Syncretic Islamic communities & their music: Difference between revisions
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# '''Bektashi and Alevi''': [https://www.jstor.org/stable/43561104 The Role of Expressive Culture in the Demystification of a Secret Sect of Islam: The Case of the Alevis of Turkey], by Irene Markoff. ''The World of Music'', Vol. 28, No. 3, Islam (1986), pp. 42-56 (15 pages) | # '''Bektashi and Alevi''': [https://www.jstor.org/stable/43561104 The Role of Expressive Culture in the Demystification of a Secret Sect of Islam: The Case of the Alevis of Turkey], by Irene Markoff. ''The World of Music'', Vol. 28, No. 3, Islam (1986), pp. 42-56 (15 pages) | ||
Watch and review: [https://fod-infobase-com.login.ezproxy.library.ualberta.ca/p_ViewVideo.aspx?xtid=282217&tScript=0 "Gnawa Music - Body and Soul" | Watch and review: '''[https://fod-infobase-com.login.ezproxy.library.ualberta.ca/p_ViewVideo.aspx?xtid=282217&tScript=0 "Gnawa Music - Body and Soul"]''' (if you have trouble with the link, search for the title in [https://www.library.ualberta.ca/dbinfo/films-on-demand Films on Demand]) | ||
What connections can you perceive between these traditions? How are they similar or different? Consider ritual, folkloric, and popular/world musical forms (including intersections with other genres, like jazz). Compare and contrast them in your review. | What connections can you perceive between these traditions? How are they similar or different? Consider ritual, folkloric, and popular/world musical forms (including intersections with other genres, like jazz). Compare and contrast them in your review. | ||
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== Class == | == Class == | ||
=== Ramadan: March 10 - April 9 === | |||
'''Ramadan Mubarak!''' The Qur'an was revealed in 610, in this month, the 9th of the Islamic calendar. By Tradition this revelation began on an odd-numbered night in the last 10 days, conventionally the 27th is celebrated as this night - known as "Laylat al-Qadr", the "Night of Power", as described in the Qur'an, [https://quran.com/en/al-qadr Surat al-Qadr (97)]. The word Qur'an means "recitation", and the first revealed chapter was [https://quran.com/96 Surat al-Alaq (96)], which begins by saying "Read!" or "Recite!". This night is considered most sacred, a time when channels between heaven and earth are most open, every year. | |||
Forms of language performance most prevalent in Ramadan (besides the usual ones): | |||
* Tilawa | |||
* Ibtihalat | |||
* Duʿaʾ | |||
* Misahharati | |||
The latter is a functional genre common in Egypt: vocal and drum sounds used to wake people for their Ramadan pre-dawn meal, called suhur in Egypt. The performer is called misahharati in Egypt. The misahharati traditionally wanders the neighborhood just before dawn, using voice and small portable drum (baza) waking the people to take their pre-dawn meal (suhur), since fasting will begin with the first glow of the night sky. | |||
[https://drive.google.com/open?id=1zjTywzH6DrNxfNwf_JG3JG0YYVQM2NzU Ramadan: the pre-dawn misahharati] (recorded 20 July 2015 in Cairo). | |||
Ramadan is generally a joyful time, both in celebration of the Qur'an and also because work and school duties ease, and families gather around evening meals. Besides being a religious duty or "pillar" (rukn) fasting is thought to encourage reflection and prayer, compassion for the poor and hungry, and better health. The practicing Muslim fasts from dawn to sunset, abstaining from food, drink, smoking, and sexual relations during that time. | |||
Just after sunset (marked by a cannon in Cairo) and the start of the adhan, the tradition is to break one's fast with a date and water, then pray maghrib. Sunset is marked by a cannon shot in Cairo, as well as the adhan, broadcast on all media. Many stations rebroadcast an [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_iMZTeupPts old adhan performed by Shaykh Mohamed Rifaʿat], which has become very famous and evocative of Ramadan and the end of the day's fasting. | |||
** [https:// | |||
There follows a meal called 'ifṭār' (related to breakfast = fiṭār). Devout Muslims then move to the mosque for ʿishāʾ prayer, followed by a lengthy supererogatory prayer called tarāwiḥ which, with religious revival, has become increasingly popular in many places It closes with the witr, including what can be a lengthy duʿāʾ. On the secular side, Ramadan is a period of especially elaborate, large evening meals, and much television entertainment. Musical entertainment is mostly unrelated to religion, and a number of local traditions may be secular - for instance, particular local delicacies, the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanous fanous] lanterns that supposedly originated in Fatimid Egypt, or Ramadan Riddles (Fawazir Ramadan), an Egyptian TV show that was popular for many years. | |||
However the night of the 27th is characterized by greater solemnity, a gravity which can become acute regret characterized by weeping during the witr prayer, especially the duʿāʾ, as it is felt that supplications will be more effective at this time. | |||
