Inshād and Language Performance. Islamicate music.: Difference between revisions
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'''LP in Theory''' and '''[https://www.artsrn.ualberta.ca/fwa_mediawiki/index.php?title=Islamic_performance_genres LP in practice]''' | '''LP in Theory''' and '''[https://www.artsrn.ualberta.ca/fwa_mediawiki/index.php?title=Islamic_performance_genres LP in practice]''' | ||
* | * My Paris ICTM forum talk | ||
* My Ithra talk: The Sonorous Audible Mosque | |||
* Examples at the above link: | * Examples at the above link: | ||
** Dawn in Egypt | ** Dawn in Egypt |
Revision as of 18:12, 20 January 2024
Tuesday (3a)
Islam as Musical Catalyst (Islamicate Music) and Islam as Sonic Ritual (Islamic "Music" = Language Performance)
Due today
1-2 page report on the following:
- Read Paralinguistic Ramification of Language Performance in Islamic Ritual. Follow YouTube links; Duʿaʾ is here.
- Read "Against ethnomusicology: Language performance and the social impact of ritual performance in Islam, Performing Islam, Volume 2, Number 1, December 2013 , pp. 11-43. Consider: why do I reject "music" (and "ethnomusicology")? What is "language performance" in Islam and why is it important? How can it be applied to ritual performance in Islam? How does it sonically localize through ramification, and what can we understand from such localization?
- Watch this documentary about Mecca: Inside Mecca (navigate via Films on Demand if it doesn't come up).
Optional (you don't have to include them in your report):
- Optional: Watch this BBC documentary film about the Hajj. Here's a text that may help explain from a more insider angle
- Virtual Hajj
- Sounds of Hajj and Umra:
- Sounds of Eid prayer:
- Takbir al-Eid: performed before Eid prayers on the days of Eid (Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha) also: [2][3].
- The text of the Takbir
Also:
- Last week I mentioned my new article on non-maqam localized styles of Qur'anic recitation; if you'd like to browse through it, please click here.
Class
Projects and Research proposals
Research proposal due 4b: AIM and SIGNIFICANCE. What issue or topic do you wish to investigate, and why do you think it's important? One page only. Optionally: include a few secondary sources, links to online media, etc.
Upcoming Islamic holidays: Isrāʾ wa Miʿrāj (Feb 8), Nisf al-Shaʿban (Feb 25), Ramadan (Mar 11), Eid (Apr 10)
Note that the Islamic calendar is based on a purely lunar system of 12 month years. The crescent moon (hilal) marks the start of a new month. Most Islamic holidays are set according to this calendar. Exceptions often mark syncretisms with pre-Islamic systems, e.g. the mawlid (saint day) of Ahmed al-Badawi in Egypt (always in October - a harvest festival), or spring festivals like Nawruz and Shamm al-Naseem.
LP and its principal Genres
Islamic LP (language performance): the mainstream sounds of Islam in social life and the social implications of sound.
The 5 "pillars" - arkan: at least four are associated with sound (excepting Zakat)
- Shahada
- Salat (namaz), including special prayers (Salat al-Eid, Tarawih)
- Ramadan, including Tarawih, and the Misahharati.
- Hajj, now in process in Mecca, Saudi Arabia
- We have already considered adhan, the call to prayer, and tilawa, Qur'anic recitation
- Salat: a compound ritual:
- Ibtihalat (sung supplications at dawn)
- Adhan
- Qur'an
- Adhkar al-Salat
- Adʿiyya (supplications within the prayer)
The theory and practice of LP
LP in Theory and LP in practice
- My Paris ICTM forum talk
- My Ithra talk: The Sonorous Audible Mosque
- Examples at the above link:
- Dawn in Egypt
- Friday prayer in Kazakhstan
- Eid prayer (Salat al-Eid)
- Rituals and sounds of the Hajj
ʿUmra, Hajj and Eid al-Adha
- The Hajj as a central meeting point for Muslims everywhere, a point of exchange and driver of Islamicate emergence via connection, fusion, and exchange
- The Hajj and Eid, and their sounds.
Islamic ritual: language performance, and its impact on Islamicate music
- Adhan
- Qur'an
- Duʿaʾ
- Khutba
- Inshad (mainstream & Sufi)
Sounds of the mosque:
- VR mosque
- The sonorous audible mosque (talk)
Thursday (3b)
Due today
Watch, read, and report:
- Watch Umm Kulthum: A Voice Like Egypt at least to 18:40 (NB: the subtitles contain errors) or on Rutherford Reserve (ML 420 U46 U46 2006). What was the role of Islam (through Qur'an, religious song, Sufi festival) in selecting singers and shaping or training their voices?
- Read "Min al-Mashāyikh": A View of Egyptian Musical Tradition, by Virginia Danielson. Asian Music. Vol. 22, No. 1 (Autumn, 1990 - Winter, 1991), pp. 113-127. (Note: if you're not on campus you may have to use this link instead.
Also please do the following (you need not report on these items)
- Prepare a few ideas for your research projects to be discussed in class (you don't have to limit yourself to just one). A short written version will be due next week.
- Review Shiloah reading from Week 2.
Class
Your research ideas
Brief presentation and discussion
Islamicate Music
- Discuss readings: Shiloah, Danielson. Questions? observations?
- Mostly what we know is the elite, court music... “art music"
- Formation through Islam as catalyst (connecting people through empire, language, religion; gathering wealth), legal restrictions (e.g. primacy of the voice), emphases (the word), training (tilawa and Sufi contexts), contexts of cultivation (primarily Sufi).
- Commonalities across Islamicate zones:
- Focus on language, combined with timbral, textural, tonal, and temporal similarities
- music: tonality, temporality; nasality; heterophony
- maqam, microtones, melodic emphasis
- iqaʿ (darb, wazn, usul): rhythmic cycles
- Shaped by Islamic discourse and practice (tilawa, Sufi hadra, musical training)
- Shaping local Islamic practices
- Variations across Islamicate zones:
- culture, contexts, articulation with pre-Islamic culture
- ideological differences, e.g. Sunni and Shia presents different soundscapes
- social and political factors: immigration/borders/state policies; Islamic ideology may trigger/represent political divides, restricting interactions
- language, dialect, pronunciation: vary from place to place
- Ramification of sound: localization adaptation, random or accommodating (Suwarian tradition of West Africa)
- Impact of Islam
- Discourses of Islam (e.g. attitudes towards music)
- Practices of Islam (e.g. tilawa, Qur'anic recitation)
- Islam as civilizational catalyst (e.g. formation of an empire that could absorb and fuse numerous traditions from a broad region)
- Examples:
- Egyptian Wasla
- Turkish Fasil
- Moroccan Nawba
- Persian Dastgah