dc.description.abstract | Music education in Kenya has been, and continues to be conducted along Western theories which
fall short of defining music as experienced within traditional African cultures (New, 1980;
Omondi, 1980; Kwami, 1989; Akuno, 1997; Kidula, 1998). Research in music, an attempt to find
reality and meaning in it, involves discovering its components, how they make a cohesive and
comprehensible whole, and how the produced item functions in the economy of the culture thai
produces and consumes it. Since music must be understood from the participants 'point of view, a
true understanding involves analysis within the context in which it is created and practised. The
created music is influenced by the artist's understanding of the subject through experience and
knowledge gained in that genre. Such experience, gained from casual, informal contacts or
deliberate, organised instruction, is drawn upon for musical creativity as manifested in
performance, response to musical stimuli as well as composition. This paper examines this process
to come up with a conceptual framework for the understanding of music within a cultural context. | en |