Music and the Islam factor

From CCE wiki archived
Revision as of 12:02, 19 September 2006 by Michaelf (talk | contribs)
(diff) ?Older revision | view current revision (diff) | Newer revision? (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Islamic influence upon Islamicate music

  • Source: pre-Islamic Arabian features that remained at core of Islamic culture
    • Centrality of Arabic language and verbal arts, especially poetry
    • Linguistic form: the qasida (monorhyme, monometer)
    • Genres of love (nasib), praise (madih), description, satire (hija')
    • Courtesan tradition: the qayna
  • Expansion: powered by Islamic ideology
  • Assimilation: openness to learning and multiculturalism (especially Persian arts and sciences)
  • Globalization, synergy: Islam provides cultural "lingua franca"
  • Accumulation of financial capital
    • Opulent courts (Madina, Damascus, Baghdad, Cordoba, Granada...)
    • Leisure class
    • Patronage of music and singing
    • Professional class of musicians
  • Accumulation of intellectual/artistic capital
    • Bayt al-Hikma
    • Music theory as philosophy
    • Development of musical arts
  • Islamic content
    • Rituals
    • Language-centrality
    • Ethical conditions - Sharia
      • Qur'an
      • Sunna (Hadith)
    • Mystical currents (Sufism)
      • "tazkiyat al-nafs, tarqiyat al-ruh" (taming the self; raising the spirit or soul)
      • Batin > Zahir (Haqiqa > Sharia) (flexibility)
      • Experiential relation to God
      • Absorption of local traditions
      • Aesthetic as means to spirituality, expression of spirituality
      • Use of music/poetry to express/attain spiritual state (ecstasy, union, annihilation...)