Difference between revisions of "Islamic performance genres"

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All genres may be categorized under what I call "Language Performance" (see [http://www.fwalive.ualberta.ca/~michaelf/Concept_of_LP.pdf Frishkopf 2013], [http://www.fwalive.ualberta.ca/~michaelf/Frishkopf_dissertation Frishkopf 1999]).  Here are some examples:
 
All genres may be categorized under what I call "Language Performance" (see [http://www.fwalive.ualberta.ca/~michaelf/Concept_of_LP.pdf Frishkopf 2013], [http://www.fwalive.ualberta.ca/~michaelf/Frishkopf_dissertation Frishkopf 1999]).  Here are some examples:
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= Mainstream sounds of Islam =
  
 
[[Qur'anic recitation (tilawa)]]
 
[[Qur'anic recitation (tilawa)]]
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[[Inshad dini]]: religious chanting of poetry generally
 
[[Inshad dini]]: religious chanting of poetry generally
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* Sounds of Hajj:
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** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hPb5GDbP1I0 Talbiya]
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** [http://www.duas.com/dua/371/the-talbiyah-chant-of-hajj-and-umrah The text of the Talbiya]
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* Sounds of Eid prayer:
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** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0zdZoyoch_A Takbir al-Eid]:  performed before Eid prayers on the days of Eid (Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha) also:  [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1xufhr-e_U][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xlr8SelQtPo].
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** [http://www.islamawareness.net/Eid/takbeers.html The text of the Takbir]
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= Sufi sounds =
  
 
[[Inshad sufi]]:  part of a larger ceremony called ''hadra'' or ''dhikr''
 
[[Inshad sufi]]:  part of a larger ceremony called ''hadra'' or ''dhikr''
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[https://vimeo.com/20409830 Five Sufi Hadras] from my fieldwork
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[https://vimeo.com/20411385 The weekly Saturday hadra at the saha of Sidi Ali Zayn al-Abidin (Cairo, Egypt, 1998)]
  
 
[[Aghani diniyya]]:  religious songs, usually performed by secular artists
 
[[Aghani diniyya]]:  religious songs, usually performed by secular artists

Revision as of 12:12, 24 September 2015

Islamic vocal performance traditions of Egypt : LANGUAGE PERFORMANCE IN ISLAM

Tilawa, ibtihalat, adhan, ad`iyya, tawashih, dhikr, aghani diniyya, inshad dini, inshad sufi

Michael Frishkopf

short link: http://bit.ly/islamperf


Note that the semantic scope of each of these words is different, and (except for aghani diniyya) none of them overlaps with either musiqa or ghina' - 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.

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)

Call to prayer (adhan)

Supplications in prayer (ad`iyya)

Sung supplications (ibtihalat)

The dawn prayer rite (salat al-fajr)

Ramadan: the pre-dawn misahharati (recorded 20 July 2015 in Cairo)

Inshad dini: religious chanting of poetry generally


Sufi sounds

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)

Aghani diniyya: religious songs, usually performed by secular artists



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.