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Minnesota Studies in

Early Modern History


Series Editor:
Edward L. Farmer
University of Minnesota

Editorial Board:
Bentley
The Arab Lands in the
lerry H. William D. Phillips, |r.
University of Hawaii University of Minnesota

Thomas A. Brady
University of Califurnia, Berkeley
Mansur Sefatgol
University of Tehran
Ottoman Era
Timothy Brook |ames D. Tracy
University of British Columbia University of Minnesota

Luca Codignola f osefi na Zor aida Visquez

Universitd di Genova El Colegio de Mdxico

Felipe Ferndndez-Armesto Ann Waltner


[Jniversity of Notre Dame University of Minnesota

Anthony Grafton Wang Gungwu


Princeton (lniversity National University of Singapore
Edited by
Tamar Herzog John E. Wills, |r. |ane Hathaway
Stanford University University of Southern Califurnia

Carla Rahn Phillips


University of Minnesota Essays in Honor oJ ProJessor Caesar Farab

Titles in Series
l. calvin B. Kendall, oliver Nicholson, william D. Phillips, ]r., and Mar-
guerite Christianity from Late Antiquity to the
Ragnow, eds., Conversion to
Modern Age: Considering the Process in Europe, Asia, and the Americas
2.lane Hathaway, ed., The Arab Lands in the Ottoman Era

nEME
11

Ottoman Musical
ForffrS:
The Samat, Basbraf and Longa in the
Arab Vorld and Beyond
Koy Hardy Campbell

uring the Ottoman period, musical influences from Persia,


Anatolia, the Balkans, and the Arab world wove themselves
into a rich and varied musical tapestry. The muezzin's
adhan, or call to prayer, rang in tiny villages and cosmopolitan
cities. Sufis from the Mevlevi and Bektashi orders used music to
reach spiritual transformation. Folk musicians played for weddings.
Churches and synagogues borrowed from the music around them to
add to their liturgical music. Court musicians composed and played
sophisticated suites of vocal and instrumental pieces.
Being part of this musical mix, musicians in the Arab world
adopted three Ottoman instrumental genres: the saz semo'1, the
pe;rev, and the longa. By the end of the nineteenth century, Arab
musicians were playing them in their own style, and were com-
posing new pieces in these forms, which they pronounced samdct,
bashraf, and longa. Today, Arab musicians still study and play hun-
dreds of compositions in these forms. They play older, Turkish-
composed pieces from the Ottoman period and selections composed
by Arabs in the twentieth century, as well as newer, more innova-
tive pieces from the twenty-first century. Some ring with a simple,
pristine clarity. Others are so complex that they require multiple
252 _ THE ARAB LANDS TN THE oTToMAN ERA tAL FoRv5 <r 253

repetitions and serious study to understand fully and appreciate. practice of the sama(levolved, but in a different way from those of
Still others are full of startling innovations. the bashraf. The earliest pieces known from the seventeenth cen-
cornpositions in these forms are still played today, having taken tury were primarily in a 614 or 618 rhythm, but by the end of the
on an additional relevance to new generations of students of Arab nineteenth century, the predominant rhythm had shifted to the l0/8
'-and ottoman music. Their very structures are seen as tools with rhythm known in Turkish as al.csak semd'f.a
which to teach the essence of Middle Eastern music: the theory and
practice of maqam, improvisation, and the art of melodic compo- . EXTENSIVE MUSICAL INTERACTION
sition.
It was natural that musicians in the Arab lands of the Ottoman
Empire learned and performed the instrumental compositions of
THE FORMS DEFINED central Ottoman composers, given the extensive contacts between
The sama't, bashraf, and longa are all built in the form of a rondo, Arabs and Turks in general during the centuries of Ottoman rule.
i.e., they have a central musical theme, known as the tasltm, which There were many musical touch points between the two cultures.
is a ritornello that is repeated several times. Introducing each piece The Mevlevi Sufis of Aleppo, for example, preserved and performed
and woven among the repetitions of the tasltm are four sections the Ottoman forms in their rituals. Several influential Arab com-
called khanat (singular, khana). Each khana explores the maqdm posers studied with the Sufis in Aleppo, including 'Umar al-Batsh
(plural, maqamat), that is, the mode or scale, in which the piece is (1885-1950) and Shaykh'Ali al-Darwish (1872-1952).s In Cairo and
composed. Each of these forms has a rhythm that distinguishes it other Ottoman Arab cities, musicians were organized in guilds and
from the others. trained future musicians in an apprentice-style system.6 Further,
Many bashraf compositions are documented in the first writ- Arab and Turkish musicians performed for each other at court in
ten collections of music in the central ottoman lands by ,Ali Ufki Cairo and Istanbul.T
Bey in 1650 and Dimitrie cantemir in 1700.' with its stately 4/4- The extent of this musical interchange is most obvious in that
based rhythms, the bashraf became an integral part of ottoman both Arab and Turkish music traditions are based on the principles
musical life. It was played in the courtly vocalfa;/, or composition; and practice of maqdmdt, a comprehensive aesthetic of musical
in the purely instrumentalfasl; by the mehter (military band); in modes or scales that developed over the centuries. These maqdmdt
the synagogues, which used sung bashraf melodies with Hebrew include microtones, notes that fall between the half-steps familiar
texts; and in the Mevlevi ritual known as ayin.2 over the centuries, to western music. In this musical aesthetic, songs and compositions
its rhythmic cycles grew longer, allowing its melodic lines to take are performed without underlying harmony except for droning on
on greate r density. By the close of the ottoman era, the bashraf s the tonic, fourth, or fifth note of the maqam. Players have the free-
rhythmic cycles had stretched to include 20/4,28/4,3214 and even dom to add ornamentation, to delay notes slightly, and to inter-
156/4.1 pret a piece differently, giving every performance a unique, living
The longa, a secular genre said to have originated in the Bal- quality. Lastly and most distinctively, singers and instrumentalists
kans as a dance form, typically has a lively 214 rhythm. The sama(t improvise, always within the aesthetics of the maqam.
form evolved from Sufi ritual, eventually finding its way into the
secular music of the ottoman court and the ensembles of Egypt
and the Levant. over the centuries, the rhythm and compositional
7,5 4 r-- THE ARAB LANDS rN THE orroMAN ERA CAL FoRMs.==:r 255

