Examples of Islamicate music

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These musical forms drew upon Islamic (especially Sufi) performance (vocal timbre, pronunciation, interactive performance dynamics) and meanings (love, unity), and were shaped by Islamic institutions (kuttab, legal rulings), but were also absorbed into Islamic language performance.

At times it is difficult to determine the boundaries of "Islamic" and "Islamicate" sounds. Always Islam provides the spiritual, ethical, legal, and societal underpinnings for a civilization hospitable to the development of particular forms (texts, themes, styles) of music and singing -- while condemning others. The Islamicate as a whole (values, institutions, social relations)--informed by Islam (including its sounds)--shapes music in these regions; that music in turn shapes the sounds of Islam.


Compare the above to Sufi performance from various places, and the category of Inshad Sufi.