* | In traditional neighborhoods of Cairo and rural Egypt, shortly before dawn, the misahharati awakens the community to take their pre-dawn meal, suḥūr. In other places I've heard several early calls to prayer that accomplish the same thing. There follows the tilawa-ibtihalat-adhan-prayer sequence for [https://www.artsrn.ualberta.ca/fwa_mediawiki/index.php/The_dawn_prayer_rite_(salat_al-fajr) fajr prayer]. | ||
*** [https:// | The Eid al-Fitr follows the last day of Ramadan, and should therefore begin April 9 in the evening. | ||
* | |||
* [http://archnet.org/authorities/2872 Paul Bowles | === Gnawa === | ||
==== Introduction to Gnawa ==== | |||
and its [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kq2Vy20SccA globalization] | |||
Gnawa is one of several North African Afro-Islamic social/ritual/religious forms that combine: | |||
* West African music and spirituality, brought to North Africa via slavery | |||
* Islam and Sufi concepts (saints, shaykhs, trance, social movement) | |||
Others include: | |||
* Hamadsha (Algeria) - see Crapanzano | |||
* Stambeli (Tunisia) - see Jankowsky | |||
* Issawiyya | |||
The name Gnawa | |||
* Some relate it to Guinea, connecting to Black Africa | |||
* Others to Tamazirt (Berber) "igri ignawan" [the field of the cloudy sky] | |||
* Historian Nehemia Levtzion notes Ibāḍīs of Black origin called Ijnāw, perhaps from Ignaun (sing. Agnaw), ‘Blacks.’ (Levtzion, “The Sahara and the Sudan,” 643.) | |||
* Still others relate it to the northern Nigerian city state of Kano | |||
Instruments: | |||
* Guimbri (sintir, hajhouj): bass lute, similar to many West African lutes | |||
* Qaraqeb (sing. Qarqeb): cymbals, similar to many West African metallic instruments | |||
* tbel or ganga: large drums, similar to West African drums | |||
Music: | |||
* Rhythms: polyrhythm (triple), stretched/swung (x.xx vs xxx) (x.x xx. vs. xxxx) | |||
* Scales: pentatonic | |||
* Timbres: metallic, low pluck | |||
* Spectra: very low (bass lute=sintir and bass drums), very high (qaraqeb) | |||
* Acceleration | |||
Spiritual aspects: | |||
* Mluk ("mulūk") - "kings", spirits | |||
* Special colors, incense | |||
* Spirits can cause illness | |||
* Colors define groups of muluk (green, white, red, black) | |||
* Connection: musical themes, rhythms, scents, colors - to spirits. | |||
* Some spirits are equivalent to Sufi saints (Abd al-Qadir) | |||
Religious and social attitudes: | |||
* Connected to Islam; spirits perceived as jinn; participants are mainly Muslim, but also | |||
* Perceived as separate, even as heretical, in contrast to "proper" Islam, especially since Islamic revival movements of the 20th c | |||
* Perceived as rural, deviant, lowclass, in contrast to "proper" music, for which the Andalusian heritage (Ala) provides the highest most elite example (along with Western music!) | |||
* Since the 1960s revived as a proud local tradition - folklore, for nationalist and touristic purposes - and repurposed | |||
Ritual aspects: | |||
* Healing, by propitiating (not exorcising) the spirits (mluk) | |||
* Dance/movement | |||
* Trance | |||
* Self-mortification | |||
* Multisensory: color, incense | |||
* Sacrifice | |||
Social aspects: | |||
* Collectivity, tariq | |||
* Professionalism | |||
* Perceived lineage: connecting to Bilal, the Prophet's first muezzin, a Christian convert and former slave from Ethiopia (the Keita family, founders of the medieval empire of Mali, also made this lineal connection) | |||
* Healing | |||
* Race | |||
* Gender: muqaddima (female), maʿallam (male), but more recently a handful of female maʿallams have emerged, such as [https://www.rfi.fr/en/culture/20230709-female-maestro-hind-ennaira-shows-gnaoua-music-power-to-transcend-boundaries Hind Ennaira][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bPz2-PecqIY] | |||
* Double consciousness? (WEB Debois) - perhaps not, at least not as among descendants of slaves in North America, due to greater homogeneity in religion and less clear demarcations based on race, as well as racial diversity among Gnawas themselves | |||
==== Examples: Gnawa music - ritual, staged, fused ==== | |||
Ritual performance (lila or derdeba): Ahmed and Mustafa Baqbou | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrXFx564e3M Ahmed] | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BOzbhIlrQu0 Trance of red](Mustafa) (red spirits include Sidi Hamou, spirits of the butchers) | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upQD6z_G3N4 Trance of white](Mustafa) (white spirits include Sidi Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani, Sufi saint) | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7ZPFbqd6QU&feature=youtu.be&t=194 Red spirits], with tabl drums | |||
Staged (nationalist folklore, traditional tourism seeking authenticity) | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOLqdbBgsk4 Hassan Hakmoun] | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7hTwkl2s6T4 Jemaa al-Fnaa], Fez | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WgmEbjgjtkE Nass el Ghiwane], folkloric group from the 1960s, reviving traditional instruments including guimbri | |||
