Musical instruments in Zambia: iron bell
Musical instruments in Zambia: iron bell. A large single iron bell, called lusonsolo1The oldest external source for Chibale is Hoffman (1929: 177) in the section about the death rituals of chief Chibale (Mwape Mondwa) in 1925., that only plays at important occasions connected to chieftainship. For instance, when the remains of the chief are carried to the distant grave or in the morning of the Ipupo lya fikankomba.
The lusonsolo of the previous chiefs are kept in the mpata, the shrine for the deceased chiefs. Each new chief has a new lusonsolo made.
Photo 216 (detail) ∵ Lusonsolo
The group involved in the moving of the mpata (kukusha mpata) arrives at the edge of chief Chibale’s place led by a lusonsolo player, 2007.
At the entrance of the rotting hut, people of the Mbushi clan played lusonsolo and ciwaya continuously. The lusonsolo should make even a stranger aware that the chief has died, without asking. It was played during daytime. And, in the evening ciwaya were played to accompany cinsengwe. Then, when the people got tired, the Ciwila mediums took over.
Munsele Lupoti ∵ personal communication, 1987 (About the funeral period of chief Mwape Mondwa in 1925).
Iron bells in the Lala region
Musical instruments in Zambia: iron bell. Within the Lala region the lusonsolo is connected with chieftainship.
Congo part of the region
For the Congo part of the Lala region Lambo reports2Lambo (1941b: 68). Original in French, translation by Jan IJzermans.: “[The chief of Shinkaola] also possesses a bell called lusonsolo. The lusonsolo consists of two bells attached to the same stem, of different lengths and said to be of different sex. The larger bell is the female one, the smaller one the male. The bells do not have a clapper, sound being produced by beating with an iron rod. When being played, the female bell has to be at the right since the wife has the privilege of laying at the right side in the conjugal bed.”
Southern part of the region
For the Ambo (southern) part of the Lala region Stefaniszyn reports3Stefaniszyn (1964b:60, 69 and 154):
“The bells were stopped with leaves when going to battle. They were struck only after a victory, at rain sacrifices, at the chief’s funeral, and probably also at the chief’s installation. The possession of lusonsolo was a prerogative of chiefly rank. The sons of a chief were allowed to own one.”
“After the death of the chief the funeral friends announced ‘the mourning of the land’. People had to come to wail at the capital. They were told to bring foodstuffs such as flour, goats and fowls. Boys and girls had to come to dance. The war drum, mandu [presumably: mangu], was sounded, the chiefly double bell, lusonsolo, was rung, the gourd drums [presumably: ilimba] were beaten. There seems to have been a degree of licence.”
“The war bell, or double bell, lusonsolo, was a flat bell, really two bells joined at the taps. It was clapperless, some eight inches long and three inches by one and a half at the bottom. The bells were forged each from two concave pieces of thick iron sheet. One bell of the pair was thicker than the other, thus producing a different sound.”
Iron bell: double or single
Musical instruments in Zambia: iron bell. Sources about neighbouring areas describe the lusonsolo as a double bell. Therefore, the Chibale single bell seems to be an exception.
Chief Chibale commented on this:
Originally the masonsolo came to Chibale through the Chikunda, while the locally made lusonsolo are single.
Teneshi Njipika Mukosha ∵ personal communication, 1985.
Lusonsolo is a singular word while masonsolo is plural; meaning single and double bell respectively. The Chikunda were traders that mediated between the Portuguese at the lower Zambezi and chiefdoms in a large area including Chibale in the 19th century.
Footnotes
- 1The oldest external source for Chibale is Hoffman (1929: 177) in the section about the death rituals of chief Chibale (Mwape Mondwa) in 1925.
- 2Lambo (1941b: 68). Original in French, translation by Jan IJzermans.
- 3Stefaniszyn (1964b:60, 69 and 154)
- 4See Photo 227 and further.