Materials
sea
ICH Materials 1,134
Audios
(5)-
Qaraqavi yaqona kei na meke ni yaqona vakaturaga(Traditional Preparation of Kava and a Chant for the Presentation of Kava to a High Chief)
This chant is from a tribe in Seqaqa, Macuata province, located in Vanua Levu, the second largest island in Fiji.
Fiji 1974 -
Oa! Oa! Oa! Oa! Bui kei Ququ(Song for Bui kei Ququ)
This is a lullaby that mentions two characters, a grandmother (Bui) and Ququ. It is usually sung by an old man to calm the baby down, especially when the baby cries after he/she wakes up from sleep. The song has a good sense of humor, so the baby laughs in the end. Literally, it says that the child’s mother has gone to catch fish in the sea; the child, having to learn of this, refuses to eat; and the rooster ends up eating the food kept for the baby.
Fiji 1977 -
Paniuw (Navigation)
This chant is from Satawal and Woleai islands and features the sons and uncles sailing between the islands. Some of them made it back home, but many others went missing. It tells how navigators got stranded at sea on their way back home. Some of these chants are sung only for local ceremonies.
Micronesia 1966 -
Wari Tolavuvu!(Hurry, Tolavuvu!)
While Track 9 and Track 10 share the same stories in their introductions, they have two different endings. Literally, this track says that the child’s mother has gone to catch fish in the sea, while the child is facing the wall. The baby refuses to have his meal, and the rooster eats up all the food kept for the baby. The grandmother looks after the baby until the mother comes back and attends to the baby again. It is usually sung by an old man to calm the baby down, especially when the baby cries after he wakes up from sleep. The song has a good sense of humor, so the baby laughs in the end.
Fiji 1977 -
Wawa! Wawa! Roko Savirewa(Song about Roko Savirewa)
This song literally relates to Roko Savirewa awaiting his meal, the day’s catch from the sea. The “meal” referred to is a fish locally known as Nuqa. (It is unknown whether Roko Savirewa is the name of a child or elder or Chief. Roko, in some parts of Fiji, refers to a chiefly title preceding the chiefdom they rule, e.g., Duke of Norwich England, but in this case “Duke of Savirewa.”) In olden days, with no formal schooling, children learned the language, cultural practices, and survival techniques through chants and stories and other means of oral transmission of intangible cultural heritage such as this song.
Fiji 1976