Item details
Item ID
MW6-061
Title Interview with Daniel ToRot, Rabaul
Description Tape#1: Traditional Tolai Song and Dance or "Singsing Tumbuna"
Side A&B:

Daniel ToRot was born in 1930 with parents from Totovel and Kikitabu in the North Coast area of the Gazelle Peninisula. He attended the local Kuanua language school run by the Methodist Church at Totovel called "Luk Buk". This was learning how to read, write and count in Kuanua language or "tok ples" and not the English language. Such learning was for any published material like the translated bible, writing and numbers to understand and communicate similar to "literacy and numeracy"in Kuanua.
During the war (WWII) in 1942, he was a gardener for the Japanese army and at peace time be stayed in the village to learn fron his father and uncle the practices and art of traditional Tolai song and dance as a composer and choreographer know as "tena buai". He mastered as a practitioner with magical powers and spiritual connections `from dreaming, composing, mentoring and leading performances in ceremonies and public gatherings of Government organised events and cultural festivals.
Daniel was then the Chairman of Tolai Warwagira Festival events for competitions in choir singing, stringbands, gospel`groups and traditional dance performances for East New Britain and other provinces were invited to participate.
Daniel was known as "Pukalop", the "tena buai"or traditional music mentor and practitioner well known and was a judge in the traditional section of the Tolai Warwagira competitions. He mentored with specific powers with different tailored "buai"in his craft for various types of traditional dances namely; Wutung, Libung, Parpari, Kulau, Perapere, Tabaran, Alor, Tapialai (Tubuan).
These types of dances have different significance and relevance to how they performed in composition, choreographed, patterns and styles of dancing and leg-hands-body movements.
There are basically the Tubuan and non-tubuan song and dances.
Tubuan songs, Gara and Kabakaver, are sung only by male members of the tubuan society. One has to be an initiate in order to take part in the gara and “ancestral dance” of tapialai. Other types of dances, non tubuan dances, are generally called malagene. Musical instruments accompanying tubuan gara are kundu and garamut.
For the non-tubuan dances, the Tabaran is the top end in the hierarchy in terms of value associated to status and wealth demonstrated by shell money or tabu as compared others in occasions of ceremonial performances.
Preparations are undertaken away from public in special bushland areas called taraiu with body dressing or moamong, head or face carved masks or pokopoko.
The dancing pattern from entry to ceremony site to during and exit have specific sequence associated and dancing format are in rows of two, three or four is a large number of performers and dependent of type of dance.
Daniel's specialty was the Tabaran Kakakao dance. Other associated dances to the Tabaran are Alor, Kulau. The Tabaran means means spirit and the dance is of the same nature or another version of the Tubuan. The Tabaran dancing imitate 'creeping spirits' (kakakao), for whose appearance is in the form of masks (lor) to signify the spirits of kaia or tutana vukarit beings.

(Steven Gagau, June 2019)
Origination date 1993-08-02
Origination date free form
Archive link https://catalog.paradisec.org.au/repository/MW6/061
URL
Collector
Michael Webb
Countries To view related information on a country, click its name
Language as given
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Content language(s) To view related information on a language, click its name
Dialect
Region / village Malaytown, Rabaul, East New Britain Province
Originating university
Operator Nick Fowler-Gilmore
Data Categories historical reconstruction
Data Types Sound
Discourse type interactive_discourse
Roles Steven Gagau : data_inputter
Michael Webb : interviewer
Daniel ToRot : speaker
DOI 10.26278/DT1R-0Y52
Cite as Michael Webb (collector), Steven Gagau (data_inputter), Michael Webb (interviewer), Daniel ToRot (speaker), 1993. Interview with Daniel ToRot, Rabaul. MPEG/VND.WAV. MW6-061 at catalog.paradisec.org.au. https://dx.doi.org/10.26278/DT1R-0Y52
Content Files (4)
Filename Type File size Duration File access
MW6-061-A.mp3 audio/mpeg 28.8 MB 00:31:30.69
MW6-061-A.wav audio/vnd.wav 1.01 GB 00:31:30.39
MW6-061-B.mp3 audio/mpeg 4.74 MB 00:05:10.708
MW6-061-B.wav audio/vnd.wav 171 MB 00:05:10.685
4 files -- 1.21 GB -- --

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Collection Information
Collection ID MW6
Collection title Music in Rabaul, Gazelle Peninsula, ENBP and New Guinea Islands Region (ca. 1950s - 1990s)
Description Recordings of a wide range of music in Rabaul 1950s-1990s covering areas of the Gazelle Peninsula of East New Britain Province and the New Guinea Islands Region. This collection was the PhD research work by Dr Michael Webb focused on music of Melanesia in the Pacific. This collection was located as a result of PARADISEC's 'Lost and Found' project and digitisation was funded by the ARC Centre of Excellence for the Dynamics of Language.

Note: This video recording on Item MW6-012 labelled Queens Birthday Singsing, Rabaul in 1993 was unable to be digitised due to poor quality of tape so deleted from collection.
(Steven Gagau)
Countries To view related information on a country, click its name
Languages To view related information on a language, click its name
Access Information
Edit access Steven Gagau
Michael Webb
View/Download access
Data access conditions Open (subject to agreeing to PDSC access conditions)
Data access narrative
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