Skip to main content

The compositional thought in Godfred Sackey’s Ebiawonkasama.

Prof. Acquah, Emmanuel Obed
Associate Professor/Dean, SCA
  +233502260039
  eoacquah@uew.edu.gh

Authors
Sackey, G., Annan, J.F. & Acquah, E.O
Publication Year
2022
Article Title
The compositional thought in Godfred Sackey’s Ebiawonkasama.
Journal
Journal of Advance Research in Humanities and Social Science
Volume
10
Issue Number
6
Page Numbers
1851-1867
ISSN
2320-9186
Abstract

Over the last six decades or so, art music compositions in Africa have been described as a symbiosis of Western and African musical elements by music scholars such as Euba, Agawu and Dor. The description was based on the fact that African composers such as Amu, Nketia, Bankole, Mereku, and others have focused on the usage of indigenous African musical elements in Art music compositions to either identify themselves with their compositions or to situate the compositions in the framework of interculturalism. Ebiawonkasama, an art composition based on Ebibindwom of selected syncretic churches in Winneba was composed by Godfred Sackey, a Ghanaian creative ethnomusicologist. In Ebiawonkasama, Sackey exploited both the indigenous Ghanaian (African) and Western musical elements. This article aims at exposing the reader to the compositional thought and analytical narrative of Ebiawonkasama using Donald F. Tovey’s descriptive communicative type of formal analysis to unravel the several compositional styles that were used by the composer. The writers utilized purposive sampling technique and document analysis for data collection. The consequence of this paper is to provide a clear compositional and analytical presentation of a research-based composition (creative ethnomusicology) that utilizes diverse compositional scopes to add to the literature on intercultural music compositions

© 2019 University of Education, Winneba