World music Gnawa fusions: jazz, funk, hiphop, rock, festival tourism - something new/global | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zvUQaD1Biow Essaouira Gnawa festival] | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzsgURRwHRs Randy Weston] [http://www.randyweston.info/randy-weston-discography-pages/1992splendidmastergnawa.html](jazz) | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oET_fayURWY&t=156s Hassan Hakmoun: Gnawa fusion] | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1-T3-8RA6I Sidi Yasser] Islamic-Gnawa fusion | |||
* Women in Gnawa fusion: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFQwj9_1qLQ&t=696s Hind Ennaira] | |||
* [http://roadsandkingdoms.com/2014/there-is-nothing-like-this-festival/ Gnawa festival][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSbEyefGb-s] | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCAhwVorBSA Led Zeppelin] | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owm1UFFymiU Rock group featuring Hassan Hakmoun] | |||
* [http://archnet.org/authorities/2872 Paul Bowles] (American writer and composer) collection in Morocco | |||
** [http://archnet.org/collections/872 overview] | ** [http://archnet.org/collections/872 overview] | ||
** [http://archnet.org/collections/872/media_contents/99335 Gnawa][http://archnet.org/collections/872/media_contents/99336] | ** [http://archnet.org/collections/872/media_contents/99335 Gnawa][http://archnet.org/collections/872/media_contents/99336] | ||
Gnawa | ==== Gnawa Origins: West African music and spirituality meets Islam ==== | ||
* [ | * Islamic connection | ||
* | * Slavery | ||
* | * Social-cultural interactions of North and West African empires through trade in various goods (gold, salt...) but especially slaves: | ||
* | ** Ghana Empire (~ 300 up to 13th century), Islamized around 11th century | ||
* [ | ** Mali Empire (13th to 17th centuries), Islamic | ||
** Kingdom of Songhai (15th - 16th centuries), Islamic | |||
** [https://www.bu.edu/africa/outreach/teachingresources/history/ancient-to-medieval-history/kingdoms/ Maps of medieval West African kingdoms][http://thegoldroad.org/map.aspx#Location=18.82998~17.29562&Zoom=4&TradeRoutes=0&TimePeriods=(1,2,3) (Interactive map)], most of which Islamized | |||
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saadi_dynasty Moroccan Saadi dynasty] (16th - 17th century): increased rate of slave trade | |||
Traditional Music of West Africa: features | |||
* Pentatonic and triple meter | |||
* Polyrhythmic | |||
* call and response | |||
* Examples: | |||
** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnZWsbuWz_E Soninke Gambare], another plucked lute with similar technique to guimbri, from eastern Senegal | |||
** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vq35XWgzZFE Polyrhythmic drumming from SE Ghana, featuring bells, rattles, and drums] (Agbadza) | |||
** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVG9QXTOGi0 Polyphonic drumming from northern Ghana, including large double headed drums] and iron finger bells (Bamaya) | |||
Traditional Spirituality of West Africa: features | |||
* Distant Creator God | |||
* Ancestors | |||
* Spirits (animism) | |||
* Examples: | |||
** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ftocqaAeKQ8 Brekete "cult"] of Ghana. Spirit possession, polyrhythmic percussion | |||
** Connection via jinn, authenticated by the Qur'an: [https://quran.com/55?startingVerse=15 creation of the Jinn], [https://quran.com/al-jinn Surat al-Jinn] | |||
* Healing rituals (see IHI talk) | |||
* Connection of such rituals to Sufism, with its focus on saint veneration, and their power of baraka (cf link of Cuban Santeria to Yoruba religion as well as Catholic saints) | |||
==== Historical background ==== | |||
Islamic history | |||
* Umayyads in Spain | |||
* Berber and Arab empires of North Africa | |||
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Almoravid_dynasty al-Murabitun] (Almoravids) | |||
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Almohad_Caliphate al-Muwahhidun] (Almohads) | |||
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saadi_dynasty Saadi dynasty] | |||
* West African history: [https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/acref/9780191735851.timeline.0001 general timeline]; [https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/chronology#!?geo=af West African timelines (Western Sudan)], [http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/africa/features/storyofafrica/index_section4.shtml empires of West Africa (BBC)]; [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rSoZ07LXnKo Davidson on Caravans of Gold] | |||
** [https://www.bu.edu/africa/outreach/teachingresources/history/ancient-to-medieval-history/kingdoms/ African Kingdoms adopting Islam] | |||
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghana_Empire Ghana] | |||
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mali_Empire Mali] | |||
