The didjeridu is a wind instrument which is traditionally made from hollowed Eucalyptus trees and used in various ceremonial situations Aboriginal people in Northern Australia. Today the didjeridu has become a globally recognized symbol of Australianna ... economically viable model for a remote community based didjeridu industry, which maintains environmental and cultural integrity and ... are made for pursuit of a sustainably managed didjeridu industry in northern Australia.
Tópico(s): Indigenous Health, Education, and Rights
2007 - | The International Journal of Environmental Cultural Economic and Social Sustainability Annual Review
Abstract The recent, non‐Aboriginal name, didjeridu (didgeridoo, digerydoo), was probably derived from sound made by this lip‐buzzed aerophone. The availability of bamboo in the north‐west of ... of the Arnhem Land Plateau, depictions of the didjeridu have been placed within the ‘post‐estuarine’ period ( ... the last 1,000 years or less, the didjeridu may have helped to preserve vestiges of earlier ...
Tópico(s): Diverse Musicological Studies
1981 - Routledge | World Archaeology
The didjeridu has accumulated considerable symbolic capital in recent years. Its status as an icon of Aboriginality, musical tradition ... firmly within the Australian national imagination. However, the didjeridu did not hold centre stage as a symbol ... to stand for Australianness at its centre. The didjeridu has crossed internal boundaries altering perceptions of music ... for the recontextualisation of Indigenous meanings around the didjeridu.
Tópico(s): Indigenous Health, Education, and Rights
2005 - Cambridge University Press | Yearbook for Traditional Music
Enthusiasm for the didjeridu is a global phenomenon that attracts interest from players and collectors worldwide despite the many popular fallacies that circulate ... to the rapid globalisation and commercialisation of the didjeridu in recent decades, and draw on my own ...
Tópico(s): Geographies of human-animal interactions
2003 - Taylor & Francis | Rural Society
The dynamic acoustics of the Australian didjeridu are studied by separately considering transverse and longitudinal lip vibration models in the context of highly non-sinusoidal lip motion. Timedomain computer ... approximately half-closed cycle) case characteristic of the didjeridu. Over a range of lip resonance frequencies, the ...
Tópico(s): Vibration and Dynamic Analysis
2000 - CSIRO Publishing | Australian Journal of Physics
The didjeridu has accumulated considerable symbolic capital in recent years. Its status as an icon of Aboriginality, musical tradition ... firmly within the Australian national imagination. However, the didjeridu did not hold centre stage as a symbol ... to stand for Australianness at its centre. The didjeridu has crossed internal boundaries altering perceptions of music ... for the recontextualisation of Indigenous meanings around the didjeridu.
Tópico(s): Indigenous Health, Education, and Rights
2005 - Cambridge University Press | Yearbook for Traditional Music
An ongoing debate surrounding the use of the didjeridu is the appropriateness of women playing it. This ... of the quite diverse public discourse on the didjeridu in Australia (and elsewhere) but also some of ... via what is remembered or forgotten when the didjeridu is discussed or used. It is argued that, ...
Tópico(s): Sport and Mega-Event Impacts
2006 - Aboriginal Studies Press | Australian aboriginal studies/Australian Aboriginal studies
The didjeridu (or yiraki) of the Australian Aborigines is a very primitive musical instrument, both historically and acoustically. It ... designs, usually in black, white and orange. A didjeridu maker typically spends about two days in shaping ...
Tópico(s): Diverse Musicological Studies
1983 - Aboriginal Studies Press | Australian aboriginal studies/Australian Aboriginal studies
John R. Lindsay Smith, Guillaume Rey, Paul Dickens, Neville H. Fletcher, Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg, Joe Wolfe,
... spectra. Most significantly, the ranked quality of a didjeridu was found to be negatively correlated with the ...
Tópico(s): Phonetics and Phonology Research
2007 - Acoustical Society of America | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
N. H. Fletcher, Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg, John R. Lindsay Smith, A. Tarnopolsky, Joe Wolfe,
The didjeridu (didgeridoo) or yidaki of the Australian Aboriginal people consists of the narrow trunk of a small Eucalypt ...
Tópico(s): Music and Audio Processing
2006 - Acoustical Society of America | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Alex Tarnopolsky, Neville H. Fletcher, Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg, Benjamin D. Lange, John Nelson Smith, Joe Wolfe,
The didjeridu, or yidaki, is a simple tube about 1.5m long, played with the lips, as in a ...
Tópico(s): Underwater Acoustics Research
2006 - Acoustical Society of America | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
... new age Pagan appropriation of the Aboriginal Australian didjeridu and the American Indian sweat lodge tradition. Against ...