ARAB MUSICAL STYLE In addition to perusing secondary scholarly works on Arab and
we know from early recordings and western-style musical nota- Ottoman music for answers to these questions, I discussed these
tion that by the early twentieth century, Arab musicians had altered issues with composers and scholars who currently perform and
these ottoman forms to their own tastes. Stylistically, Arab musi- study these instrumental forms. I conducted interviews with eight
cians tend to play the maqamat differently from Turks. They play composers in New England during August and September 2005.
microtonal intervals, such as E half-flat, with less subtlety, so that My subjects were Alan Shavarsh Bardezbanian, Dr. Robert Laba-
the distance between E flat and E half-flat might be much larger ree, Dr. Ali Jihad Racy, Charbel Rouhana, Kareem Roustom, Dr.
than when a classical Turkish musician plays the same note, depend- Mehmet $anhkol, Simon Shaheen, and Gregory White. Some are
ing on the maqan within which it is played. These differences are scholar-composers; others are professional musicians with commer-
most striking in certain maqamat, such as rast and slkah. More cial recordings. One, a Ph.D. candidate in rnedieval Middle Eastern
educated and experienced Arab musicians alter some of the writ- literature at Harvard, had just composed his first samdcl.to
ten microtonal pitches slightly to reflect the subtlety of the Turk- There are several reasons why the Ottoman musical forms sur-
ish interpretation.s vived in the Arab world. First, they were three of only a handful of
Arab ensembles also interpret musical phrasing differently, add- purely instrumental genres being played in Egypt and the Levant
ing dramatic emphasis where a Turkish ensemble might hold back. at the close of the Ottoman era. Second, during the twentieth cen-
Arab ensembles also place more emphasis on rhythm, resulting in tury, they were safely marginalized while mainstream Arab com-
a heavier-sounding percussion line than one would hear in a Turk- posers and musicians experimented with new forms and foreign
ish ensemble performance. on an individual level, Arab violinists, influences. Even though they were on the sidelines, musicians still
qanun (Middle Eastern zither) players, and,ud players perform in played these forms because they presented challenges to music stu-
a more virtuosic manner that some Turks dismiss as showy.e Arab dents, performers, and composers. Further, admired compositions
musicians like to make maximum use of ornamentation and add in these genres are believed to encapsulate the knowledge and aes-
runs and even glissandos to a phrase when a classical Turkish con- thetics of the complex maqdm system on which Middle Eastern
noisseur would prefer a more subtle expression. It should be noted music is based. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, musicians
that while some Turkish classical musicians deride the Arab style, who want to learn to improvise use these pieces to help them learn
that Arab style has had a great influence on the Turkish musical how to play a credible improvisation, or taqstm. The art of taqslm
mainstream in the twentieth century. is one of the fundamental elements of Middle Eastern music and
Aside from these stylistic modifications, how did Arab musi- one of the most difficult things to learn. A good sama't or bashraf
cians change these forms over the twentieth century? why did shows musicians the path to taqstm.
every major twentieth-century Arab composer publish and/or
record at least one sama't, bashraf, or longa even though these PAUCITY OF PURETY INSTRUMENTAL PIECES
rarely achieved any popularity? why are these ottoman musical There are relatively few purely instrumental genres from the Otto-
forms still "in play" in performance in the Arab world and beyond? man period that survive on paper notation and in early recordings
And finally, what do these forms have to offer musicians in the in Egypt and the Levant. Only two other instrumental genres were
twenty-first century? being played at the time: the very short dulAb and the Egyptian
tahmlla. Musicians in the Persian, or Arabian, Gulf, North Africa,
256 _ THE ARAB LANDS IN THE oTToMAN ERA orroMAN MUsIcAL FoRv^s 257
-

