The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a profound sense of uncertainty and insecurity in the world of opera. The COVID-19 pandemic has emerged as a phenomenon that is brutally affecting the opera industry. This effect was most prevalent and predominant in developing countries. Within a short period, the COVID-19 pandemic triggered unprecedented turmoil in the world of the arts. In European countries, many well-established opera companies opted for online streaming. The seismic disruption brought by the protocols imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic confirms the importance of changing from the traditional method of performance. Hence, this paper explores the challenges and opportunities of the transition to online streaming performances in the South African opera industry. A qualitative research method was employed using reviews of scholarly writings and informal interviews with opera singers and managers of opera companies. A thematic analysis was adopted to analyse the findings. The findings were presented in themes, namely 1. Challenges and opportunities of the transition to online streaming performance; 2. Effect of the national lockdown in South African opera industry; 3. Vulnerability of opera singers in the South African opera industry. The findings demonstrate that the South African opera industry was hit hard by the pandemic. The severity of the impact is partly attributable to the lockdown the South African government imposed to curb the spread of coronavirus. This paper concludes by stating that online streaming performances could be a longstanding solution for the opera industry.
In this article the term Ingoma (literally, song) in isiZulu covers a broad range of male group dances such as isikhuze, isicathulo, ukukhomikha, isiZulu, isibhaca, umzansi and isishayameni (Coplan 1985:65; Erlmann 1991:95). However, there is controversy among both authors, as Erlmann includes the term 'isiZulu' (Zulu), while Coplan, includes 'Ingoma' [dance-song] in the list of dances by amaZulu migrant workers. It is unclear why they decided to include these terms because all the dance-songs mentioned are classified as isiZulu and Ingoma. However, for this article, the term Ingoma has been used. As mentioned earlier, it is a generic term for dance-songs by amaZulu or isiZulu dance-songs.It is prudent to highlight that Ingoma has played an essential role in the transformation of amaZulu. The Ingoma's story is of dramatic socioeconomic changes in Zulu society after the final 'downfall' of the independent kingdom. It is the decade in which amaZulu entered the migrant labour system in greater proportions than ever before. As expected from any African society, the narrative for this decade could well be expressed in music, song, dance and some other forms of performances, which could be collectively called Ingoma. Sentiments arose around this period in the history of Zulu Ingoma, whereby some felt it as negative, while others saw it as positive. As such, this article set out to examine the story of Ingoma during the decade between 1929 and 1939. This article adopted an ethnomethodological approach within an interpretive paradigm to understand the impact of Ingoma musical and/or dance performance tradition. The results of this article reveal that Ingoma musical and/or dance performance traditions of the 1920s and 1930s represented the less continuity of precolonial musical and/or dance performance traditions of amaZulu expressions of power and warfare than the complex interaction of dance traditions, labour migration and missionisation. This article concludes by affirming that people continuously construct their cultures to reflect their identities. These results imply two things: firstly, amaZulu migrants were not just passive recipients of cultural changes at that time, and secondly, they were consciously responsible for the transformation of Ingoma dance songs as they reflected on the socioeconomic changes they found themselves in.Contribution: This study contributes by establishing the factual impact of this transformative period on Ingoma musical and/or dance performance tradition and on the broader cultural expression of amaZulu as a society in developing South Africa.
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