Bullroarer

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Bullroarers from Africa in the Pitt Rivers Museum Bull roarers.jpg
Bullroarers from Africa in the Pitt Rivers Museum

The bullroarer, [1] rhombus, or turndun, is an ancient ritual musical instrument and a device historically used for communicating over great distances. [2] It consists of a piece of wood attached to a string, which when swung in a large circle produces a roaring vibration sound.

Contents

It dates to the Paleolithic period, being found in Ukraine dating from 18,000 BC. Anthropologist Michael Boyd, a bullroarer expert, documents a number found in Europe, Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Australia. [3] In Ancient Greece it was a sacred instrument used in the Dionysian Mysteries and is still used in rituals worldwide. [4] It was a prominent musical technology among the Australian Aboriginal people, used in ceremonies and to communicate with different people groups across the continent.

Many different cultures believe that the sounds they make have the power to ward off evil influences.

Design, use, and sound

Video of a bullroarer being swung to make a noise

A bullroarer consists of a weighted airfoil (a rectangular thin slat of wood about 15 to 60 centimetres (6 to 20 in) long and about 1.2 to 5 centimetres (0.5 to 2 in) wide) attached to a long cord. Typically, the wood slat is trimmed down to a sharp edge and serrations along the length of the wooden slat may or may not be used, depending on the cultural traditions of the region in question.

The cord is given a slight initial twist, and the roarer is then swung in a large circle in a horizontal plane, or in a smaller circle in a vertical plane. The aerodynamics of the roarer will keep it spinning about its axis even after the initial twist has unwound. The cord winds fully first in one direction and then the other, alternating.

It makes a characteristic roaring vibrato sound with notable sound modulations occurring from the rotation of the roarer along its longitudinal axis, and the choice of whether a shorter or longer length of cord is used to spin the bullroarer. By modifying the expansiveness of its circuit and the speed given it, and by changing the plane in which the bullroarer is whirled from horizontal to vertical or vice versa, the modulation of the sound produced can be controlled, making the coding of information possible.

The low-frequency component of the sound travels extremely long distances, clearly audible over many miles on a quiet night.[ citation needed ]

In culture

Various cultures have used bullroarers as musical, ritual, and religious instruments and long-range communication devices for at least 19,000 years.[ citation needed ]

North American Indigenous Bullroarers.
BullRoarerNavajo1910.jpg BullRoarerApache1892.jpg BullRoarerGrosVentre1908.jpg
Navajo
tsin ndi'ni'
"groaning stick" [5] [6]
Apache
tzi-ditindi
"sounding wood" [7]
Gros Ventre
nakaantan
"making cold" [8]

This instrument has been used by numerous early and traditional cultures in both the northern and southern hemispheres but in the popular consciousness it is perhaps best known for its use by Australian Aborigines (it is from one of their languages that the name turndun comes).

Henry Cowell composed a composition for two violins, viola, two celli, and two bullroarers. [9] A bullroarer featured in the Kate Bush Before The Dawn concerts in London 2014. [10]

Australian Aboriginal culture

Bullroarers have been used in initiation ceremonies and in burials to ward off evil spirits, and for bad tidings. Bullroarers are considered secret men's business by all or almost all Aboriginal tribal groups, and hence forbidden for women, children, non-initiated men, or outsiders to even hear. Fison and Howitt documented this in "Kamilaroi and Kurnai" (page 198). Anyone caught breaching the imposed secrecy was to be punished by death.

They are used in men's initiation ceremonies, and the sound they produce is considered in some indigenous cultures to represent the sound of the Rainbow Serpent.[ citation needed ] In the cultures of southeastern Australia, the sound of the bullroarer is the voice of Daramulan, and a successful bullroarer can be made only if it has been cut from a tree containing his spirit.