and Mesopotamia have their own indigenous instrumental musi- THE BASIIRAF: SIMPLIFIED RHYTHMS
cal forms that they weave into musical suites combining vocal Arab musicians used the bashraf as an introductory piece to set
and instrumental pieces. Musicians in the Levant and Egypt, how- the stage for the maqam of the wa;la. In Sufi music, this form has
ever, use these Ottoman forms in their musical suite known as the also retained its place in the Mevlevi ritual in Syria. Many pieces
wasla. by Ottoman composers in this genre are still popular with Arab
Throughout the Arab world, there are relatively few genres of musicians today, such as the bashraf in the maqdm of faraltfaza
purely instrumental music because vocal music has always been by Isma.il Hakkr Bey (1865-1927), along with other basharif by
more popular with audiences. Songs contain emotionally powerful (Astm Bey, Neyzen Yusuf Pasha, Tan-
Turkish composers Giriftzen
lyrics that ultimately bring a musical performance to its emotional buri Osman Bey, and the Armenian Kemani Tatyos Efendi. Arab
peak. As a result, songs always take center stage. The Arabs call composers also added a few, but not many, basharif of their own.
purely instrumental musi c al-musfqa al-;amita, "silent music". ln Shaykh'Ali Darwish wrote a bashraf in l.tijazkar. Composer, edu-
addition, composers fbcus more on vocal music because singers are cator and'ud master George Farah of Lebanon composed a bashraf
the most acclaimed artists and because writing music for complex in rast. Contemporary Lebanese composer Marcel Khalife (b. 1950)
poetry is a big challenge. As a result, instrumental pieces have nor- has composed several basharif.t2
mally been used as preludes, interludes, or postludes to the more Over the course of the twentieth century, Arab musicians and
important vocal works. composers gradually replaced the longer rhythmic cycles used by
the Ottomans, such as 2814 and 3214, with 414. Shaykh 'Ali Dar-
THE MARGIN OF SAFETY wish's bashraf in ftijazkar, which appeared at the close of the Otto-
As the twentieth century unfolded, these forms survived in the Arab man era, was composed in3214. But by mid-century, collections of
world but became marginalized. The Arab musical mainstream in sheet music that included older basharifby Turkish composers such
the twentieth century was focused on music in new forms for newer, as Isma'il Hakkr Bey and Tanburi Osman Bey were all notated in
larger audiences. Leading composers rose to great fame by compos- 414 whereas the Turkish notation of the same pieces reflects lon-
ing in the form of the long song or poem (qa;rda) for large orches- ger rhythmic cycles. Veteran classical Arab percussionist Michel
tral performances with famous vocalists such as umm Kulthum, Merhej confirmed that during his career, which spanned the mid-
Asmahan, and 'Abd al-Halim Hafiz. Musical theater and film also dle and late twentieth century, Arab musicians rarely played any-
called for new forms of instrumental and vocal music. As a result, thing besides 414 for a bashraf unless it were specifically written
the longa, the bashraf, and the samd(l were relegated to the con- out in a longer cycle. He noted, however, that he added rhythmic
servatory, the salons of the connoisseurs, and the composers' stu- accents called for in the melody, perhaps a remnant of the original
dios. Purists played the old repertoire. others wrote new pieces in Ottoman rhythmic cycle.r3 This trend may also be found in Turkey
the old genres. In this w&y, the forms were preserved even while among percussionists outside the conservatories, since Dr. Robert
mainstream Arab musical life constantly experimented with western Labaree believes that many Turks also "have lost touch with a lot
influences and new forms.rr Even so, as these forms were relegated of the old u;uls [rhythms]."r4
to the safe sidelines, each had a slightly different fate in the Arab
world as the decades of the twentieth century progressed.
25 8 THE ARAB LANDs rN THE orroMAN ERA OTTOMAN MUSICAL FORtt'tS < 259
-

THE IONGA: FASTER IS BETTER percussion line, in addition, a samd(iplayed by an Arab ensemble
with its Balkan-influenced lively flourishes, the fast-paced longa takes on Sweep and grandeur. Early on, Egyptian performers added
has always been popular with Arab musicians. Several longas, such taqaslm between Some of the sections of the sama'l,'u a practice
as the longa nahdwand (nihavend) by Tanburi Cemil Bey (1871- that continues today.
l916) and the longa shahnaz by Edhem Efendi, are played in all Several samac tyaf by Ottoman composers are still popular with
kinds of musical settings, from conservatory recitals to nightclubs. Arab musicians. The Sama't RAst by Tatyos is considered by many
Arabs have not altered the structure of the longa although they "to be one of the finest ever written. Other beloved Turkish-com-
sometimes add rhythmic taqasim (improvisations played over a per- posed sama'tyat are three pieces by Tanburi Cemil Bey in the
cussion line) in-between some of the sections. The Arab musical maqamat of sha!! (or shadd)'araban,faral.tfaza, and multayyar; the
style is highlighted in this form since Arab musicians can demon- nahdwand by Neyzen Yusuf Pasha, and the samdrl in the maqam
strate their technical prowess and virtuosity with nothing held back. of suzidil by Sedat Oztoprak. The humble, anonymously-composed
Interestingly, Arab and Turkish musicians agree that the faster one Samdc t Bayati Thaqrt was so commonplace at one point during the
plays a longa, the better. twentieth century in the Arab world that it became known as the
We have many more longas by twentieth-century Arab compos- Barbers' Samd(i, for it was being played even in the barbershops.
ers than basharif. Early examples are by Shaykh (Ali Darwish in This sama(l demonstrates four major moqamAt in a clear, almost
Jarahfaza, Jamil 'Uwais in hijazkar, and 'Abd al-Rahman Jabuqji instructive way. It was the first sama't that the author of this arti-
rn rast. One of the most popular longas of the twentieth century is cle learned to play on the'ud, and it was also one of the first that
also in the maqam of faraftfaza. Nearly every student of Arab music Dr. Ali Jihad Racy remembers hearing as a nine-year-old boy in
studies this piece, and it is a popular item on concert programs. Lebanon.rT
This longa was penned by a mainstream Egyptian composer of the Of the three Ottoman forms discussed here, the samatf appears
twentieth century, Riyad al-Sunbati (1906-81). He is best known to have intrigued Arab composers the most. We can deduce this
for his big orchestra compositions, such as Rubd,tyat al-Khayyam from the large number of published and recorded compositions in
and al-A7lal (The ruins), which Umm Kulthum sang. Interestingly, this genre. One of the earliest Arab-composed samactyat, by the
his longa is the only instrumental ottoman-form piece we have Egyptian composer Ibrahim al-(Aryan (1850-1920), the maqdm of
composed by him. He left no bashraf or samdcl-. Contemporary bayati, is considered an excellent example of an Arab-style sama't-
Arab composers also try their hand at the longa. Marcel Khalife Several Arab composers of the late Ottoman Empire tried their
has published one, Dr. Jihad Racy has written three, and George hands at this genre, and the resulting compositions are among the
Farah (b. l9l3) has one.r5 favorites of modern-day Arab musicians, such as the Nawa Athar
by Jamil 'Uwais.
THE SAMA( I:MAIESTIC SWEEP Even mainstream twentieth-century composers left works in the
Arab musicians adapted the instrumental sama(l- to their taste by samd(r genre. Egypt's Muhammad'Abd al-Wahhab published two
(ud master Muhammad al-Qasabji com-
playing the l0/8 rhythm as a slow and stately waltz with some sama( tyat. Composer and
extra beats. Like the longa, this form works well with Arab musi- posed one.r8 Those outside of the mainstream, such as professional
cians' frequent preference to add flourishes and to play with a more musicians with classical tastes or conservatory instructors, such
obvious virtuosity than their Turkish counterparts. With a heavier as George Farah and George Michel, composed many samac lydt
260 : THE ARAB LANDs IN THE oTToMAN ERA cAL FoRMs:261

