Transcript document

Chapter 16
Continuous Forms
Continuous Forms
• Musical compositions in which the
musical elements create continuity; that
is, no internal divisions or interruptions
are created. There is little or no
contrast.
Continuous Forms
• Two forms of continuity--
• Pattern-Based
• Text-Based
Pattern-Based Continuous Forms
• Western European--
Invention
Prelude
Fugue
Passacaglia
Chaccone
Inventions
• Invention (a discovery, an original product of the
imagination) is a title Western European composers
from the baroque through the twentieth centuries give
to short, single-movement keyboard compositions,
particularly compositions in contrapuntal texture.
• Bach’s two-part inventions were originally called
praeambulum and were part of a collection of keyboard
pieces that he composed as teaching pieces for one of
his sons, Wilhelm Friedemann.
Inventions
• Two-part Invention no. 13 JS Bach
Piano
Piano and Vibraphone
 http://web.grinnell.edu/courses/mus/mus213-01/BachInv13.html
Imitative [polyphonic]
Leader
Follower
Inversion
Retrograde
Fugue
A more complex example of pattern-based
continuous music is the fugue. A fugue is a
contrapuntal composition built on a short
melody called the subject.
• Subject
Answer
Countersubject
Exposition
• Toccata and Fugue in D minor-Bach
Harmonic Progressions
• Refer back to the discussion of the blues
in Chapter Nine
–Blues Progression
I
I
I I
IV IV I I
V
IV I I
Turkish Continuous Forms
• Melodic
–makams (maqams)
–basic pitch sets (scales)
quarter (micro) tones
• Egreti karar
–main melodic tone
• Improvisation
– taqasim
Maqam
• In Arabic music, a maqam (plural maqamat)
is a set of notes (like a scale) with defined
relationships between them, like a raga.
Maqamat are best defined and understood in
the context of the Arabic music repertoire.
The nearest equivalent in Western classical
music would be a mode.
• Example of a maqam—the Bayati
• Example of Bayati in a song- “Ataba”
Instruments of Turkish Classical Music
• Ud (Uod)
The oud is one of the
most popular
instruments in Arabic
music. Its name derives
from the Arabic for a
thin strip of wood, and
refers to the strips of
wood used to make its
rounded body.
Strings-cont.
• Tanbur (Tambur)
The Tanbur, in the East,
refers to a category of
popular lutes of various
sizes, proportions, and
sounds, with the
common characteristic
that their necks are
longer than their bodies.
Strings-cont.
• Kanun (Qanun or qanoon)
• The qanun is a descendent of
the old Egyptian harp and has
been an integral part of Arabic
music since the 10th century.
The word qanun means 'law' in
Arabic. The qanun was
introduced to Europe by the
12th Century, becoming known
during the 14th to the 16th
Century as a psaltery or zither.
Other Instruments--Winds
• Ney
• The ney (Farsi for 'reed')
is an open-ended,
obliquely end blown flute
made of cane. They ney
was known in the Near
East since antiquity. It is
nine-jointed, and usually
has 6 holes in the front for
the fingers to play and 1
hole underneath for the
thumb.
Percussion Instruments
• Riq
• The riq is a small
tambourine traditionally
covered with a goat or
fish skin head, stretched
over a wooden frame
inlaid with mother of
pearl. The riq has five
sets of two pairs of brass
cymbals spaced evenly
around the frame, and
called 'sagaat' in Arabic.
Percussion Instruments
• Kudum
• Kudum is a small
double kettle drum
with the copper cup
covered in camel or
sheep skin and
playedwith a pair of
stickscalled
"Zahme".
Percussion Instruments
• Bendir or Douf-(Doof or
Duf)
• The bendir is a flat frame
drum with a pair of snare
strings stretched across the
back of the head to give it a
little buzz when played. It is
associated with Sufi Rituals.
It is used to create
merriment and to stir the
emotions. The thundering
tones of the Daf are
unsurpassed by any other
drum.
Musical Ensemble• The Turkish musical ensemble is called a Mutrip
Sufi Music
• The word sufi is derived from the term
sahafa. In the times of the Holy
Prophet Hazrat Mohammed, the
message of Islam was spreading far
and wide by missionaries and
conquests. The sahafa was one band
of men who were totally devoted to
prayer and meditation. Worship and
search for spiritual perfection was their
only aim. Over the centuries the
sahafa became those holy men who
are now called sufis.
Sufi Music
• The film soundtrack to The Last Temptation of Christ,
on which Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan performed, was of
crucial importance in bringing the religious music of
Qawwali (Sufi) to new audiences.
• Today, Sufism has an estimated 9 million followers.
Sufis can be traced across North Africa, East Africa,
the Balkans, the Central Asian Republics of the
former USSR, east across Malaysia and Indonesia,
and also within the many Middle-Eastern nations
traditionally associated with Islam.
Sufi Music
• used for religious purposes
• accompanies the Whirling Dervishes
– The Whirling Dervishes trace their origin to
the 13th century Ottoman Empire. The
Dervishes, also known as the Mevlevi
Order, are Sufis, a spiritual offshoot of
Islam.
The Ritual Dance or Sema
• The Mevlevi (also spelled as mawlawi) Ritual
dance or sema consists of several stages with
different meanings:
• The first stage, Naat-i Sherif, is a eulogy to
the Messenger of Islam and the all Prophets
before him, who represent love. This eulogy
is followed by a drumbeat (on the kudum)
symbolizing the divine command ‘Be’ for the
creation of the entire universe.
The Ritual Dance or Sema
• The Naat-i Sherif is followed by a Taksim, an
improvisation on the reed flute or ney. This expresses
the divine breath, which gives life to everything.
• Then follows the Sultan Veled procession or Devr-i
Veled, accompanied by peshrev music; this is a
circular, anticlockwise, procession three times around
the turning space. The greetings of the semazen, or
whirling dervishes, during the procession represent
the three stages of knowledge: ilm-al yaqin (received
knowledge, gained from others or through study),
ayn-al yaqin (knowing by seeing or observing for
oneself) and haqq-al yakin (knowledge gained
through direct experience, gnosis).
The Ritual Dance or Sema
•
Whirling is one of the tools used by Sufis (Islamic mystics) to
come closer to Allah/God.
The Ritual Dance or Sema
• This is followed by a recitation from the
Qur’an, the Sura (Chapter) Mary on the
miracle birth of Jesus and his mission.
Sultan Veled Peshrev
• Peshrev –– musical prelude
• Long, melodic phrases
• Irregular phrases, conjunct motion
• Grand Cycle (devr-i-kebir)–– 56 beats
• Sufi Meditation Song