home, and the community adopted and adapted it. The version the
researcher heard was a condensation of the original recorded text, with
melodic alterations and several verses collapsed together. After more
than a decade of performance, the changes to "Chitekete" were
sung consistently by all community members. Such a process of oral
transferal of media music has been termed "secondary orality"
(Ong, 1982).
Caretakers' Belief Systems
About Musical Behaviors
Caretakers of the Nharira subjects were asked for their
observations on children's singing, dancing, playing instruments,
and creating music. Figure 2 represents a compilation of the
community's observations of the onset of children's s musical
activities. For ease of comparison, the responses have been computed as
percentages and expressed as the number of children out of 100. Thus, a
hypothetical group of 100 Nharira children would exhibit the listed
musical behaviors at the given ages.
One answer to the question about the age that children begin to
sing was "When they start to talk." The answer evokes the
often-quoted Zimbabwe adage: "If you can talk you can sing; if you
can walk you can dance." A distinction emerged between singing
(when words are used) and humming (musical tone patterns). Children are
observed to be humming long before they acquire language. Over a third
of the respondents placed the onset of singing/humming at 18 months or
younger.
Observations about when children begin to dance followed suit; 12%
of the respondents said, "Before they walk." One connected
dancing with standing, at about eight months. Fully half of the
caretakers agreed that children have begun to dance by the time they
were 20 months old. Dancing continued to be the favored response to
music observed by caretakers for children up to age 5 (60 months), at
which point singing overtook it, with 95% of children singing, 90%
dancing, and 66% playing instruments. (Ssee Figure 2.).
Movement is an integral component of music-making in the Zimbabwe
culture. Many children's vocal performances included some form of
bouncing, stepping, or clapping. Moog (1976) reported that movement
responses to music peaked in German children before age 3. After that,
he observed, subjects listened more quietly. That was not the case in
Nharira, where children's adult role models dance throughout life.
Even the oldest grandmother does not sit when music is playing. A Roman
Catholic priest at the local mission praised the church policy of
incorporating traditional pasichigare music into the mass. He said he
supported the changes because "my mother should not have to stand
still in church."
Asked if children play musical instruments, three people answered
that they do not, and one said that they "play the radio." The
rest, however, named the instruments that children do play. Drums were
mentioned most often (30 times); the traditional shakers, hosho, next
(13 times); and the complex metal keyed instrument, the mbira, next (7
times). A scattering of respondents named guitar, marimba, chipendani
(musical bow), and the bottle. Answers to the question about the age at
which children begin to play were affected by whether the respondent
inferred sound exploration or actual performance. Several made a
distinction: children play at 3 or 4, but they play well, with rhythm,
at age 10 (see Figure 2).
The Nharira caretakers were asked at the interviews if children
create their own songs. Opinions were closely divided among the 59
respondents; 58% said yes, 42% said no. The few who elaborated said that
children create songs at sports events. One woman remembered making up
songs herself as a child, when she sat alone in the yard behind the
house. Two said that children create songs at age 3 to 4, while another
said that children create them beginning at age 5.
To gather perceptions on when children begin to sing as well as
adults, the researcher asked the caretakers, "Vana vanoimba rini
nziyo nzinofanana ne nziyo dze mhunu mukuru": When do children sing
songs that sound just like the songs of adults? The answers of the 60
people from the Nharira community who answered that question are
recorded in Table 2.
In the opinion of 18.3% of the respondents, children 4 years old
can sing as well as adults. Combined with those who identified an
earlier age, almost half, or 42.3%, think that children can sing as well
as adults by the age of 4. An additional 21.7% of observers see children
singing as well as adults by the age of 5. Another 13.3% think that
children sing as well as adults by age 7. The next surge of opinion
comes at age 10. A cumulative 96.5% of observers say that by age 10,
children can sing as well as adults. It is interesting that not much
improvement is observed after age 10, the age that Western researchers
typically identify as the time when music aptitude development plateaus
(e.g., Gordon, 1985).
