AdminHistory | Kenneth Alexander Gourlay (1919-1995) was a British ethnomusicologist who conducted work amongst the Karimojong of Uganda (1965-66), in Papua New Guinea (1972-74) and in Nigeria (1974-80).
Gourlay was educated at Henry Mellish Grammar School, Bulwell, Nottingham, and graduated in 1940 from St. Edmund Hall, University of Oxford, with a degree in English Language and Literature. Following military service, he taught in a number of grammar schools in England, until 1965, when he was appointed head of the English department and director of Liberal Studies at Makerere College School, Kampala, Uganda. During this time he studied African music and ethnomusicology with John Blacking and K. P. Wachsmann, and conducted ethnomusicological, anthropological and linguistic fieldwork among the Karimojong. He made a number of field recording of Karimojong ox-songs.
Gourlay was awarded a Ph.D. in 1971 for his thesis "Studies in Karimojong Musical Culture", and in 1972 took a post as senior lecturer in the Expressive Arts department of Goroka Teachers College, Papua New Guinea. In Papua New Guinea, he worked on teaching methods incorporating traditional music, and conducted research into the distribution of sound-producing instruments and cultural concepts governing the practice of traditional music making.
In 1974, Gourlay went to Nigeria as Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Nigerial Cultural Studies, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria. The following year, he was appointed head of the Ethnomusicology Section there. In Nigeria, he researched particularly the socio-cultural significance of an Ataka "musical pot" (kimkim), particularly among the Kagoro, Morwa, Kagoma and Irigwe. His major research project in Nigeria was "Instrumental Music Areas of Nigeria".
In 1981, Gourlay was appointed Senior Fellow in Music Studies in the Africa Department at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.
Gourlay died in 1994. |