Difference between revisions of "Islamic performance genres"
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'''Localization within the Islamicate zone''' | '''Localization within the Islamicate zone''' | ||
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+ | ''Traditional localization'' | ||
In a sense all music is "popular" to some degree, but under this heading we may file types that aren't accepted as either entirely traditional, or entirely liturgical - they mix, to a greater or lesser degree, Islamic themes with contemporary features of music more generally - whether sonic (e.g. instruments, styles, sounds) or social (the ways the music is promoted and produced, the position of the artist...), in every location. | In a sense all music is "popular" to some degree, but under this heading we may file types that aren't accepted as either entirely traditional, or entirely liturgical - they mix, to a greater or lesser degree, Islamic themes with contemporary features of music more generally - whether sonic (e.g. instruments, styles, sounds) or social (the ways the music is promoted and produced, the position of the artist...), in every location. | ||
− | These are in some sense instances of "localization" - Islam rooted in specific locations through absorption of new sounds, and sometimes new practices and beliefs as well. But the local doesn't always stay that way; a localization in one place can easily move to another. And in this case the "local" is also the "modern". | + | These are in some sense instances of "localization" - Islam rooted in specific locations through absorption of new sounds, and sometimes new practices and beliefs as well. But the local doesn't always stay that way; a localization in one place can easily move to another, via media. And in this case the "local" is also the "modern". |
+ | |||
+ | ''Contemporary mediated localization'' | ||
Popular Islamic music can be divided into two types by performer identity and intention. Some performers are wholly devoted to religious performance, identifying as "Islamic performers" locally (e.g. "munshid" in Arabic), but bring contemporary standards of popular music production to bear on their work (usually they are studio-produced), often along with some stylistic mixing, e.g. complex arrangements, harmony, counterpoint. [[Nasheed]] (nashid, nasyid) is the common term for a more contemporary genre of inshad, sung religious poetry, influenced by popular music production standards, but developing out of traditional Arab inshad. | Popular Islamic music can be divided into two types by performer identity and intention. Some performers are wholly devoted to religious performance, identifying as "Islamic performers" locally (e.g. "munshid" in Arabic), but bring contemporary standards of popular music production to bear on their work (usually they are studio-produced), often along with some stylistic mixing, e.g. complex arrangements, harmony, counterpoint. [[Nasheed]] (nashid, nasyid) is the common term for a more contemporary genre of inshad, sung religious poetry, influenced by popular music production standards, but developing out of traditional Arab inshad. |
Revision as of 12:58, 17 November 2015
Islamic vocal performance traditions of Egypt : LANGUAGE PERFORMANCE IN ISLAM
short link: http://bit.ly/islamperf
Michael Frishkopf
In Egypt, the primary genres are: Tilawa, ibtihalat, adhan, ad`iyya, tawashih, dhikr, aghani diniyya, inshad dini, inshad sufi, nashid. But every part of the Muslim world has these too, or something similar.
Note that the semantic scope of each genre term is different, and (except for aghani diniyya) none of them overlaps with either musiqa ("music") or ghina' ("singing")- indeed to imply an overlap is somehow sacrilegious:
- musiqa: (a) theoretical-philosophical tradition (historical definition), or (b) melodic instrumental music, possibly combined with vocals (contemporary definition).
- ghina': singing (for entertainment or aesthetic pleasure)
Nevertheless, the religious genres almost always center on a sophisticated use of the maqamat (melodic modes)
Not only that, but
(a) because religious genres center on solo vocal performance (highlighting the text), often ametric, and
(b) because there is a preference for spontaneous expression of emotion in reaction to spiritual texts and contexts, and
(c) because in the case of the Qur'an there is also an aversion to any melodic composition, which could be considered an "association" (shirk) with God), therefore...
...vocal performance tends to feature melodic flexibility (~improvisation), developing the maqamat, and audience responses reminiscent of secular tarab (though that word may be rejected in favor of something more spiritual, e.g. nashwa ruhiyya, spiritual refreshment, or wajd, spiritual ecstasy).
Metered singing appears in corporate inshad dini (primarily in the Sufi orders, as a technique for the liturgical unification of the group), and in some religious songs (aghani diniyya) straddling the boundary of "singing" and "religion".