that they taught to their students and performed for their own audi- rhythm. There is a majestic thing about the sama( l.
ences. There is also something that can be very spiritual and
very calming because you have this really lush met-
ric pattern.... The sama'l really requires compositional
I asked several composers why ,nI rn""ght Arab musicians wrote
skill, thought, and planning. It requires real soul-search-
and performed more samd( tyal than works in other genres.
ing because the whole form is about how an individual
Dr. Ali Jihad Racy of UCLA, who has composed several unfolds a maqam....
samd(lyat and three longas but no basharrt gave his view:
.
Alan Shavarsh Bardezbanian (d. 2006), an Armenian-American
The meter is accessible, and it's easier to get inspired
composer who wrote more than thirty-five samdcfydt, far more
and catch a measure from the muse with a l0/8 beat, and
than his output in the other two genres combined, enjoyed compos-
then build a whole composition on it. But if you get a
ing the samdcf the most.
muse sense in a four-note motif flike the bashraJf you
may have to expand it to make it more of a melody. You have to use the l0/8. You have to use the maqdm
correctly. You have to be able to stretch the time, and
According to Palestinian 'ud master and composer Simon Sha- you have to keep it melodic. Because it's such a chal-
heen, lenge, and it's such an intellectual process along with
I guess the sama(i is the middle ground between the the creative process, I think it's the most exciting of the
bashraf and the longa. The bashraf is stately; it's very forms.
slow. It requires longer, extended breath in playing while
First-time sama'l composer Gregory White talked about the
the longa, on the other hand, is faster and requires more
challenge of his experience.
technical ability. So the sama(f is kind of in-between,
and it has this beautiful l0/8, yet it has this dance-form I was surprised how short forty beats is to fit a given
style. It lends itself. It's not too slow; it's not too fast. amount of material into one of the sections. When you're
As a prelude for a wa;la, for example, I think it creates playing la sama'fl, it seems so endless and long, so I
a beautiful selection.... always had the impression that it has a lot of space in it.
But when I composed it, I was struck at how little space
Kareem Roustom, a composer now in his thirties, recently per- you really have as a composer.
formed his second sama'r in nahawand at the Kennedy Center in
Washington, D.C. He talked about choosing to compose a samdcf
for the occasion. MODERN INNOVATIONS
In the late twentieth century, many modern composers stretched
I wanted to present the finest aspect of art music. To
the limits of these forms. Iraqi cud maestro Munir Bashir (1930-97)
me, the sama'f represents that, of Arab-Ottoman and
composed a samacl in l.tijazkar that eliminated the first khana
Arab art music. I'm not crazy about the idea of a bashraf
entirely. Simon Shaheen's samactyat include complex and daring
yet. I don't know why it doesn't attract me as much.
maqam modulations. Marcel Khalife of Lebanon adds harmony to
I haven't composed a longa. I'm not a big fan of the
26? :' THE ARAB LANDs IN THE oTToMAN ERA rAL Fonus '--r 263