The bullroarer can also be used as a tool in Aboriginal art.[ citation needed ]

Bullroarers have sometimes been referred to as "wife-callers" by Australian Aborigines.[ citation needed ]

A bullroarer is used by Paul Hogan in the 1988 film Crocodile Dundee II . John Antill included one in the orchestration of his ballet Corroboree (1946). [9] See: Corroboree.

An Australian band Midnight Oil included a recording of an imitation bullroarer on their album Diesel and Dust (1987) at the beginning of the song "Bullroarer". In an interview, the band's drummer Rob Hirst stated "it's a sacred instrument... only initiated men are supposed to hear those sounds. So we didn't use a real bullroarer as that would have been cultural imperialism. Instead we used an imitation bullroarer that school kids in Australia use. It is a ruler with a piece of rope wrapped around it." [11]

Bull-Roarers from the Great Britain and Ireland. BullRoarerBritish1898.jpg
Bull-Roarers from the Great Britain and Ireland.

Ancient Greece

In Ancient Greece, bullroarers were especially used in the ceremonies of the cult of Cybele. A bullroarer was known as a rhombos (literally meaning "whirling" or "rumbling"), both to describe its sonic character and its typical shape, the rhombus. (Rhombos also sometimes referred to the rhoptron, a buzzing drum). [13]

Great Britain and Ireland

In Great Britain and Ireland, the bullroarer—under a number of different names and styles—is used chiefly for amusement, although formerly it may have been used for ceremonial purposes. [14] In parts of Scotland it was known as a "thunder-spell" and was thought to protect against being struck by lightning. [15] In the Elizabeth Goudge novel Gentian Hill (1949), set in Devon in the early 19th century, a bullroarer figures as a toy cherished by Sol, an elderly farm labourer, who uses it occasionally to express strong emotion; however, the sound it makes is perceived as being both eerie and unlucky by two other characters, who have an uneasy sense that ominous spirits of the air ("Them") are being invoked by its whirring whistle. [16]

Scandinavia

Scandinavian Stone Age cultures used the bullroarer. In 1991, the archeologists Hein B. Bjerck and Martinius Hauglid found a 6.4 cm-long piece of slate that turned out to be a 5000-year-old bullroarer (called a brummer in Scandinavia). It was found in Tuv in northern Norway, a place that was inhabited in the Stone Age.

Mali

The Dogon use bullroarers to announce the beginning of ceremonies conducted during the Sigui festival held every sixty years over a seven-year period. The sound has been identified as the voice of an ancestor from whom all Dogon are descended.

Māori culture (New Zealand)

The pūrerehua is a traditional Māori bullroarer. [17] Its name comes from the Māori word for moth. Made from wood, stone or bone and attached to a long string, the instruments were traditionally used for healing or making rain. [17] [18]

Native North American

Almost all the native tribes in North America used bullroarers in religious and healing ceremonies and as toys. There are many styles.

North Alaskan Inupiat bullroarers are known as imigluktaaq or imigluktaun and described as toy noise maker of bone or wood and braided sinew (wolf-scare). [19]

Banks Island Eskimos were still using Bullroarers in 1963, when a 59 year old woman named Susie scared off four polar bears armed only with three seal hooks acting as such accompanied by vocals. [20] Aleut, Eskimo and Inuit used bullroarers occasionally as a children's toy or musical instruments, but preferred drums and rattles. [21]

Pomo

The inland Pomo tribes of California used bullroarers as a central part of the xalimatoto or Thunder ceremony. Four male tribe members, accompanied by a drummer, would spin bullroarers made from cottonwood, imitating the sound of a thunder storm. [22]

Native South American

Shamans of the Amazon basin, for example in Tupi, Kamayurá and Bororo culture used bullroarers as musical instrument for rituals. In Tupian languages, the bullroarer is known as hori hori.