All genres may be categorized under what I call "Language Performance" (see Frishkopf 2013, Frishkopf 1999). Here are some examples:
Mainstream sounds of Islam
Qur'anic recitation (tilawa). The performer is called muqri' or qari'. This recurs everywhere, often in an Egyptian style; more recently Saudi styles have surged, but there are local versions too.
Call to prayer (adhan). The performer is called mu'adhdhin. Again, there is variety.
Supplications in prayer (ad`iyya). The performer is called da`i.
The dawn prayer rite (salat al-fajr) (a complex of genres)
One functional genre are the 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).
Inshad dini: traditional chanting/singing of religious poetry. This is a broad category, distinguished by the fact that its basis is poetry. The performer is called a munshid (and is often given the title "shaykh"). One frequently hears "madih" (praise) as an alternative term for "inshad dini", though "madih", properly understood, should refer to praise poetry. These words are Arabic, sometimes used outside the Arabic-speaking zone. Other Muslim societies use different terms for what is more or less the same thing, e.g. in South Asia: "qawwali" for inshad and "na`t" for "madih".
Islamic rituals and festivals often carry particular sounds, for instance: Hajj and Eid al-Adha.
- Sounds of Hajj:
- Sounds of Eid al-Adha prayer:
- Takbir al-Eid: performed before Eid prayers on the days of Eid (Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha) also: [1][2].
- The text of the Takbir
- Other soundscapes: At particular times of the day, week, or year, a number of sound sources converge on the listener, producing a rich and evocative soundscape.
Listen to a few examples of such Islamic soundscapes.
Sufi sounds
Sufism is the mystical dimension of Islam. While it is not always called thus in every cultural setting, one can generally observe a gradient from more to less experiential approaches to Islam, and religion generally. The experiential domain tends, for a variety of reasons, to include more music. This music varies greatly around the world, though many of the themes are constant.
The following links pertain primarily to my own research on Sufi music of Egypt:
Inshad sufi: part of a larger ceremony called hadra or dhikr
Five Sufi Hadras from my fieldwork
The weekly Saturday hadra at the saha of Sidi Ali Zayn al-Abidin (Cairo, Egypt, 1998)
Popular Islamic music (in the "Muslim world" and elsewhere...)
Localization within the Islamicate zone
Traditional localization
In a sense all music is "popular" to some degree, but under this heading we may file types that aren't accepted as either entirely traditional, or entirely liturgical - they mix, to a greater or lesser degree, Islamic themes with contemporary features of music more generally - whether sonic (e.g. instruments, styles, sounds) or social (the ways the music is promoted and produced, the position of the artist...), in every location.
These are in some sense instances of "localization" - Islam rooted in specific locations through absorption of new sounds, and sometimes new practices and beliefs as well. But the local doesn't always stay that way; a localization in one place can easily move to another, via media. And in this case the "local" is also the "modern".
Contemporary mediated localization
Popular Islamic music can be divided into two types by performer identity and intention. Some performers are wholly devoted to religious performance, identifying as "Islamic performers" locally (e.g. "munshid" in Arabic), but bring contemporary standards of popular music production to bear on their work (usually they are studio-produced), often along with some stylistic mixing, e.g. complex arrangements, harmony, counterpoint. Nasheed (nashid, nasyid) is the common term for a more contemporary genre of inshad, sung religious poetry, influenced by popular music production standards, but developing out of traditional Arab inshad.
Popular Islamic nashid occurs in a variety of languages e.g.
- Yusef Islam
- Sami Yusef
- Zain Bhikha (children's song)
- Mishary Rashid
4shabab, a music video TV channel carrying Islamic themes, including nasheed. Watch on YouTube, e.g. [3]
While the origins of nasheed are usually traced to Arabic sources, in fact there's a wide variety of styles, drawing on local Islamic and musical traditions. Much of this material is closely linked to Sufi groups, though floating free of Sufi social structures (tariqas) to mix with the broader soundscapes of Islam and popular music in any particular place. Thus in northern Ghana and Nigeria is a style called "akwashi rawa", associated with the Tijaniyya Sufi order, but accepted as a popular style of music outside any Sufi or even specifically religious context.