his basharif. Charbel Rouhana also likes to use harmony, and has tion, scholars and educators see intrinsic value in them. They cite
introduced accordion and bass to his compositions. Kareem Rous- the unique combination of form and substance as an accessible
tom has notated places in his sama(l-scores where performers must gateway to efficient learning, better performance, improvisation,
improvise. Alan Bardezbanian has written a longa with five khanat. and composition, all within the maqan system.
It should be noted that these innovative trends are also found among
leading Turkish composers of the contemporary period, such as
CAPSULES OF MAQAM KNOWLEDGE
Cinugen Tanrrkorur.
A good bashraf or samaci (and, to a lesser extent, a good longa)
Many young Arab composers are abandoning the old Ottoman
reflects the composer's understanding and inventiveness not only
forms. Charbel Rouhana teaches 'ud at the Lebanese National Con-
within the structure of the form but within the aesthetic taste of
servatory and the Holy Spirit University of Kaslik in Jounieh, Leb-
the maqan. Most importantly, it should capture the essence, soul,
anon.
and spirit of the maqam. It should also illustrate artful phrases that
For the last fifteen years, students are interested more work within the aesthetic of the mode, emphasizing the parts of the
in free composition, not in sama't, bashraf, or longa.If maqam that are considered the most beautiful. As the piece devel-
they compose, they compose something free, and not in ops, it should also illustrate good modulation intb neighboring or
a form. They are more interested in composing songs related maqamdt Finally, these pieces should roughly follow the
and modern music. correct sayir,zo or the flow in which a good musician should impro-
vise in that maqam.zl
We have many choices. But the most important thing is
Simon Shaheen believes that the old strophic songs, the Arab
to always have new ideas in composition and to choose
muwashshal.tat, also offer a rich source for the study of maqam to
to compose instrumental pieces, and to take care of
those who have access to archival recordings and notation. Shaheen
the traditional instruments like the ([td and the qanun.
uses passages from muwashshahat when he teache s maqam theory
Maybe this is the way to deal with old forms: not to
at the Arabic Music Retreat at Mount Holyoke College.
keep them as they are. Maybe I'll [compose one] and
add an introduction, some taqdslm inside, then a finale The Arabic vocal repertoire has rhythmic richness that
or a song. is so diverse and so deep. You have all these modula-
tions there on a deeper level that I don't think the samqcl
In his recent composition "Forward," Rouhana demonstrates this
can get close to.... These pieces are based on three mod-
idea. He weaves new themes around the tasltm of the famous samd( t
ulations, maximum four. Capturing the maqam is based
by tbrahim al-'Aryan. After an original introduction in l0/8, "For-
on sticking to the maqam itself as much as possible and
ward" moves into a jazz-llke section and then experiments with
not modulating too much. If you modulate, you do minor
electronic vocal music before returning to repeat the tasltm at the
modulations to related maqamat that are very close to it,
end.re
that are within the essence of the maqdm.
While they may not be required to compose in these forms,
Arab music students are still required to study them, and they still For instrumentalists who cannot find pieces from the old song
perform them at recitals. Even as composers continue to work with repertoire, the bashraf, samatl, and longa are a key to understand-
these forms with varying degrees of enthusiasm and experimenta- ing the maqdm and its aesthetic.
2.64 THE ARAB LANDs IN THE orroMAN ERA
- cAL Fonus :265

BRIDGE TO TAQS'M Dr. Robert Labaree, who is particularly interested in the prac-
Arab musicians and singers are expected to be able to improvise tice of composition and performance within the maqam system,
in a given maqam. In order to learn to improvise, they study.and believes the rondo format is persistent because it allows for effi-
analyze other improvisations. They also study instrumental works cient composition and gives performers leeway to add expression
that illustrate the sayir of the maqam, as well as aesthetically pleas- to every performance.
ing modulations.
. It puts a tool in your hand for being able to create for a
Bardezbanian elaborates:
situation. It is a form that is really concise and efficient
This is how you learn maqams! you learn it through the and has been honed down over the years. Essentially it's
bashraf and the sama,l and you apply itto taqsrm.Two those kind [sic] of refrained forms, which are the same
or three nights a week I'm reading scores, just so I can kind of things you find in song forms. They seem to be
analyze the maqans. That's how you learn it, to me, really well matched to a human being with maqam and
through the sama.l-s and the bashrafs. u;ul frhythm] in his hand.... They falso] put in the per-
former's hands, within his control, the power to really
Dr. Robert Labaree confirms this: get the expression.
I was told the classic statement is, "If you want to learn
how to do taqsrm, you have to learn ten pieces in that SIMPTE NOTATION INCREASES EXPRESSIVE OPTIONS
maqdm." The other side of it is, "you can't do any of
The Ottoman and later Arab works in the forms of sama'r, bashraf,
those pieces if you don't know taqsfm!" That combina- and longa are usually notated very simply, with just a single mel-
tion shows you that these two are interlocked.
ody line. As a consequence, a typical composition fits on one or
two sheets of paper even though it might take fifteen minutes to
THE COMPACT RONDO STRUCTURE perform. This simplicity allows individual students to learn a piece
as a solo work, and to layer on ornamentation and dynamics when
Dr. Ali Jihad Racy believes that the rondo structure of these old
working with a teacher or by experimenting alone. Small ensem-
forms lends itself well to expressing the maqam as a composer.
bles and large orchestras can read through and learn the composi-
The rondo structure allows you to apply your whole tion more easily since they are playing it in unison. Once a group
modal sense in terms of modulating from the refrain learns the basic melody, ensemble members and large orchestra
to the other sections. So really, it's almost like if you're conductors can experiment by adding drones, layering on orna-
not going to play a taqstm from a certain mode, play the mentation, developing "call and response" among instruments,
sama ci. It gives you the facility, the accessibility of the and trading solos. This means that the simple notation, in combi-
meter, and the verses through which you can express nation with the rondo format, gives performers and arrangers great
your maqam and modulate. It becomes a great teaching freedom of interpretation. It also means that each performance of
device, and aesthetically it becomes very relevant to the one of the old forms will differ from the next. In a sense, then, the
whole modal sense. simple notation of the forms engenders expressiveness, heteroph-
ony, and the idea of a living performance, all central elements of
the musical tradition.
266 THE ARAB LANDs rN THE orroMAN ERA IAL FORtr.tS
- -= 267

