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Catalog Data

Producer:
Elisofon, Eliot  Search this
Group W Productions  Search this
Westinghouse Broadcasting Company  Search this
Narrator:
Angelou, Maya  Search this
Davis, Ossie, 1917-2005  Search this
Parks, Gordon, 1912-2006  Search this
Bond, Julian, 1940-2015  Search this
Extent:
64 Sound tape reels (1/4 in., 5 in and 7 in reels)
Culture:
Kuba (Bakuba)  Search this
Pende (Bapende)  Search this
Bambara (African people)  Search this
Dendi (African people)  Search this
Bozo (African people)  Search this
Type:
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Sound tape reels
Place:
Congo River (Congo)
Ruwenzori Mountains (Uganda and Congo)
Niger River
Africa, West
Ghana
Ivory Coast
Date:
1972
Content Description:
These original (64) magnetic audio tapes and reels were created for the Black African Heritage television series, produced by Eliot Elisofon and Group W (Westinghouse Broadcasting Company) in 1972. These correspond with the film outtakes and original work prints held in the EEPA 1973-001 Collection.
Biographical / Historical:
These materials were produced by Eliot Elisofon and Group W (Westinghouse Broadcasting Company) in 1972, for a four-hour television series called Black African Heritage. The episodes, in order of broadcast date: 1. The Congo, narrated by Julian Bond, focuses on the "heartland of Africa" the equatorial area which encompasses rainforests, grassy plains, volcanoes, the great Congo River, lakes, and the snow-covered Ruwenzori, called the Mountains of the Moon. This episode encounters groups such as the Watusi, Bambenga, the Wagenia, the Bakuba, and the Bapende—and traces African art and history back 1,500 years. 2. The Bend in the Niger, narrated by Ossie Davis, follows one of the continent's great rivers as it flows northward in West Africa from the home of the Bambara group, known for their music, dancing, and sculpture, to Timbuktu, where it turns eastward to the Atlantic Ocean through the home of the Dogon groups, famous for sculpture. Other groups met along the way are the Borora, the horseman of Muslim Hausa, the nomadic Tuaregs, and the Bozo and Dendi people of the Niger River. 3. The Slave Coast, narrated by Maya Angelou, focused on the tradition, cultures, beauty, and history of the people of the rainforest and the coast of West Africa. Watch dancers of Nigeria, examine sculptures made 2000 years ago, listen to the talking drums of Yoruba, see bronze portraits, visit the women warriors once known as Amazon, see golden treasures of Ashanti in Ghana, and marvel at the acrobatic dancers of the Ivory Coast. 4. Africa's Gift, narrated by Gordon Parks, focuses primarily on the Senufo people of the Ivory Coast, their music, and their art. Mongo Santamaria, leading exponent of Afro-Cuban music plays the "Afro-blues." Lionel Hampton and his group play "Glad Hamp," to show the relationship of the vibraphone and the balaphone of the Senufo. Modern jazz star Randy Weston and a trio play a number rooted in the Ashanti music in Ghana.
Related Materials:
Related materials include the Eliot Elisofon Papers and Photography Collection (PH-00066) at the Harry Ransom Center, The University of Texas at Austin, the Time/Life Photographs Archives, and Broadcast programs collection (ACMA.09-037) at the Anacostia Community Museum Archives
Restrictions:
Materials have not yet been digitized and processed for public access.
Topic:
Hausa (African people)  Search this
Dogon (African people)  Search this
Tuareg (African people)  Search this
Yoruba (African people)  Search this
Drums  Search this
Senufo (African people)  Search this
Vibraphone  Search this
Identifier:
EEPA.2020-007
Archival Repository:
Eliot Elisofon Photographic Archives, National Museum of African Art
GUID:
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/xo7f30b2f3e-fefc-4e4d-97a7-196b5dceb0a2
EDAN-URL:
ead_collection:sova-eepa-2020-007