Songs - English Oral Literature Notes
Songs - English Oral Literature Notes
Introduction
Types of Songs/Oral Poems
o Birth/Cradle
o Child Naming
o Lullabies
o Children’s Songs and Games
o Circumcision
o Courtship Songs
o Wedding/Marriage/Nuptial
o Work Songs
o Sacred/Religious
o Political/Patriotic Songs
o War Songs
o Beer Party Songs
o Dirges/Funeral Songs
Characteristics of Songs
Styles in Oral Poetry
o The Pattern of the Poem
o Diction
o Imagery
o Satire/Humour
o Irony
o Suspense
o Allusion
o Rhyme
o Alliteration
o Assonance
o Consonance
o Idiophones and Onomatopoeia
How to Analyse an Oral Poem/Song
o Classification
Introduction
An oral poem or a song is a composition in verse form expressing ideas and thoughts
verbally.
An oral poem can be sung, recited or chanted.
Types of Songs/Oral Poems
Birth/Cradle
These are songs performed when a baby is born or sung to encourage a woman in labour.
Child Naming
Songs sung during naming of newborns. Such names are given in several ways:
o after an important event.
o Location where the child is born.
o According to season.
o After the father of the husband, mother etc.
o from recurrent dreams.
o Inheriting names of important people.
o Praise names.
Lullabies
Songs sung to comfort a baby to sleep. Lullabies also
o educate on social values and culture,
o tell more about the social organization of the people, their food and work,
o have simple and repetitive words,
o are sung softly and slowly,
o have a rocking rhythm.
Children’s Songs and Games
Songs performed by children during their playtime. They keep children busy and entertain
them.
Circumcision
These are songs sung during the season or ceremony of circumcision to encourage the
initiates and ridicule the cowards. They are usually full of obscenities in the direct use of
sexual language or talk about relationship between men and women.
Courtship Songs
Songs sung by those in love to express emotions of happiness, praise lovers and
express romance. Sometimes they are sung by jilted lovers to express sadness or deal with
marital problems or unrequited love.
Wedding/Marriage/Nuptial
These are songs performed during marriage ceremonies. They are often sung to praise the
bride and groom. They also express the sorrow of leaving home and parting with friends.
Some of the marriage songs warm about the problems of living among strangers or in-laws.
Some advise on how to cope with married life. These songs also may be sung as farewell to
the bride’s beloved siblings and parents.
They may tend to scorn but generally, they are happy songs.
Work Songs
Work songs are sung as accompaniment to some chores like pounding, ploughing etc. They
are sung in unison to make strenuous work more bearable. They also sung to discourage
laziness and extol the value of working hard.
Some work songs are specific, like hunting songs, fishing songs etc.
Sacred/Religious
These are songs sung during religious activities like worship, sacrifice etc. They include
hymns, praise and lamentations that make reference to supernatural beings.
Political/Patriotic Songs
They are performed during public holiday and political rallies. They are usually sung to
create political awareness, promote propaganda, conformity or to protest against injustice
and oppression. But mostly they are sung to praise good leaders and satirize bad ones.
War Songs
These are songs sung or performed during war. They are meant to inspire warriors to
fight bravery. They are also sung to honour heroes and glorify the achievement of war.
Beer Party Songs
These are songs sung by drinkers together with brewers at a drinking party. They are sung
by revellers to express enjoyment, praise the brewers and satirize the lazy or the poor.
Dirges/Funeral Songs
These are songs sung during funerals or memorial ceremonies usually accompanied, in
some communities, with loud wailings and sobs. They are sung to mourn the dead, share
grief with the bereaved and console the relatives of the dead. Dirges are sometimes sung to
satirize the benefactors of the deceased’s wealth.
Characteristics of Songs
1. They have repetitive segments—songs would have a refrain or chorus to emphasize the
mood and create rhythm.
2. They have direct address of the audience for immediacy of expression.
3. They carry direct translation of original language for local flavour or authenticity.
4. Many songs have rhetorical questions to involve the audience and provoke them to think
about issues the songs raise.