TOOLS FOR THE FUTURE ning to become more attuned to the ideas of maqamat and Middle
Far beyond the lands of the ottoman Empire, students, musicians, Eastern rhythms.
and scholars are taking an appreciative look at these forms, whether This raises questions about the future of the Ottoman instru-
they are playing them in the Turkish or in the Arab style. In the mental forms. Will musicians in the Middle East abandon these
united States, Middle Eastern music ensembles have been estab- maqam-laden gems? Will they continue to be marginalized, far
lished at Boston's Berklee School of Music, Bowdoin College, Brown from the musical mainstream in the Middle East and the rest of the
university, california Polytechnic State University, Harvard Uni- world? Will the practice of composition in these rondo forms, inter-
versity, Tufts University, UCLA, the university of california-santa pretive performances, and improvisation be lost? Will the knowl-
Barbara, the University of Chicago, The University of Texas at Aus- edge of the maqamdt become watered down or fall into disuse? Or
tin, and william and Mary college, with more formed each year.z2 will they take root on new continents and evolve in new ways?
while most of these groups focus on Arab music, they also explore Dr. Robert Labaree believes the last-mentioned possibility is
Turkish music.23 These three instrumental forms are usually played already becoming a reality.
in the recitals of these groups, bringing them to new audiences.
The internet is also spreading knowledge about the forms, the A student will find himself falling out of jazz or clas*
maqam system, and aesthetic practice. Hundreds of websites about sical music. He's got the chops; what's he going to do?
Middle Eastern music and several Middle Eastern music discus- He might join a klezmer ensemble, where he finds an
sion groups have sprung up in English in the last ten years. Record- ensemble, some spirit, a way of working that's more
ings and sheet music of Arabic and Turkish samactyat, basharif, communal, more open. He is more in control; he's not
and longas are readily available online.2a Comprehensive archival score-driven. It's very liberating. After a couple of
recordings of the early twentieth century from both the Turkish and years, he gets itchy. He wants to improvise. What's the
Arab traditions have been made widely available and are appear- next thing? Maqam. Maqam sits there waiting for peo-
ing on the shelves of young musicians, as well as major libraries ple, sort of at the edge of all these large modal systems
around the world. like raga. It's another alternative, waiting for people to
Leading Arab musicians such as Simon Shaheen and Dr. Ati move in and learn the ropes. It's not just learning tunes;
Jihad Racy perform these genres and discuss them in their con- it's learning a whole practice, a discipline, and a role.
certs, bringing the concepts of the maqdrn system and the rondo They are in an ensemble, and they are improvising....
forms to new audiences. other educational efforts, such as the I think it's because they are immersed in a world that
Arabic Music Retreat at Mount Holyoke college and the Mid- can't shut out all that other kind of music. Therefore
dle Eastern Music and Dance camp in Mendocino, califorinia, they start looking and maqan is there.
teach sama( fyat, basharif, and longas to students from all over It's an incredibly powerful tool. It has an immense leg-
the world. acy, so it's a bottomless pit of source that you can always
outside of academia, mainstream musicians such as Sting and go to and drink and get renewed. It has enormous appli-
Carlos Santana have produced recordings with Arab musical stars, cations in polyphonic settings, in electronic settings,
bringing the sound of Middle Eastern instruments and rhythms to in pop music, in symphonic music of all kinds that we
the mass media. As a result of all this, the world's ear is begin- don't even know. I see it as a tool, a technology, and I
don't see any reason why it can't survive.
268 c- THE ARAB LANDS rN THE orroMAN ERA cAL Fonus.== 269

Two young Boston-area composers illustrate this trend. While piece is a little bit more free-form. I can see having a
both are of Middle Eastern descent, others with no family ties to the movement within that, like a sama(r.I guess you could
Middle East are also on the experimental musical path described say it's like a neo-classical composition. Stravinsky at
by Dr. Labaree. a certain point was using very old classical forms and
Dr. Mehmet $anhkol, a graduate of the New England Conser- doing new things with them. There's something that's
vatory originally from Bursa, left Turkey and came to Boston to very new in the very old, if you choose to interpret it in
.
study jazz and rock music at the Berklee School of Music . Later, a different way.
while finishing up a master's degree at the New England Conserva-
tory, he became fascinated by the mehter music of the Janissaries, Time will tell how these Ottoman musical forms will be regarded
by future audiences and musicians. Regardless of their popularity,
which he discovered one night while surfing the internet. I-ater, he
they will remain as they have for centuries, elegant miniature musi-
was introduced to the principals of the maqamat This drew him
cal masterpieces that encapsulate the essence of what makes the
into a long period of exploration, performance, and composition of
music of the Middle East distinct.
several bashraJb (or pesrevs, to use the Turkish form of the word)
and saz sema)ts (a Turkish form of the sama(l). He and Dr. Laba-
ree founded a performing and educational nonprofit organization
called Diinya, which explores the music traditions of Turkey and Endnotes
the Middle East and looks for innovative ways to apply them. Dr. l. Walter Feldman, Music of the Ottoman Court: Makam, Composition
$anlrkol composed a pesrev in honor of his new bride, entitled and the Early Ottoman Instrumental Repertoire (Berlin, 1996), 303.
Hantm Sultan. His mehter group, The New England Drum and 2. Ibid., 3t4-t5.
winds Mehterhane, debuted this piece, as well as other ottoman 3. Ibid., 330-31.
selections, at a Harvard University concert in October 2005.
4. Ibid., 465-66.
5. Ali Jihad Racy, Making Music in the Arab ll'orld: The Culture and
Kareem Roustom also started out in rock and jazz, then began
ry of I ar ab (Cambridg e, 2003), 25.
A r t is t

