The substance of African Divine Church choral music
Abstract/ Overview
Choral music in Africa could be classified asWestern“art”, African“art”or indigenous
African choral music, which includes traditional“classical”, ethnic, religious and folk
styles. All over Africa, indigenous choral singing was a strongly established tradition
long before colonisation and the subsequent introduction of Western choral music.
This music is rich in terms of culture, musical quality and functionality, making use
of styles which although diverse, are unique to Africa. As observed among theYoruba
of Africa, indigenous choral music is organised on gender, age, social, hereditary and
divine orders. The harmonic textures include unison, homophonic parallelism and
polyphony, while the arrangement of scores is completely oral, surviving through
oral traditions. Unlike Western practice, the conducting is carried out by the master
musician or the lead singer, while the voice arrangements and stylistic techniques are
distinct. This paper examines the unique aesthetic principles that underlie the
indigenous choral styles of the Yoruba of Africa and the resultant organisational
structures, performance contexts and practices, with a view to documenting and
reviving the indigenous choral heritage which is almost dying in many ethnic groups
as a result of education, modernity and other external influences.