Basic
Information - Where does the didjeridu/yidaki come from?
 |
Djambawa Marawili
speaks of his travels in the early 1970's, when he never saw didjeridus
outside the Top End. But he believes the boomerang was just like
didjeridus for those other people. text
only |
| click image to open video clip in a new window |
Today the didjeridu is known all over the world, and thanks to an American
astronaut, a plastic version has even been played in space. But the
didjeridu was not originally played all over Australia. Science
can not tell us one specific origin, but it is widely accepted that before
Europeans arrived, the didjeridu was used only in the Top End
of the continent, from northern Western Australia east to the Gulf
of Carpenteria including Groote Eylandt, and soon after in Cape York,
northern Queensland. Most academics and many Aboriginal People agree
that is only
in the past
two
hundred years that it has become known beyond this region.
Yol\u do have their own stories of very specific origins of the instrument.
 |
A rough map of the area the didjeridu was used
at the time
of European arrival, according to anthropological sources. |
Travel anywhere tourists are likely to be in
Australia, and chances are good you will see didjeridus in gift shops
and in performances
on
the
street. While a few decades ago it was an oddity in its own country,
now it has been adopted as part of the national identity, by black and
white alike. Its sound is used in television commercials throughout
the world
to invoke the spirit of Australia, whether it is for Australian beers or
cars with Australia-inspired names.
The Yol\u clans from northeast Arnhem Land are just a few of the many
who have used the instrument for thousands of years and consider it their
birthright. Yol\u accept that the instrument has spread around the world
and do not wish to change that, but feel strongly that these groups should
be acknowledged and respected as the
traditional
owners
of the
didjeridu.
Yidaki has never been a national instrument and never
will be.
Galarrwuy Yunupi\u
Gumatj clan leader
Garma Festival Yidaki Forum, August 2004
|
|