composing film scores. ln 1997, he bought his first ,ud andjoined 6. Idem, "Preface to the Turkish Edition" of Making Music in the Arab
Dr. Ali Jihad Racy's Middle Eastern Music Ensemble at UCLA. World (forthcoming), p. 2.
There he discovered the maqam-based music of his Syrian heri- 7. Ibid.,5.
tage. He has composed two samdclyat and earned a master's degree 8. The first four notes, or the jins, of the maqam of hUaz on D, for exam-
in composition and ethnomusicolo gy at Tufts university, where he ple, are written in Arab notation as D, E-flat, F-sharp, G. However, if
formed a Middle Eastern music ensemble for students. He has com- it is played that way, it does not sound authentic to a discerning lis-
tener. Experienced musicians raise the E-flat slightly and lower the F-
posed classical music for the Philadelphia orchestra, the Boston
sharp slightly to shorten the interval between the two notes. Arab mu-
children's chorus, and the Firebird Ensemble, a group of classical
sicians term the "as written" l.tijaz "Hollywood Hijaz" since it can be
musicians in Boston who perform new classical music exclusively. heard in western-composed imitations of Arab music in film scores.
He discusses the sonata he composed for the Firebird Ensemble: 9. Interview with Dr. Robert Labaree, September 2005.
10. See the biographies and discographies of the interview subjects fol-
I took the rhythms of classical Arabic poetry, the bul.tur,
lowing the Notes.
and based each movement on one of them. I'm diving ll. Interview with Dr. Ali Jihad Racy, August 2005.
into that as a form. But the actual physical form of the
27 O THE ARAB LANDs rN THE orroMAN ERA OTTOMAN MUSICAL FORtvtS : 271
-

t2. Marcel Khalife has written basharif in ftijaz kar kurd, rallat al-arwah,
sha!!'arabdn, bayati, rdst, and jaharkah- For the scores, see Khal-
Interview Sublects
ifeh, Oud (Beirut, 1997). Alan Shav ar sh B ardezb anian
13. Telephone interview with Michel Merhej, September 2005. Mr. Bardezbanian (d. 9 November 2006) was an Armenian-American
t4. Interview with Dr. Robert Labaree, September 2005. composer and performer on'ftd, clarinet, and qanun. He studied the
15.Khalifeh, oud,38 George Farah, Tamdrrn mustqiyya li-atat al-(ud maqam system and the classical Turkish instrumental repertoire with
fMusical exercises for the
([d] (Beirut, 1986), the qanun master Esber Kopriicti. Mr. Bardezbanian led a Middle East-
40.
16. Racy, Making Music in the Arab World,I35. ern music ensemble in Maine, where he resided. He coached the Middle
t7. lnterview with Racy, August 2005. Eastern Music Ensemble at Bowdoin College and was also adjunct fac-
18. Interview with Simon Shaheen, September 2005. ulty member in (ud at the Arabic Music Retreat.
t9. on charbel Rouhan a, The Art of the Middle Eastern oad (ARC Re-
Discography
cords, 2003), released in Lebanon as Vice Versa.
Oud Masterpieces front Armenia, Turkey and the Middle Easf. ARC Music,
20- Feldman, Music of the ottoman court,337:"seyyirdiffers from other 2007.
concepts of melodic progression in that it specifies not only a hierar- ReOrientalism: The Near East Lives Next Door. Cultural Exchange Discs,
chy of tonal centers within a scale, but a specific melodic path, which 2003.
will involve not only direction, but returning to specific tones, pro- From Kef to Classical: Alan Shavarsh Bardezbanian and His Middle Eastern En-
longing of these or other tones, and deviating from the basic scale in semble. Cultural Exchange Discs, 2002.
predetermined ways."
21. Ibid-, 466; also Racy, Making Music in the Arab world,102-.03. Dr. Robert Labaree
22. Robert Tuttle, 'An unusual campus Love Story," Christian science An ethnomusicologist, composer, and performer on the Qeng, or clas-
Monitor,l2 April 2005, 12. sical Ottoman harp, Dr. Labaree serves as Chair of History and Musi-
23. During the 2001-02 academic cology at Boston's New England Conservatory. He is also the founder
year, Harvard's Middle East Music
Ensemble focused exclusively on studying and performing ottoman and chair of NEC's Intercultural Institute, and is a co-founder of Diinyo
classical music under the directi on of kemence player and vocalist Dr. (World). He has performed Ottoman classical music extensively in Tur-
Nilgtin Do$rusoz from the National Conservatory of Turkish Music key and in the United States, and is a founding member of the EurAsia
in Istanbul. Harvard's group has also sponsored several workshops Ensemble. He has composed several pieces in the traditional peSrev and
and lectures by visiting ottoman music scholars. During the academ- sdz sema) | genres.
ic year 2004-05, the ensemble at Brown University invited Turkish Discography
musician Latif Bolat to work and perform with them. For You the World, For Us the Roses (with Diinya). Dtinya, Inc., 2009.
24- For a comprehensive website on maqamat, see www.maqamworld. The Language of the Birds (with Dtinya). Diinya, Inc., 2008.
com. For sheet music, see www.xauen-music.com and www.neyzen. The Tulip and the Sword (with Di.inya). Di.inya, lnc.,2007 .