The work of others is closer to contemporary popular music, often incorporating melodic instruments, and featuring contemporary arrangements, and differing primarily in the texts used, along with the intentions with which they are delivered, and sometimes the context (e.g. a performance for a Muslim student group will carry a particular Islamic meaning, even if it takes place in an ordinary concert hall).
Often artists performing in these veins do not portray themselves as carrying a primarily Islamic identity, though sometimes they do. Usually they bring together a range of styles (including Islamic) and typically do not perform in religious contexts, such as mosques or Sufi hadras. They tend to be heard through the media, or in concert.
Unlike nasheed proper, such music builds in part or in whole upon contemporary non-religious genres, whether local or western-- from older Arab art music to hip hop and neo-soul to folk, metal and even country -- or upon other more localized genres. The boundaries are somewhat arbitrary, but one can say that generally speaking nasheed is an extension of traditional inshad genres (e.g. ibtihalat, or Sufi dhikr), whereas the newer popular genres move beyond those into other musical domains.
In the Arab world, aghani diniyya, literally "religious songs", are performed by a secular artist, or by a munshid in a secular setting. In the past such songs adopted a tarab (traditional emotional) musical style representative of elevated art music in the region.
Islamic popular music is a global phenomenon today. Popular performers include the British Iranian-Azeri Sami Yusuf. In one album (My Umma) he scrupulously avoided use of musical instruments, but later made use of them as in this clip, though not without invoking criticism. In his song My Umma he deploys music and rich harmonization; in You Came to Me he deliberately makes use of several languages, emphasizing unity of the Muslim Ummah (community). Sami has recently sought to move to a more "universal" musical category, beyond the limitations of Islamic pop; he calls it spiritique.
Other performers of Islamic popular music include Zain Bhikha from South Africa, Mesut Kurtis from Macedonia (here he performs a contemporary version of the Burda), the Indonesian Haddad Alwi and the phenomenal Malaysian boy band, Raihan, performing what is locally called "nasyid". Some southeast Asian nasyid contains elements of local music, e.g. gongs.
Islamic Western genres: localizing to the global
Islamic versions of Western popular music genres have been developed by Muslims living in the West, born in the West of Muslim heritage, or converts. They often use western musical genres (albeit inflected with Islamic traditions concerning vocal timbre or use of instruments) to support Islamic texts and intentions. Examples include Islamic performance poetry and hip-hop (Amir Sulayman, who recently performed poetry at the University of Alberta and also raps).
In this case the "localization" of Islamic content consist of absorbing a "global" sonic form, since Western genres -- from rock to metal, soul to hiphop, even country -- are typically found world-wide. And unlike the sound of West African Islam, say, such genres continue to exist in a milieu that is predominantly non-Muslim. In other words, what is new here is that "localization" is happening outside the Islamicate zone.
Thus there is Islamic punk rock (Taqwacore) (e.g. the Kominas, Islamic folk-rock (Dawud Wharnsby Ali, and of course Yusuf Islam, aka Cat Stevens), even Islamic country (Karim Salama) (Buysse, 2007, Swedenburg, 2002, Miyakawa, 2005, Abdul Khabeer, 2007). Many of these musics tend to engage social issues afflicting diasporic Muslim communities, e.g. racism and drug use, addressing non-Muslims as well.
What happens to the Islamic content when the "sounds of Islam" are "localized" to global forms originating outside the Islamic zone? A greater engagement with issues of the diaspora? A greater proselytizing effect? Or greater marginality to the mainstream?
Here are some additional links:
- Taqwacore (Islamic punk). "Taqwacore", or Islamic punk, emerged with life imitating art: the style was defined in a novel by Muslim convert Michael Muhammad Knight, before emerging in practice. Watch documentary film here.
- Heavy metal Islam
- documentary on Islam and hip hop
- Busta Rhymes, hip hop
- Snoop Dog
- Kareem Salama and country
A fascinating underground trend is the relation of Islam - especially five percenter Islam (Nation of Gods and Earths) - to hip hop...