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  1. Oceanic music and dance, the music and dance traditions of the indigenous people of Oceania, in particular of Melanesia, Micronesia, Polynesia, New Zealand, and Australia. Music and dance in Polynesia and Micronesia are audible and visual extensions of poetry, whereas in Melanesia they are aimed more at spectacular display during times of life crises and as a part of secret-society rituals.

  2. Oceanic music and dance - Polynesian, Melanesian, Aboriginal: Melanesia, including New Guinea, houses a multitude of regional musical styles, few of which have been thoroughly investigated. The diversity, which parallels the linguistic situation, is assumed to be a result both of migrations and of the relative isolation of ethnic groups due to geographic conditions. Intergroup contacts ...

  3. Music scholars, journalists, audiences, record industry individuals, politicians, nationalists and demagogues may often have occasion to address which fields of folk music are distinct traditions based along racial, geographic, linguistic, religious, tribal or ethnic lines, and all such peoples will likely use different criteria to decide what constitutes a "folk music tradition".

    Country
    Elements
    Dance
    bush ballad - country music
    imene metua - imene tuki
    koauau - paatere - purerehua
    hula - kepakepa - mele - oli
  4. Oceanic music and dance - Solomon Islands, Rituals, Melodies: While the music of New Guinea and western Melanesia—particularly the Bismarck Archipelago—is predominantly vocal and monophonic, the music of the Solomon Islands is largely determined by use of highly developed panpipes. These instruments have three to nine closed tubes, usually doubled by open tubes that sound the higher octave ...

  5. Oceanic peoples create many varieties of wind instruments, including flutes, panpipes, trumpets, and ocarinas. Flutes are made in all regions of Oceania except Australia. Predominantly fashioned from bamboo, Oceanic flutes are diverse in their forms and functions.

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  6. The sea and other water ways such as large lakes, long rivers, and wide bays, have inspired songs for centuries. Maritime music plays a major role in life on the water, through its ability to entertain, motivate, and pace seamen in their work. Sailors and fishermen sing rhythmic songs called chanteys while pulling in nets, hauling anchors, and ...

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  8. The music of Polynesia is a diverse set of musical traditions from islands within a large area of the central and southern Pacific Ocean, approximately a triangle with New Zealand, Hawaii and Easter Island forming its corners. [1] Traditional Polynesian music is largely an inseparable part of a broader performance art form, incorporating dance ...