[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
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, 1; 1 £<" (2) Ning THE GONGS 505 lal N aanbughoi. gt "Mother" w ‘I w ‘I .| '1 W ’1 gangs Medium gongs _! E4 J J E4 J J §J _I _l Q4 Hand gongs w w w (3) Unnamed. “ Mother " gangs Medium SW85 Handgongs _‘ w _‘ 0| _| 1 1 0‘ , ' Some others h av instance 1 " Mother " gangs Medium SW85 ‘i1ï¬Å7jï¬Å7ï¬ÅT 1-11 -ifl-ifl-1 of these Larnbumbu rhythms are based on bird calls ; e " inversions â€ù representing call and answer, as for ~11~-1‘-111-1 ‘ $511 "=5 "1 i ~25? I mmhuufluuuu , “ Mother " gangs Medium gouge 1"W"1"1“ _y 11-1 ~-11* 1~A:§§er'- 1 Hewne 7.3 ‘L1 ‘Ll DU U U U I which, it seems, is called Nela nemer ti, meaning the " Pudding of Breadfruit 3 It is unfortunate that there is no indication as to when these 1 rhythms are employed ; whether they are the rhythms of different clans, or whether they belong to certain episodes in the celebra- y tion of a The na mes of many other rhythms will be found in the accounts of the ceremonies belonging to the transition rites and to the i nimangks, a nelemew, or the rites of Nimzmgki Tlel. secret societies. Of the aesthetic side of MALEKULAn gong-beating it is clearly impossibl e for one who has not heardit to write, but of its - t_. _, ,7, ,_7_ , 2