5. Songs are populated by idiophones and onomatopoeia to echo local sounds and make
them interesting.
6. Songs are full of exaggerations or hyperbole to create comic or satirical effects.
7. Songs carry striking imagery, like metaphors and similes to create mental images in the
mind of the audience.
8. Songs have antiphon or call and response mode. Many songs are sung in a way that the
soloist call and the choir or group respond, or one person calls and another responds.
9. Many songs are elastic and flexible; which means they can be stretched during performance
to accommodate the time given or shortened on demand. Some songs can be modified to
suit disparate situations like the famous Mwana wa mbeli song.
10. Some songs depend on the tone and texture of the voice of the performer to establish
mood and even meaning. The same song can be sad and at another context happy or even
spiritual depending on how it is sung and on tone.
Styles in Oral Poetry
When discussing styles in oral poetry, we base on the following aspects
The Pattern of the Poem
The pattern of the poem refers to the structure and layout. How many stanzas does the poem
or song have an d how many lines per stanza?
Diction
Diction refers to the choice of words used in a song. When composing a song, the poet
must choose words carefully, by using poetic licence, so as to make sure there is rhythm in
the song as well as the message.
Imagery
Imagery refers to figures of speech like Metaphor, simile and symbolism that create
mental images in the mind of the audience.
Metaphor refers to direct comparison of qualities of two things by referring to one thing
using another. E.g. Your father is a lion.
Simile refers to direct comparison of the qualities of two things using words like, like and as
e.g. She is as fat as a pig.
Symbolism refers to using objects in a song that have a metaphorical sense or extended
meaning and runs throughout the song. E.g. A song that talks about a snake but the snake in
the song represents a corrupt leader in a given society.
Satire/Humour
Satireis the use of mocking language in a song which in essence creates humour. The
subject in the song may be mocked and ridiculed by the persona as being like an elephant
that is scared of fighting a hare, or describing the physical features of the subject in a
ridiculous manner e.g. his head has the shape of a mango fruit, his hands resemble long
sticks and his stomach, like a tube of toothpaste.
Humouris any use of language that is funny or creates comic relief. Humour can be serious
or light.
Sarcasm is another tool that helps creates satire and humour at the same time. Sarcasm is
saying something to someone while you mean the opposite of what you say in order to hurt
his feeling and create humour. For instance, one can tell a very short man, a pigmy, ”My
girlfriend loves tall men; I am afraid of you because you are going to make her fall in love with
you.” Of course what he means is that she will not even notice him because he is a short
man.
Any song that has sarcastic statements can be said to have a sarcastic or satirical tone.
Irony
Irony occurs when events in a song or a story goes contrary to the expectations of the
audience or reader. Like in a situation where the child in a family is the breadwinner and his
parents depend on him for everything. This would be contrary to our expectations that parents
provide for their families and children.
Situational Irony occurs in situations where events go contrary to expectations or the
outcome is not expected as in the example above.
Dramatic Ironyoccurs in plays mostly where the audience know something that
surprisingly some the characters in the play do not know. For instance if character A steals
goods from character B, and later character B, unaware of who the thief is, goes to seek help
from character A in searching for the goods when clearly the audience is aware who stole the
goods.
Verbal Irony occurs when someone says something while doing the opposite of what he
says. E.g.” I am coming,” when he is going away. Verbal Irony is different from sarcasm
because it is not meant to hurt the feelings of the addressee.
Suspense
Suspense involve withholding information from the reader or audience as a performer or
narrator to arouse their curiosity and enhance their concentration, or even the dilemma
situations in a song where no conclusive ending is present to make the audience second
guess on the controversial situation presented.
Allusion
Occurs when a song borrows a pattern from another famous song; or makes reference to
a famous historical situation. A song can be sung in the same structure say a famous song
like Hallelujah was structured or borrow words from famous songs such as Desiderata. That
would be use of allusion.
Rhyme
Rhyme is the repetition of syllables or end sounds of lines in a song to create rhythm. The
last sounds the song below carry a rhyme scheme.
e.g .