Indigenous Musical Instruments: Project To Help Save Calabashes From Extinction

The objective is to ensure ready supply of material for the production of Mvets, Sanzas and xylophones

Mvets, Sanzas and xylophones, have for ages served as soothing sources of entertainment at private and public functions in Cameroon. The music they produce is so cherished by lovers of traditional music, though the tendency has been to neglect a major component of their production – calabash gourds. Consequently, the growing of calashes is fast fading away – with the attendant risks of the evergreen tropical fruits sooner or later becoming extinct.

If this were to be the case, Mvets, Sanzas and xylophones would only survive further if there is replacement for the calabash gourds currently used in resonance. Already, the sad reality is beginning to dawn on some people. Given that the tendency nowadays is to use plastic, instead of calabash gourds, in producing Mvets, Sanzas and xylophones. Worried by the growing trend, Mbassi Noa, alias Packo Mbassi, a Cameroonian singer-composer and producer of traditional musical instruments, has initiated a project to help save different species of calabash from extinction.

Together with colleagues in Ndek Association (“ndek” meaning calabash in the Eton language of the Centre Region), the group in November 2018 begins the large-scale cultivation of calabashes. Located 48km from Yaounde in Ajab village, Okola Subdivision, Lekie Division of the Centre Region, the project is worth about 200,000 Euros (131 million FCFA). It comprises a farm for growing...

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