Music in Global America

TRADITIONAL MUSIC IN THE ARAB WORLD

INTRODUCTION

Image: Sid Ahmed, Hanaa. (2016). Socio-environmental impacts of urban expansion: Case of Arab countries. International Journal of Applied Business and Economic Research. 14. 7689-7706. Source: researchgate.net 


Arabic music is the music of Arabic-speaking states of Western Asia and North Africa sharing common music practices, theories, and instruments. From the tenth century, Arabic music maintained close contacts with Persian music theory, song, and instruments. During the Ottoman Empire beginning in the thirteenth century, Turkish culture dominated Arabic musical life. A distinctly Arabic consciousness was reborn in the nineteenth century, launched by anti-imperialist Islamic reformers, scholars, and musicians. Fundamental change occurred during the colonial rule of the Arab World by European powers following World War I when Arabs began to adopt Western musical styles and instruments. From the mid-twentieth century to today Arabic music has been influenced by American popular music as well, especially jazz and hip hop. 

[Touma, The Music of the Arabs]
 

TRADITIONAL ARABIC MUSIC

Anne Rasmussen, in The Music of Multicultural America, counts as the distinguishing features of Arabic music:

Melodic Style

Traditional Arabic music is almost wholly melodic, and melodies are often melismatic and highly ornamented as in "Seyouff el Ezz" performed by Mohammed Assaf. Singing is held as the ideal of musical expressiveness. In traditional style, singers are almost always accompanied by an instrumental ensemble playing in unison with the singer.  

Maqam System

The theory behind the maqam system of Arabic music stretches back to the ninth century. Arabic music is based on eight commonly used melodic modes, or maqams. The maqam system is the basis of composed and improvised Arabic music, whether vocal and instrumental. The maqam system is mostly taught orally, and by extensive listening to traditional playing. Each maqam is also meant to produce a certain mood or emotional state in the listener.

The particular tones of each maqam are organized in seven-tone scales, and each maqam has characteristic musical phrases made up of four (less often, three or five) continuous tones that give the maqam its flavor and recognizability. The Arabic tuning system contains tones that sound "out of tune" in the European equal-tempered tuning system. Such tones are often referred to as "microtones," because their distance apart is less than that of the semitone, the smallest interval in European music. For Arabic music to sound as intended it should be played on traditional Arab instruments that can produce the microtones that Western instruments with fixed pitches (such as piano) cannot. Violin, and the other members of the fretless violin family, adapt readily to the tunings of the maqam system.

Comparison of maqam Ajam and maqam Hijaz:

The tuning of maqam Ajam is identical to the European major scale and is meant to produce a happy feeling in the listener. The examples are from an instrumental solo (taqsim) played on oud, and an instrumental ensemble (takht).

Maqam Hijaz has two tones that are outside of the European tuning system and that give Hijaz a sound shared by Semitic people throughout the Middle East. The examples played are again taqsim and takht. 

Rhythm in Arabic Music

Rhythm is Arabic music is often in free rhythm. Metric rhythm is organized by rhythmic patterns of various durations —3, 4, 7, 8, or 10 beat long, up to more than 100. The pattern is made from two different timbres — one low-pitched and one sounding higher and drier — and rests. These patterns can be varied by decoration in performance, similar to improvised melodic ornamentation. 

[Touma, Radmussen, "Maqam," Wikipedia]
 

TRADITIONAL ARABIC INSTRUMENTS

Instrumental music may be played by a soloist as a self-contained improvisation (taqsim), or by an ensemble.  The representative instrumental ensemble of the classical Arabic music of the Middle East is the takht. In Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, and Jordan, the takht includes the oud, kamanjah (violin),  ney, qanun, and two main percussion instruments, riq and darbuka

Oud (Ud)

The oud is considered by many to be the most important instrument in traditional music of the Middle East. The progenitor of the oud dates back over 5000 years to Central Asia. Other instruments that were derived from this common ancestor include the Chinese pipa and the European lute. This performance of "Bint al chalabiya" is  by  Iraqi musician Omar Bashir whose father Munir (1930 – 1997) was a prime figure in bringing Middle Eastern instrumental traditions to the attention of the West. Omar begins in the nature of a free-form improvised taqsim and is later joined by other instruments in a combination of maqam, rumba, and jazz. 

 

Ney (Nay)

The nay is an end-blown flute.

Qanun

The qanun is a trapezoidal box zither.


Qanun
Photo: Ozanyarman at English Wikipedia [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Percussion



A takht may play a stand-alone composition, or the ensemble may play a suite (nuba) — a series of linked vocal and instrumental sections, with free-form vocal or instrumental improvisations alternating with ensemble playing in strict rhythm. The link below has several videos. The sixth video from the top — "Arab Instrument demonstration - the Full Takht" — is a composition for the five basic instruments of the takht. The videos that follow present demonstrate playing Arabic music on solo qanun, oud, and nay, respectively. 

Qatar Music Academy: Performance by Takht
 

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