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Songhai_Empire Songhai] | |||
= Thursday (10b) = | = Thursday (10b) = | ||
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Read: [http://www.jstor.org/stable/3270140 Liminal Rites and Female Symbolism in the Egyptian Zar Possession Cult], by Richard Natvig, ''Numen'', Vol. 35, Fasc. 1 (Jul., 1988), pp. 57-68 | Read: [http://www.jstor.org/stable/3270140 Liminal Rites and Female Symbolism in the Egyptian Zar Possession Cult], by Richard Natvig, ''Numen'', Vol. 35, Fasc. 1 (Jul., 1988), pp. 57-68 | ||
Listen/watch: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nscue8p-a8w | Listen/watch: traditional Egyptian zar music: | ||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNiUc4W5Kzo&t=97s Delta zar style], with dufuf and [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nscue8p-a8w kawala (flute)], very [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HCjP6Gb9UN4 similar to dhikr] (Abu el-Gheit ensemble, from Qalyubiya, just north of Cairo) | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UzmvEPYvBE4 Sudanese style], with Sudanese drums and tambur (large lyre) | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X8dP7L-v2Eo&t=590s construction of the Sudanese tambur], [https://youtu.be/X8dP7L-v2Eo?si=RHkQqGKRujEjDSwV&t=733 and performance of the tambur] (at Makan folklore centre, Cairo) | |||
Then browse the following sites and videos produced by two folkloric centers in Cairo | Then browse the following sites and videos produced by two folkloric centers in Cairo. Besides local folkloric performances their groups have traveled abroad on the world music circuit, and sometimes engaged in various musical fusions with musicians from Europe or North America - or elsewhere. (Some Egyptian Zar musicians told me they'd met Gnawa musicians in Montreal at a music festival!) | ||
[http://www.egyptmusic.org/ Makan]: | 1. [http://www.egyptmusic.org/ Makan]: | ||
* [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vXRw5XHp9lGCcCsgbl8bGPWvB_40yED6/view?usp=sharing Zar performance] | * [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vXRw5XHp9lGCcCsgbl8bGPWvB_40yED6/view?usp=sharing Zar performance, dufuf] | ||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xbdz8BpmkAs Zar performance, tambur][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2UD12JWbZw] | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARgZTLVJDO4 Zar interpretation] | * [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARgZTLVJDO4 Zar interpretation] | ||
[http://www.el-mastaba.org/ El Mastaba] | 2. [http://www.el-mastaba.org/ El Mastaba] | ||
* Rango (xylophone) | * Rango (xylophone-based zar) | ||
** [http://www.el-mastaba.org/rango.html Rango tradition] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9ISiLpv2Do&t=1s Rango video] | ** [http://www.el-mastaba.org/rango.html Rango tradition] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9ISiLpv2Do&t=1s Rango video] | ||
** More rango: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlpTB5gz2LY][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IngG7lXBJUA] | ** More rango: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlpTB5gz2LY][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IngG7lXBJUA] | ||
* Zar (Asyad El Zar) | ** The group toured and released a CD, [https://propermusic.com/products/rango-brideofthezar Bride of the Zar] | ||
* Zar (Asyad El Zar: Masters of Zar) - tambur | |||
** [https://www.el-mastaba.org/asyad-el-zar.html Zar in Egypt - overview] | ** [https://www.el-mastaba.org/asyad-el-zar.html Zar in Egypt - overview] | ||
** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGqRrKLi4HI Zar with Tambur] (large bass size, similar to guimbri) | ** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGqRrKLi4HI Zar with Tambur] (large bass size, similar to guimbri) | ||
* Optional: [https://www.theguardian.com/music/2009/sep/24/rango-cairo#:~:text=Rango%20music%20has%20its%20roots,weddings%20in%20Ismailia%20and%20Cairo. This Guardian review] | |||
Also note | Also note presence of Zar in other parts of the world: | ||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=If24b_hGda0 Zar ritual in Ethiopia] | * [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=If24b_hGda0 Zar ritual in Ethiopia] (some say Zar originated here) | ||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rm9Io7gKjbU&t=362s Zar Ritual in Iran] | * [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rm9Io7gKjbU&t=362s Zar Ritual in Iran] (probably brought by Black slaves) | ||
* Common also in Sudan (I' | * Common also in [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9nrr9nCgLI Sudan] (I believe this is an instance; also see other videos on this channel). [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNMDc3H2LbM&t=444s Gerasimos Makris - The Zar Cult in Sudan; an anthropologist's view][https://youtu.be/VNMDc3H2LbM?si=w-YRciSLTFwuHaZV&t=393 He speaks about the spirits, European, Muslim, and other.] | ||