The underlying assumption of those interviewed in Nharira appears
to be that all people who have hearing and voices can sing. When asked,
"Do some adults sing better than others--why and who?," 45
respondents agreed that there are differences. Only one person said that
there are adults who cannot sing. Another said that there are poorer
singers, but when asked to name one, said, "No one is a poor
singer." The reasons given for why some adults sing better than
others ranged from global to very specific: some people are more clever
than others (N=7); some people sing discordantly (N=4) or are not
well-tuned (N=1). Some people know the words better (N=2) and some can
pronounce them better (N=2). Many comments focused on the quality of the
voice: there are good and bad voices (N=3). "Good" was
synonymous with "clear" (N=2) or "soft" (N=3), as
opposed to "hoarse" (N=3) or "harsh" (N=4). One
respondent said that a thick voice is better than a thin one. Another
said that having either a deep or a high voice was bett er, because
harmony is important. Practice (N=3) slightly outweighed training (N=2)
as a reason why people become good singers. Some people are too shy to
sing, even if they are good (N=2). Two respondents answered the question
from the perspective of an audience, rather than as a participant: a
good singer must have good tunes (N=1) and be entertaining (N=1).
The majority of the 18 people who specified an answer when asked,
"Who is a good singer?" named family members--a father, a
grandmother or grandfather, an older child. Four people named
themselves. The rest identified people from the community, except for
two of the teachers, who named the professional musicians Simon
Chimbetu, Thomas Mapfumo, and Oliver Mutukudzi. An implication of these
answers is that people affirm that they and others they know personally
are singers; they do not think that the only good singers are those who
have achieved national recognition.
The Nharira caretakers were asked, "Is it important that
people sing? If so, why?" Every respondent said yes, it was
important for people to sing. Their stated reasons confirmed the value
of music for its ability to make people happy, to relieve sadness, and
for entertainment (see Table 3). Some of the individual comments testify
to music's importance in the Nharira Communal Lands:
"If [there were not singing], the world would be very down,
very terrible without singing" (Amai [mother of] Brandina
Matirongo).
"[Music] helps [us] to forget what has happened previously and
what will be going on in the future" (Amai Prince Dondo).
"When you think of a friend [who is] far away or dead, you
think of her by singing a song" (Amai Gamuchirai Bimha).
"If you have been thinking very deep, when you sing it will go
away. But if you keep being silent, you will think very deep" (Amai
Marlven Deshe).
"It's how life comes. If you not sing, you are so
poor" (Amai Tsitsi Chidyiwa).
Conclusions and Implications
In the Nharira environment, music performance is an interactive
process between mother and child, among family members of all ages, and
between community members. Through daily musical communications,
children develop into functional musical beings who are able to take
their roles in the adult life of the community. Zimbabweans style
themselves as members of a singing society. In a post-research job at
the University of Zimbabwe, the researcher observed teaching practices
in rural and urban schools across the country. She witnessed the use of
songs for teaching in nearly every subject area, and encountered no
primary teacher who could not sing. Colleagues in music at the Teacher
Training Colleges confirmed this reality; they do not have to remediate singing skills at the tertiary level.
The findings of this study underscore the importance of musical
experiences in early childhood, long before formal primary music
education begins. Interestingly, no special educational strategies are
employed to instruct young children in making music, other than modeling
and the uncritical encouragement of imitation. The music existed as a
component of daily routines. Adults used music to make themselves and
others happy. Just as conversation is the curriculum for early language
acquisition, communal music-making is the impetus for developing latent
musicality.
From this tapestry of observations and opinions, four major threads
emerged. In order for musical development to unfold, the environment
must provide:
* music as a valued means of communication
* a relaxed expectation that every person will be musical
* emotional experiences manifested in musical interactions
* opportunities for children to move in response to music.
What does this mean for parents and early childhood care providers
who want their children to develop their full music potential? They must
find ways to communicate with and through music. They must applaud all
efforts to make music, so that children feel safe expressing themselves
musically. The natural sequence of musical development stems from
modeling and imitation--that is, from doing music, not just listening.
The literature, especially the work of Gordon (1985, 1990), points
to the preschool and early primary school years as crucial for musical
development. The ages between 5 and 10 are a window of opportunity for
certain kinds of cognitive growth, including musical aptitude. By this
time, children are ripe for skill development. Classroom teachers and
music specialists need to offer an environment that stimulates musical
behavior. Music activities should include movement, as well as time for
singing and playing instruments.
These ideas are not new. Perhaps they can carry more impact as
parents and educators raise their expectations of what is possible for
all human beings to achieve musically. Parental awareness of the
positive effects of musical exposure has recently been sharpened by
widespread media coverage of the connections between music and brain
development. Music specialist Fox (2000) sifted through much research to
determine what types of early music experiences affect brain
development. She identified four conditions as critical to both
musicaltiy and brain development: children must be actively engaged with
the music, not just be passive listeners; the musical interactions must
result in some type of meaningful communication; the use of
imagination--learning through play--must be linked to the music; and
finally, the musical learning must come through positive interactions
with other people.