See also

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References

  1. Haddon, The Study of Man, p. 219: "Prof. E. B. Tylor informs me that the name of 'bull-roarer' was first introduced into anthropological literature by the Rev. Lorimer Fison, who compares the Australian tundun to 'the wooden toy which I remember to have made as a boy, called a 'bull-roarer',' and this term has since been universally adopted as the technical name for the implement." [Fison and Howitt, Kamilaroi and Kurnai, 1880. p. 267.]
  2. "MAKE YOUR OWN BULLROARER". Otago Museum . Retrieved 5 July 2022.
  3. Gregor, Thomas. Anxious Pleasures: The Sexual Lives of an Amazonian People. University Of Chicago Press (1987). p. 106 "Today we know that the bullroarer is a very ancient object, specimens from France (13,000 B.C.) and the Ukraine (17,000 B.C.) dating back well into the Paleolithic period. Moreover, some archeologists—notably Gordon Willey (1971, 20)—now admit the bullroarer to the kit-bag of artifacts brought by the very earliest migrants to the Americas."
  4. Bayley, Harold. The Lost Language of Symbolism: An Inquiry into the Origin of Certain Letters, Words, Names, Fairy-Tales, Folklore, and Mythologies Book Tree (2000). p. 86: "The bullroarer, used always as a sacred instrument, is still employed in New Mexico, the Malay Peninsula, Ceylon, New Zealand, Africa, and Australia, and under the name of Rhombus it figured prominently in the Mysteries of Ancient Greece."
  5. Fransciscan Fathers, An Ethnologic Dictionary of the Navaho Language, p. 414.
  6. Young, R & Morgan, W An Analytical Lexicon of Navajo, (1992) University of New Mexico Press ISBN   0-8263-1356-6, p. 461.
  7. Powell, Ninth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, p. 477: "Fig. 430.—Rhombus of the Apache."
  8. Kroeber, "Ethnology of the Gros Ventre", p. 190: "Fig. 26 (50-1788). Bull-roarer, Length, 56 cm."
  9. 1 2 Blades, James (1992). Percussion Instruments and Their History, p.394. Bold Strummer. ISBN   9780933224612.
  10. "Kate Bush, Hammersmith Apollo, gig review: Just what everyone was hoping for". Independent.co.uk . 28 August 2014. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  11. Michael Lawrence (2016). Midnight Oil. Melbourne Books. pp. 171–172.
  12. Haddon, The Study of Man, p. 221: "Fig 38. Bull-Roarers from the British Isles."
  13. Mathiesen, Thomas J.; et al. (2001). "Greece, §I: Ancient". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers. ISBN   978-1-56159-239-5.
  14. Haddon, The Study of Man,p 225: "Those given to me were made for me, and may not represent the common form of bull-roarer in the north-east corner of Ireland. My informant stated that once when, as a boy, he was playing with a 'boomer' an old country woman said it was a 'sacred' thing."
  15. Haddon, The Study of Man, p. 222: "It was believed that the use of this instrument [thunder-spell] during a thunder-storm saved one from being struck with 'the thun'er-bolt'."
  16. Goudge, Elizabeth. Gentian Hill, New York: Coward-McCann, Inc., 1946, pp. 71-72, 168, 315-321, 346-348, 354.
  17. 1 2 Taonga, New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu. "Māori musical instruments – taonga puoro – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand". Archived from the original on 2 October 2018. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  18. www.netvalue.nz. "purerehua - Māori Dictionary". www.maoridictionary.co.nz. Archived from the original on 27 February 2018. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  19. "Iñupiaq Knowledge and Skills" (PDF). North Slope Borough School District. Utqiagvik, Alaska. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2014. Retrieved 2 October 2018. pdf download - toy noise maker of bone or wood and braided sinew
  20. Douglas, William O. (May 1964). National Geographic (722 ed.).
  21. "The Bullroarer". Archived from the original on 17 October 2020. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  22. Loeb, Edwin M. (1926). Pomo Folkways (PDF). University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. University of California Press. pp. 378–380. pdf extract - page 378=234 (e) The Thunder Ceremony

Other sources