Submit: one page on similarities and differences between Moroccan Gnawa and Egyptian Zar. Consider: the people, the ritual, the music - but also the ways this music has been folklorized, rendered "world music", or mixed with other genres. How, when, and where does the performance retain a spiritual significance, and why is that significance at other times and places eliminated? What are the reasons why the two traditions may be similar? Why are there differences? | Submit: one page on similarities and differences between Moroccan Gnawa and Egyptian Zar. Consider: the people, the ritual, the music - but also the ways this music has been folklorized, rendered "world music", or mixed with other genres. How, when, and where does the performance retain a spiritual significance, and why is that significance at other times and places eliminated? What are the reasons why the two traditions may be similar? Why are there differences? | ||
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== Class == | == Class == | ||
* Introduction to Zar | * Introduction to Zar | ||
** Critical reading of the article by Natvig ([https://www.google.com/maps/place/Ash+Sharqia+Governorate,+Egypt/@30.7290312,31.4393243,10z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x14f7f044ed84e6db:0x6a3238c46e1c2865 Sharqiya Governorate] in | ** Critical reading of the article by Natvig ([https://www.google.com/maps/place/Ash+Sharqia+Governorate,+Egypt/@30.7290312,31.4393243,10z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x14f7f044ed84e6db:0x6a3238c46e1c2865 discussing Zar in Egypt's Sharqiya Governorate]). Note that his article is dated 1988, and the research was earlier still. The Zar has largely disappeared today - or else gone underground. Yet it is popular among dancers - and appears in many older Egyptian filmls. | ||
** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rm9Io7gKjbU Iranian zar] | ** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rm9Io7gKjbU Iranian zar] | ||
** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2KJFlDtT70c | ** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2KJFlDtT70c various scenes of zar]: ritual, folkloric, dance... | ||
** Egyptian Zar: very similar to dhikr; even same musicians. Note male musicians; female adepts and patients. | ** Egyptian-style Zar: very similar to dhikr; even same musicians. Note male musicians; female adepts and patients. | ||
*** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LGZ8nh60ww4 Zar at Makan] | *** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LGZ8nh60ww4 Zar at Makan] | ||
*** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNiUc4W5Kzo House Zar] | *** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNiUc4W5Kzo House Zar] | ||
*** [https://vimeo.com/20411385 Sufi hadra at Ali Zayn al-Abidin in Cairo] | *** [https://vimeo.com/20411385 Sufi hadra at Ali Zayn al-Abidin in Cairo] | ||
** Sudanese Zar in Egypt: The [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6eu5WQmDI3A Tanbura][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0OiH-RWfCTY][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAglDQmRA6A][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aqq51CMrDjc]. The British Museum [http://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/past_exhibitions/2015/sudanese_lyre.aspx displayed this beautiful Sudanese tanbura], known locally as "kissar". | ** Sudanese Zar in Egypt: The [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6eu5WQmDI3A Tanbura][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0OiH-RWfCTY][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAglDQmRA6A][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aqq51CMrDjc]. The British Museum [http://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/past_exhibitions/2015/sudanese_lyre.aspx displayed this beautiful Sudanese tanbura], known locally as "kissar". Egypt [https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?search=Nubian+Harper+in+Egypt&title=Special:MediaSearch&go=Go&type=image] | ||
** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onIsrvPZLks Rango documentary] (CSL component by Mariem Oloroso, Music of the Arab World, fall 2014); [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOmsXiNl7v0 Rango zar ceremony]. More videos from [http://www.30ips.com/rango/ the Rango website] | ** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onIsrvPZLks Rango documentary] (CSL component by Mariem Oloroso, Music of the Arab World, fall 2014); [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOmsXiNl7v0 Rango zar ceremony]. More videos from [http://www.30ips.com/rango/ the Rango website] | ||
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uh10sZX623Y Zar in the global bellydance scene] | * [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uh10sZX623Y Zar in the global bellydance scene] |
Latest revision as of 12:50, 14 March 2024
Syncretism from an Islamic perspective: spirit propitiation/healing groups and practices combining Islamic and sub-saharan Africa: Gnawa and Zar
Tuesday (10a)
From Kurdistan to Turkey to Morocco: Ahl al-Haqq, Bektashi/Alevi ... and Gnawa!
