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Mervyn McLean traditional music of Aitutaki and Mangaia, Cook Islands recordings

 Collection
Identifier: AMPS 2023/01

Scope and Contents

Having researched Māori traditional musical forms extensively in Aotearoa New Zealand, Mervyn McLean secured funding from the American National Science Foundation to conduct a survey in the Cook Islands looking for similarities or insights considering the two nations’ linguistic similarities.

This collection consists of the recordings made during the survey in the Cook Islands, predominantly at Aitutaki and Mangaia, from September to November 1967. More than 40 different song types feature, in over 400 recordings.

Song texts and further information for some items can be found in the original finding aid, published as the ‘Catalogue of McLean collection recordings of traditional music of Aitutaki and Mangaia Cook Islands, Sept-Nov 1967'.

Dates

  • Sep-Nov 1967

Creator

To request or comment

To request access to items in this collection, or to provide comment or corrections, please complete the following: Archive of Māori and Pacific Sound request form

ICIP position statement

Cultural Collections acknowledges and respects the Indigenous Cultural Intellectual Property (ICIP) rights of Pacific peoples in the contents of this collection and encourages engagement and collaboration to improve this resource to align with the aspirations and needs of Pacific communities.

To view our full statement on ICIP, please visit: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/library/about-our-collections/cultural-collections/our-kaupapa/indigenous-cultural-intellectual-property.html

Biographical / Historical

Mervyn McLean was a prominent ethnomusicologist and founding director of the Archive of Māori and Pacific Music.

Born in Invercargill, McLean attended Otago University in the late 1950s, where he studied for a Master of Arts in History and Literature of Music. It was during this time he heard waiata recordings from the Māori Purposes Fund Board and decided to pursue the topic for his thesis. After successfully completing his Masters, he went on to a PhD which he completed in 1965.

On completion of the PhD, McLean left New Zealand on a three-year post-doctoral fellowship, during which time he travelled to Indiana University to study with Alan P. Merriam, a pioneer in the anthropology of music; conducted field work on Aitutaki and Mangaia in the Cook Islands; and took an appointment for a semester at the Music Department at the University of Hawai’i.

Offered a fellowship by Bruce Biggs at the University of Auckland, McLean returned to New Zealand and commenced the role in 1969. Here he taught courses in the Anthropology, Music, and Māori Studies departments, as well as being the founding director of the Archive, becoming an associate professor in 1975.

McLean retired from the University of Auckland in 1992 and passed at the age of 92 on July 8, 2022.

Extent

0.48 metres : 24 open reel tapes

Language of Materials

Rarotongan; Cook Islands Maori

Other Finding Aids

Original finding aid published as the ‘Catalogue of McLean collection recordings of traditional music of Aitutaki and Mangaia Cook Islands, Sept-Nov 1967', ISBN: 0959800565.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Donated by Mervyn McLean in 1989

Related Materials

Texts for items identified as 'Hymn' may be found in 'Te Au imene ekalesia', the hymnal of the Cook Islands Christian Church.

Items identified as `Īmene tuki mostly have texts based upon scriptural verses, as indicated in the records, from the 'Biblia Tapu' or Rarotongan language edition of the Holy Bible of the Cook Islands Christian Church (Rev. 6th ed. 1962)

Title
Inventory of the Mervyn McLean traditional music of Aitutaki and Mangaia, Cook Islands recordings
Status
In Progress
Author
William Hamill. Additions by Huni Mancini.
Date
November 2023
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Archive of Māori and Pacific Sound, University of Auckland Repository

Contact:
Level 3, General Library
5 Alfred Street
Private Bag 92109
Auckland 1010 New Zealand
+64 9 923 5008