Recommendations for Further Research
The researcher's year among the people of Nharira strengthened
a growing personal conviction that the human brain is hardwired for
musical communication, that alongside language-making capacity, people
have the cognitive structure for perceiving, and transmitting within, a
musical symbol system. Several findings from this study raise questions
for future systematic research. One is the effectiveness of holistic
presentation of musical content. Is it necessary to employ "musical
motherese," or simplification of musical materials, or do children
employ their own ways of sequencing learning as their capacity for
understanding develops? It would also be interesting to pursue the
relationship between children's emotional attachment to people who
make music and their inclination to emulate. Closer to the study itself
would be replications of the work in other cultures and by people who
are fluent in the language and traditions. For cross-cultural
comparisons, it would be informative to have specialists from other t
raditions evaluate the musicality of the Nharira subjects.
Natalie J. Kreutzer, former doctoral student at the School of
Music, Indiana University, Bloomington, is now Assistant Professor of
Music at Lionel Hampton School of Music, University of Idaho, Moscow,
Idaho. This article includes research conducted between 1992-94,
assisted by a grant from the Joint Committee on African Studies of the
Social Science Research Council and the American Council of Learned
Societies. Funds were provided by the Rockefeller Foundation. All
research was carried out with the permission of the Research Council,
the Ministry of Education and Culture, and the Ministry of Social
Welfare of Zimbabwe. A full account of the work is available from:
Kreutzer, N. J. (1997). The nature of music acquisition among selected
Shona-speaking people of rural Zimbabwe as reflected in the vocal
productions of children from birth to 7 years.
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[Figure 1 Omitted]
Figure 2
Onset of Nharira Children's Musical Activities
Behavior Profile of Every 100 Nharira Babies
Adjusted from caretaker responses: When do children begin singing, N=65;
dancing, N=59; playing instruments, N=50, * represents one child
Age in Months Singing Dancing Playing Instruments
2 ******
3
4 **
5 ** **
6 ****** ****
Cumulative Total 8 2 12
7 **
8 **** **********
9 *****
10 ** **
11
12 ********** ********** ******
**** ****
Cumulative Total 28 35 18
13
14
15 ***
16 **
17
18 ****** *** ****
Cumulative Total 34 43 22
19
20 ** ********
21 **
22
23
24 ********** ********** **********
********** ********** ******
*****
Cumulative Total 63 71 38
30 ****
36 ********* ********** ********
*******
Cumulative Total 76 88 46
48 ********** ** ********
**
Cumulative Total 88 90 66
60 ******* ********
Cumulative Total 95 90 66
72 *** *** **********
Cumulative Total 98 93 74
84 ** *** ****
Cumulative Total 100 96 88
10 Years or more **** **********
**
Cumulative Total 100 100 100
Table 1
Caretaker Response On Who Sings to Childen
Who sings to your child?
Answered by 76 caretakers in the Nharira community
Response N
Mothers/Caretakers 76
Brothers and sisters 29
Neighbor children 24
Grandmothers 10
Fathers 5
Aunts 5
Adult neighbors 2
Uncles 1
Others 2
Table 2
Caretaker Responses on When Children Can Sing As Well As Adults
When do children sing as well as adults?
Answered by 60 caretakers in the Nharira Community
Response Percent of Respondents Cumulative Percent
at 1 year 1.7
at 2 years 11.6 13.3
at 3 years 11.6 24.9
at 4 years 18.3 43.2
at 5 years 21.7 64.9
at 6 years 3.3 68.2
at 7 years 13.3 81.5
at 8 years 5.0 86.5
at 9 years 3.3 89.8
at 10 years 6.7 96.5
at 12 years 1.5 98.0
at 13 years 1.7 99.7
Table 3
Caretaker's Responses On Why It Is Important for People To Sing
Is it important that people sing? If so, why?
Answered by 70 caretakers in the Nharira community
Response Percentage
1. To be happy 24%
2. To comfort loneliness, sadness, 22%
3. For entertainment 20%
4. To use brain, gain knowledge 8%
5. Physical exercise, keep children 7%
active
6. To praise God in church 6%
7. For traditional ceremonies 4%
8. For personal pride, to win 3%
competitions
9. Single responses: 6%
Good for the throat--to
keep it soft
Make people social
To make time go