Friday 13 May 2022

My Instrument: Nakibembe Xylophone Troupe and their Embaire

First published in Songlines Magazine issue 178, June 2022.



There’s a worn-out cliché of a proverb that says ‘it takes a village to raise a child.’ In the Ugandan kingdom of Busoga, it takes a village to play a xylophone. The instrument is the embaire, and the village of Nakibembe is world-renowned for its musicians’ prowess.

The embaire is huge. It is three metres long, and its 21 keys are played by six musicians, who sit three per side. Each musician plays a relatively simple repeating pattern across three or four keys, but multiplied six-fold they create an intense battery of ever-evolving interlocking sonic shapes. From this dense tangle of sound, distinct melodies, basslines and drum rhythms emerge, each musician’s abstract part combining into an entrancing whole. “It’s a bit like jazz,” explains Nassar Kinobi, the singer and bass-keys-specialist in the Nakibembe Xylophone Troupe. “Everyone is playing a different thing, but there is always a connection between them. And there are things we can’t explain, it’s like magic. When we start playing, there is momentum. Anything can change and become a perfect part of a pattern, even if it’s an accident!

The instrument itself is a feat of carpentry. The keys of the embaire are made from the wood of the omusambya (Markhamia lutea or Nile tulip), and its beaters are made from the wood of the nzo (Teclea nobilis). The omusambya wood is carefully hewn with a special axe-chisel called the eyiga; the tuning is incredibly precise – each small chip of a giant key is an irreparable alteration – and measured entirely by ear.

When played in the villages of Busoga, the keys are laid on banana stems and placed over a 50cm-deep pit dug into the ground. This trough provides a booming resonance that enhances the instrument’s bass keys, connecting the embaire to the land of its ancestors in a very literal way. It also makes it a challenge to set up on a stage – the concept of transporting a hole is a bit of an ontological head-scratcher. But with multiple international appearances under their belt, the Nakibembe Xylophone Troupe have found a way around that challenge. Each time they travel abroad, a specially-built box is commissioned to stand in for the earthen pit. The original keys from Nakibembe are then placed upon the new resonator, creating a hybrid instrument: half-Soga, half-international.



The Nakibembe Xylophone Troupe don’t just carry the name of their village out of sentimentality; the group is interwoven with the community itself. They are more than six musicians. In fact, they’re more like a football team. They have their ‘starting line-up,’ who are usually the ones who tour abroad, but there are many other players in the troupe who can sub in whenever necessary – the village even has a youth ensemble for the trainees.

Arising in the 1970s, the giant 21-keyed version of the embaire is a fairly modern innovation on an ancient instrument, but it’s already a valuable tradition in Nakibembe. “It’s become something big, and we want to keep it going,” says Rashidi Ngobi. Affectionately referred to as ‘the old man’ by the rest of the musicians, Ngobi is the troupe’s elder, and the one who holds the embaire’s history. “If we teach people, and then they teach people, then it lives on because our ancestors did the same thing. My job is to inspire the young generation and to make sure that I leave something for them. When they have children, they should teach them the same thing and keep the legacy going.

Behind the intricate melodies and rhythms interlaced into a complex cacophony lies a simple truth: “The embaire was created to help take away sorrow, to bring joy, and to make people forget their suffering. Its history is about people coming together and creating something for a cause,” says Ngobi. With an instrument this big, it really does take a village to play the embaire.


Photos, from top: Nakibembe Xylophone Troupe live at CTM Festival 2020, by Stefanie Kulisch; the keys of the Nakibembe embaire.

Pongo - Sakidila

First published in Songlines Magazine issue 178, June 2022.

Pongo
Sakidila
Virgin Records (40 mins)

Angolan-born, Lisbon-based singer and rapper Pongo already gained notoriety within the field of forward-thinking kuduro for her collaborations with Buraka Som Sistema stretching back to 2008. After a series of singles, EPs and high-energy live shows, her debut album is finally here.

Sadilika starts more on the laid-back side. The heavy beats of the kuduro club make way for classy R&B and chilled influences from Brazil and the Caribbean. This section is definitely the most pop-oriented, and while it’s pretty much inoffensive, Pongo really comes into her own half-way through the album when she turns up the heat.

The highlights come from this second half, starting with the track ‘Começa’ – the beats are harder, the bass is darker and the vocals delivered with a little bit more poison. Influences from hip-hop, amapiano and even soukous give each track an interesting, individual identity and the delightful rework of Pongo’s first hit with Buraka Som Sistema, ‘Wegue Wegue’, shows 14 additional years of musical maturity.

Pongo uses this debut to explore her musical range, but it’s the moments where the energy matches her frenetic live performances that show you what she’s truly capable of.

Sigurd Hole - Roraima

First published in Songlines Magazine issue 178, June 2022.

Sigurd Hole
Roraima
Elvesang (78 mins)

Sigurd Hole’s previous album was a solo double bass exploration into the environment and atmospheres of his native Norway. Now in a seven-piece among some of the biggest names in Norwegian jazz, Hole studies similar themes, albeit a little further from home.

Roraima is an instrumental telling of the creation myth of the indigenous Yanomami people of the northern Amazon, and a musical echo of the dense but calm soundscapes of the rainforest. Hole and his musicians play alongside and converse with field recordings of the Amazon and its people, while taking influence from jazz, folk, minimalism and subtle flavours from India and Armenia. It’s an intriguing concept and execution – Nordic jazz is very rooted in its landscape and the juxtaposition between Norwegian and Amazonian provides an interesting dissonance.

In creating the intricately-constructed atmospherics and mimesis, Roraima is Hole’s plea to reorient our culture and society around the environment and its needs, a return to a philosophy central to many indigenous beliefs. But with its structure directly inspired by Yanomami religion, it is disappointing to see an apparent lack of Yanomami contributors, either as participants or consultants. While Roraima is certainly admirable in its message and music, it raises the question – whose story is this to tell?