Classroom lesson · Music · 🇸🇱 Sierra Leone

The Gumbe Drum

The heartbeat of Sierra Leonean Krio music

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The gumbe drum is a distinctive, square-framed drum that is central to the musical traditions of Sierra Leone's Krio community. Unlike round drums, the gumbe has a flat, square body and is played with both hands, producing a deep, resonant thump that forms the rhythmic foundation of gumbe music and dance.

Tell me more

The gumbe drum arrived in Sierra Leone with the Krio people - descendants of freed enslaved Africans from across the Atlantic who settled in Freetown from the late 1700s onwards. They brought musical traditions with them from many different places, and those traditions blended together to create the gumbe music style. The unique square drum became the symbol of this rich cultural fusion.

Gumbe music is joyful and communal. At a gumbe performance, the drum provides the heartbeat while singers, dancers and smaller percussion instruments respond around it. The music is associated with celebrations, storytelling and the preservation of Krio cultural identity. Learning to play the gumbe drum is considered an important skill in many families.

Today, gumbe music is being celebrated and preserved by musicians who are proud of its unique place in Sierra Leonean culture. Schools and cultural organisations teach children gumbe drumming and dance, making sure this beautiful tradition - born from a remarkable meeting of cultures in Freetown - continues to thrive for future generations.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Gumbe music was created when people from many different cultures came together in Freetown. What other things - foods, words, traditions - are created when different cultures mix?
  2. 02The square shape of the gumbe drum is very unusual. Why do you think this drum ended up with a square body instead of a round one?
  3. 03Preserving a musical tradition often requires teaching young people. How does your school or community pass on important traditions?
Try this

Classroom activity

Research three traditional drums from different parts of the world - for example, the tabla (India), the djembe (West Africa) and the taiko (Japan). Draw each drum, label its shape and size, and write one sentence about the music it is used for. Compare them with the gumbe drum.