Due
Read/skim and review one of the following two (depending on your interests - your choice!), in conjunction with the videos posted for last week:
- Yaresan (Ahl al-Haqq): Introduction and Chapter 5: Ritual and Observance from “God First and Last". Religious Traditions and Music of the Yaresan of Guran, by Philip G. Kreyenbroek (feel free to browse other sections of the book if you're interested)
- Bektashi and Alevi: The Role of Expressive Culture in the Demystification of a Secret Sect of Islam: The Case of the Alevis of Turkey, by Irene Markoff. The World of Music, Vol. 28, No. 3, Islam (1986), pp. 42-56 (15 pages)
Watch and review: "Gnawa Music - Body and Soul" (if you have trouble with the link, search for the title in Films on Demand)
What connections can you perceive between these traditions? How are they similar or different? Consider ritual, folkloric, and popular/world musical forms (including intersections with other genres, like jazz). Compare and contrast them in your review.
You may submit both reviews in one page or less.
Class
Ramadan: March 10 - April 9
Ramadan Mubarak! The Qur'an was revealed in 610, in this month, the 9th of the Islamic calendar. By Tradition this revelation began on an odd-numbered night in the last 10 days, conventionally the 27th is celebrated as this night - known as "Laylat al-Qadr", the "Night of Power", as described in the Qur'an, Surat al-Qadr (97). The word Qur'an means "recitation", and the first revealed chapter was Surat al-Alaq (96), which begins by saying "Read!" or "Recite!". This night is considered most sacred, a time when channels between heaven and earth are most open, every year.
Forms of language performance most prevalent in Ramadan (besides the usual ones):
- Tilawa
- Ibtihalat
- Duʿaʾ
- Misahharati
The latter is a functional genre common in Egypt: vocal and drum sounds used to wake people for their Ramadan pre-dawn meal, called suhur in Egypt. The performer is called misahharati in Egypt. The misahharati traditionally wanders the neighborhood just before dawn, using voice and small portable drum (baza) waking the people to take their pre-dawn meal (suhur), since fasting will begin with the first glow of the night sky. Ramadan: the pre-dawn misahharati (recorded 20 July 2015 in Cairo).
Ramadan is generally a joyful time, both in celebration of the Qur'an and also because work and school duties ease, and families gather around evening meals. Besides being a religious duty or "pillar" (rukn) fasting is thought to encourage reflection and prayer, compassion for the poor and hungry, and better health. The practicing Muslim fasts from dawn to sunset, abstaining from food, drink, smoking, and sexual relations during that time.
Just after sunset (marked by a cannon in Cairo) and the start of the adhan, the tradition is to break one's fast with a date and water, then pray maghrib. Sunset is marked by a cannon shot in Cairo, as well as the adhan, broadcast on all media. Many stations rebroadcast an old adhan performed by Shaykh Mohamed Rifaʿat, which has become very famous and evocative of Ramadan and the end of the day's fasting.
There follows a meal called 'ifṭār' (related to breakfast = fiṭār). Devout Muslims then move to the mosque for ʿishāʾ prayer, followed by a lengthy supererogatory prayer called tarāwiḥ which, with religious revival, has become increasingly popular in many places It closes with the witr, including what can be a lengthy duʿāʾ. On the secular side, Ramadan is a period of especially elaborate, large evening meals, and much television entertainment. Musical entertainment is mostly unrelated to religion, and a number of local traditions may be secular - for instance, particular local delicacies, the fanous lanterns that supposedly originated in Fatimid Egypt, or Ramadan Riddles (Fawazir Ramadan), an Egyptian TV show that was popular for many years.
However the night of the 27th is characterized by greater solemnity, a gravity which can become acute regret characterized by weeping during the witr prayer, especially the duʿāʾ, as it is felt that supplications will be more effective at this time.
In traditional neighborhoods of Cairo and rural Egypt, shortly before dawn, the misahharati awakens the community to take their pre-dawn meal, suḥūr. In other places I've heard several early calls to prayer that accomplish the same thing. There follows the tilawa-ibtihalat-adhan-prayer sequence for fajr prayer.
The Eid al-Fitr follows the last day of Ramadan, and should therefore begin April 9 in the evening.
