Inshād and Language Performance. Islamicate music.: Difference between revisions

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Brief presentation and discussion
Brief presentation and discussion
=== Language performance, and its impact on Islamicate music, culture, and society===
Consider wider socio-cultural impact of...
* Adhan: marking the day
* Qur'anic recitation: training in the kuttab; various uses for listening
* Duʿaʾ
* Khutba: discourses
* Inshad (mainstream & Sufi)
* Eid and Hajj


=== Islamicate Music ===
=== Islamicate Music ===

Revision as of 13:29, 23 January 2024

Tuesday (3a)

Islam as Sonic Ritual (Islamic "Music" = Language Performance)

Due today

1-2 page report on the following:


Optional (you don't have to include them in your report):


Also:

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)

  1. Shahada
  2. Salat (namaz), including special prayers (Salat al-Eid, Tarawih)
  3. Sawm (Ramadan), including Tarawih, and the Misahharati (March 11 - April 10, 2024)
  4. Hajj, in Mecca, Saudi Arabia (to take place in June 2024)
  • We have already considered adhan, the call to prayer, and tilawa, Qur'anic recitation
  • Today we'll consider a few other ritual genres: duʿāʾ, inshād, khutba, and ṣalāh or "salat" (prayer)
  • Salat: a compound ritual:
    • Ibtihalat (sung supplications at dawn)
    • Adhan
    • Qur'an
    • Adhkar al-Salat
    • Adʿiyya (supplications within the prayer)
  • Ramadan & Hajj are even more complex compound genres, involving all of the above.

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.

Thursday (3b)

Islam as Musical Catalyst (Islamicate Music)

Due today

Watch, read, and report:

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

Language performance, and its impact on Islamicate music, culture, and society

Consider wider socio-cultural impact of...

  • Adhan: marking the day
  • Qur'anic recitation: training in the kuttab; various uses for listening
  • Duʿaʾ
  • Khutba: discourses
  • Inshad (mainstream & Sufi)
  • Eid and Hajj

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


Lecture on Islamicate Music

Islamicate Music, and the relation to the Sounds of Islam

Music and Islam talk