Tópico(s): Pacific and Southeast Asian Studies
2002 - Taylor & Francis | Journal of Contemporary Religion
... and teaching with the Aboriginal musical instrument the didjeridu. Didjeriduists are at the vanguard of introducing music‐ ... literally and figuratively sound silences; they use the didjeridu to help construct a musically informed textual space ...
Tópico(s): Indigenous Health, Education, and Rights
1998 - Taylor & Francis | Journal of Intercultural Studies
... Swedish herding calls soaring over a djembe and didjeridu groove, Russian refrains inserted between Finnish texts and ...
Tópico(s): Musicology and Musical Analysis
2007 - Cambridge University Press | Yearbook for Traditional Music
... the ritual specialist John Nummar and the karnbi (didjeridu) player Benedict Tchinburur. The texts of these songs ...
Tópico(s): Diverse Musicological Studies
2005 - Taylor & Francis | Musicology Australia
Michael Webb, Karl Neuenfeldt,
Tópico(s): Australian Indigenous Culture and History
1997 - Cambridge University Press | Yearbook for Traditional Music
Tópico(s): Education, sociology, and vocational training
1996 - Springer Science+Business Media | Acoustics Australia
1966 - Cambridge University Press | Journal of the International Folk Music Council
Abstract The Australian didjeridu is a unique and interesting instrument. Despite the fact that the bore shape is almost random in nature and varies considerably across different instruments, the didjeridu timbre is readily recognizable. This is also true ... vocal tract. In this study we examine the didjeridu spectrum in detail, in order to determine the ...
Tópico(s): Music Technology and Sound Studies
2004 - Elsevier BV | Applied Acoustics
Information about the Australian Aboriginal musical instrument, the didjeridu, has spread rapidly and widely over the internet. ... web sites, and monitoring the exchanges on a didjeridu mailing list, I found that the information could ... into three categories: new age/world music pages; didjeridu musicians' forums; and Aboriginal community sites. The information ... the sharing of Aboriginal musical practices. While the didjeridu network does exhibit the appropriation of Aboriginality to ...
Tópico(s): Diverse Musicological Studies
1999 - SAGE Publishing | Convergence The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies
... songs are an endangered set of individually owned, didjeridu-accompanied songs, sung predominantly in Kun-barlang, a ...
Tópico(s): Language and cultural evolution
2010 - Taylor & Francis | Australian Journal of Linguistics
... dedicated to the craft and study of the didjeridu, initiated, owned, and maintained by one Aboriginal family ...
Tópico(s): Geographies of human-animal interactions
2009 - Taylor & Francis | Journal of Ecotourism
... lyuna (vocals), Jimmy Djarrbbarali (vocals), Owen Yalandja (mako (didjeridu)), Murray Garde and Stephen Wild (field recording and ... themselves with clapsticks and accompanied by a short didjeridu. The documentation provided with the CD indicates that ...
Tópico(s): Pacific and Southeast Asian Studies
2007 - Aboriginal Studies Press | Australian aboriginal studies/Australian Aboriginal studies
... clap sticks alone or both clap sticks and didjeridu. First investigations reveal that the song texts are ...
Tópico(s): Indigenous Studies and Ecology
2007 - Aboriginal Studies Press | Australian aboriginal studies/Australian Aboriginal studies
Joe Wolfe, John R. Lindsay Smith,
The didjeridu is the principal musical instrument of the world’s oldest continuous culture and its sound is an ...
Tópico(s): Music Technology and Sound Studies
2023 - Acoustical Society of America | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
John R. Lindsay Smith, Guillaume Rey, Joe Wolfe,
... often a difficult goal in music acoustics. The didjeridu offers advantages in such a study because it ...
Tópico(s): Diverse Musicological Studies
2012 - Acoustical Society of America | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
John Nelson Smith, Guillaume Rey, J. Wolfe,
... the finding that the ranked quality of a didjeridu correlated negatively with the magnitude of its acoustic ...
Tópico(s): Diverse Musicological Studies
2008 - Acoustical Society of America | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
... has been barely touched upon regarding the Australian didjeridu. This is very interesting, considering that didjeridus vary ...
Tópico(s): Music and Audio Processing
2008 - Acoustical Society of America | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Review(s) of: The Didjeridu: From Arnhem Land to Internet, by Neuenfeldt, Karl, ed, John Libbey and Co, Sydney, 1997, ISBN 1 86462 003 X, ...
Tópico(s): Australian Indigenous Culture and History
1997 - Griffith University | Media Information Australia
Abstract The didjeridu type of instrument is, in essence, a hollow rigid body enclosing a column of air. Its shape may ...
Tópico(s): Maritime and Coastal Archaeology
1964 - Taylor & Francis | Musicology Australia