Gnawa
Introduction to Gnawa
and its globalization
Gnawa is one of several North African Afro-Islamic social/ritual/religious forms that combine:
- West African music and spirituality, brought to North Africa via slavery
- Islam and Sufi concepts (saints, shaykhs, trance, social movement)
Others include:
- Hamadsha (Algeria) - see Crapanzano
- Stambeli (Tunisia) - see Jankowsky
- Issawiyya
The name Gnawa
- Some relate it to Guinea, connecting to Black Africa
- Others to Tamazirt (Berber) "igri ignawan" [the field of the cloudy sky]
- Historian Nehemia Levtzion notes Ibāḍīs of Black origin called Ijnāw, perhaps from Ignaun (sing. Agnaw), ‘Blacks.’ (Levtzion, “The Sahara and the Sudan,” 643.)
- Still others relate it to the northern Nigerian city state of Kano
Instruments:
- Guimbri (sintir, hajhouj): bass lute, similar to many West African lutes
- Qaraqeb (sing. Qarqeb): cymbals, similar to many West African metallic instruments
- tbel or ganga: large drums, similar to West African drums
Music:
- Rhythms: polyrhythm (triple), stretched/swung (x.xx vs xxx) (x.x xx. vs. xxxx)
- Scales: pentatonic
- Timbres: metallic, low pluck
- Spectra: very low (bass lute=sintir and bass drums), very high (qaraqeb)
- Acceleration
Spiritual aspects:
- Mluk ("mulūk") - "kings", spirits
- Special colors, incense
- Spirits can cause illness
- Colors define groups of muluk (green, white, red, black)
- Connection: musical themes, rhythms, scents, colors - to spirits.
- Some spirits are equivalent to Sufi saints (Abd al-Qadir)
Religious and social attitudes:
- Connected to Islam; spirits perceived as jinn; participants are mainly Muslim, but also
- Perceived as separate, even as heretical, in contrast to "proper" Islam, especially since Islamic revival movements of the 20th c
- Perceived as rural, deviant, lowclass, in contrast to "proper" music, for which the Andalusian heritage (Ala) provides the highest most elite example (along with Western music!)
- Since the 1960s revived as a proud local tradition - folklore, for nationalist and touristic purposes - and repurposed
Ritual aspects:
- Healing, by propitiating (not exorcising) the spirits (mluk)
- Dance/movement
- Trance
- Self-mortification
- Multisensory: color, incense
- Sacrifice
Social aspects:
- Collectivity, tariq
- Professionalism
- Perceived lineage: connecting to Bilal, the Prophet's first muezzin, a Christian convert and former slave from Ethiopia (the Keita family, founders of the medieval empire of Mali, also made this lineal connection)
- Healing
- Race
- Gender: muqaddima (female), maʿallam (male), but more recently a handful of female maʿallams have emerged, such as Hind Ennaira[1]
- Double consciousness? (WEB Debois) - perhaps not, at least not as among descendants of slaves in North America, due to greater homogeneity in religion and less clear demarcations based on race, as well as racial diversity among Gnawas themselves
Examples: Gnawa music - ritual, staged, fused
Ritual performance (lila or derdeba): Ahmed and Mustafa Baqbou
- Ahmed
- Trance of red(Mustafa) (red spirits include Sidi Hamou, spirits of the butchers)
- Trance of white(Mustafa) (white spirits include Sidi Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani, Sufi saint)
- Red spirits, with tabl drums
Staged (nationalist folklore, traditional tourism seeking authenticity)
- Hassan Hakmoun
- Jemaa al-Fnaa, Fez
- Nass el Ghiwane, folkloric group from the 1960s, reviving traditional instruments including guimbri
World music Gnawa fusions: jazz, funk, hiphop, rock, festival tourism - something new/global
- Essaouira Gnawa festival
- Randy Weston [2](jazz)
- Hassan Hakmoun: Gnawa fusion
- Sidi Yasser Islamic-Gnawa fusion
- Women in Gnawa fusion: Hind Ennaira
- Gnawa festival[3]
- Led Zeppelin
- Rock group featuring Hassan Hakmoun
- Paul Bowles (American writer and composer) collection in Morocco
Gnawa Origins: West African music and spirituality meets Islam
- Islamic connection
- Slavery
- Social-cultural interactions of North and West African empires through trade in various goods (gold, salt...) but especially slaves:
- Ghana Empire (~ 300 up to 13th century), Islamized around 11th century
- Mali Empire (13th to 17th centuries), Islamic
- Kingdom of Songhai (15th - 16th centuries), Islamic
- Maps of medieval West African kingdoms(Interactive map), most of which Islamized
- Moroccan Saadi dynasty (16th - 17th century): increased rate of slave trade
Traditional Music of West Africa: features
