A fakanau (meaning "spells")[1] is a traditional Tuvaluan male dance, accompanied by singing and rhythmic clapping.
Fakanau singing and dancing are typical of Niutao and Nukufetau islands of Tuvalu, formerly known as the Ellice Islands, a group of nine low-lying coral islands in the central Pacific that are inhabited by Polynesian people. Fakanau is described as having "a tune that is between speech and singing [which] was performed while dancers are standing on their feet."[2] Examples include Te onge ne tupu ia Kiollli, Neutuakina te vao i napanapa,[3] and Ko na fakanau nei e kamata ifo mai gauta oi fakaholo atu ai ki gatai kafai te vaka e hoho ifo ki gatai.[4] Other dances within the genre include the mako, the fakaseasea, the fatele, the lue, the sea, and the oga.
Ethnomusicology1963
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