- Pentatonic and triple meter
- Polyrhythmic
- call and response
- Examples:
- Soninke Gambare, another plucked lute with similar technique to guimbri, from eastern Senegal
- Polyrhythmic drumming from SE Ghana, featuring bells, rattles, and drums (Agbadza)
- Polyphonic drumming from northern Ghana, including large double headed drums and iron finger bells (Bamaya)
Traditional Spirituality of West Africa: features
- Distant Creator God
- Ancestors
- Spirits (animism)
- Examples:
- Brekete "cult" of Ghana. Spirit possession, polyrhythmic percussion
- Connection via jinn, authenticated by the Qur'an: creation of the Jinn, Surat al-Jinn
- Healing rituals (see IHI talk)
- Connection of such rituals to Sufism, with its focus on saint veneration, and their power of baraka (cf link of Cuban Santeria to Yoruba religion as well as Catholic saints)
Historical background
Islamic history
- Umayyads in Spain
- Berber and Arab empires of North Africa
- al-Murabitun (Almoravids)
- al-Muwahhidun (Almohads)
- Saadi dynasty
- West African history: general timeline; West African timelines (Western Sudan), empires of West Africa (BBC); Davidson on Caravans of Gold
Thursday (10b)
Gnawa continued....links to jazz and popular music in the West.
Zar.
Due
Read: Liminal Rites and Female Symbolism in the Egyptian Zar Possession Cult, by Richard Natvig, Numen, Vol. 35, Fasc. 1 (Jul., 1988), pp. 57-68
Listen/watch: traditional Egyptian zar music:
- Delta zar style, with dufuf and kawala (flute), very similar to dhikr (Abu el-Gheit ensemble, from Qalyubiya, just north of Cairo)
- Sudanese style, with Sudanese drums and tambur (large lyre)
- construction of the Sudanese tambur, and performance of the tambur (at Makan folklore centre, Cairo)
Then browse the following sites and videos produced by two folkloric centers in Cairo. Besides local folkloric performances their groups have traveled abroad on the world music circuit, and sometimes engaged in various musical fusions with musicians from Europe or North America - or elsewhere. (Some Egyptian Zar musicians told me they'd met Gnawa musicians in Montreal at a music festival!)
1. Makan:
2. El Mastaba
- Rango (xylophone-based zar)
- Rango tradition Rango video
- More rango: [6][7]
- The group toured and released a CD, Bride of the Zar
- Zar (Asyad El Zar: Masters of Zar) - tambur
- Zar in Egypt - overview
- Zar with Tambur (large bass size, similar to guimbri)
- Optional: This Guardian review
Also note presence of Zar in other parts of the world:
- Zar ritual in Ethiopia (some say Zar originated here)
- Zar Ritual in Iran (probably brought by Black slaves)
- Common also in Sudan (I believe this is an instance; also see other videos on this channel). Gerasimos Makris - The Zar Cult in Sudan; an anthropologist's viewHe speaks about the spirits, European, Muslim, and other.
Submit: one page on similarities and differences between Moroccan Gnawa and Egyptian Zar. Consider: the people, the ritual, the music - but also the ways this music has been folklorized, rendered "world music", or mixed with other genres. How, when, and where does the performance retain a spiritual significance, and why is that significance at other times and places eliminated? What are the reasons why the two traditions may be similar? Why are there differences?
Class
- Introduction to Zar
- Critical reading of the article by Natvig (discussing Zar in Egypt's Sharqiya Governorate). Note that his article is dated 1988, and the research was earlier still. The Zar has largely disappeared today - or else gone underground. Yet it is popular among dancers - and appears in many older Egyptian filmls.
- Iranian zar
- various scenes of zar: ritual, folkloric, dance...
- Egyptian-style Zar: very similar to dhikr; even same musicians. Note male musicians; female adepts and patients.
- Sudanese Zar in Egypt: The Tanbura[8][9][10]. The British Museum displayed this beautiful Sudanese tanbura, known locally as "kissar". Egypt [11]
- Rango documentary (CSL component by Mariem Oloroso, Music of the Arab World, fall 2014); Rango zar ceremony. More videos from the Rango website
- Zar in the global bellydance scene
- Folklorization (El Mastaba, Makan), world music presence, belly dance element...(use of ayub rhythm). How are these musics promoted for general consumption? Distortions, exaggerations? (Be critical!)
- Discussion: comparison of Gnawa and Zar; spirit/healing groups in Islam...
- Zar-Gnawa fusion in Cairo!