com/nota_arsivi.htm. Discussion groups on Middle Eastern music at Music of Cyprus (with Drinya). Dtinya, [nc.,2007.
Yahoo Groups include arabc las s icalmus ic, arabicmus icre t reat, mid- The Psalms of AIi UJki. Dnnya, Inc., 2006.
dle- eas te rn clas sical mus ic, ney Come See Whot Love Has Done to Me (Gel Gdr Beni ASk Ney,ledi) (with Di.inya).
_lovers, and, turkis h-mus icology.
Recorded live, 14 February 2005, at Jordan Hall, New England Conservatory,
Boston. Dtinya, Inc., 2005.
Qengnagme [Book of the Qeng]. Kalan, 2001 .
Eski Dilnya ile Sohbet (Conversations with the OId llttorld) (with the EurAsia En-
semble). N.d.
Boston Sema. 1998.
. Istanbul on the Charles. 1997.
27 2 _ THE ARAB LANDS IN THE oTToMAN ERA orroMAN MU.sICAL FoRlts '=< 273

Dr. Ali lihad Rocy Koreem Roustom


Dr. Racy is a professor of ethnomusicolo gy at ucLA. In addition to being A native of Damascus, Mr. Roustom is a composer and performer on'ud
a leading Middle Eastern ethnomusicologist, he is an active composer and jazz guitar. He is the musical director of the Sharq Music Ensemble,
and a highly-regarded performer on the nay, or oriental flute, and the as well as the Middle Eastern Music Ensemble at Tufts University, where
buzuq (bouzouki), as well as the'ud, the violin, and folk-music wind he completed his master's degree in composition and ethnomusicology.
instruments such as the mijwiz and the mizmdr. He founded and contin- He composes and arranges scores for film and television, and has pro-
ues to direct the Middle Eastern Music Ensemble at UCLA, the first and vided arrangements for popular music artists Shakira and Beyonc6. His
longest-running such ensemble in an American college or university. composition commissions include ()pon Eastern Breezes for the Phila-
Born and raised in Lebanon, Dr. Racy was immersed in the old otto- delphia Orchestra, a vocal work for the Boston Children's Chorus, and
man musical forms at an early age. He serves as the Associate Director
a sonata for Boston's Firebird Ensemble. Mr. Roustom's musical score
of the Arabic Music Retreat, where he conducts the Retreat Ensemble, for the documentary film Encounter Point won the Best Musical Score
lectures on ethnomusicology and performance practice, coaches small award at the 2006 Bend International Film Festival.
ensembles, and teaches nay and buzilq, as well as sitar and trumpet on
occasion. He is also the author of the award-win ning Making Music in Discography
the Arab world: The culture and Artistry of larab (see Bibliography). Revival (with the Sharq Ensemble). Xauen Music, 2006.
The Songs of Sayyed Darweesh: The Soul of a People (with the Chicago Classi-
Discography cal Oriental Ensemble). Xauen Music, 2006.
Mystical Legacies. Lyrichord Discs, 1997. A Mediterraneon Christmas: Songs of Celebration from Spain, Provence, Ita-
Ancient Egypt. Lyrichord Discs, 1993. Iy, and the Middle East (with the Boston Camerata, Joel Cohen, conductor).
Taqasim: Art of Improvisation in Arabic Music. Lyrichord Discs, Warner Brothers Classics, 2005.
1993.
Almitrab Question (with El-Zafeer Ensemble). Fuller Street Music, 2004.

Charbel Rouhana
A Lebanese composer and performer, Mr. Rouhana is also professor of Dr. Mehmet $anl*ol
(ud at the
Lebanese National Conservatory of Music and at the Holy Born in Bursa, Dr. $anlrkol is a composer and performer in Turkish
Spirit University of Kaslik in Jounieh, Lebanon. His study of ,udmethod music as well as rock and jazz. He earned his doctorate in composition
was adopted by the National conservatory in Lebanon. Mr. Rouhana at the New England Conservatory. Alongside Dr. Labaree, he founded
is considered one of the leading ,ud players of his generation. He has the Boston-based cultural organization Diinya, and is the director of a
taught cud at the Arabic Music Retreat. Janissary band, The New England Drum and Winds Mehterhane. He
has composed several sama(ryat and basharif.
Discography
Hand Made. Forward Music,2008. Discography
Dangerous. Forward Music, 2006. For You the World, For Us the Roses (with Dtinya). Diinya, Inc., 2009.
We Live (with various artists). Forward Music, 2006. The Language of the Birds (with Dtinya). Di.inya, Inc.,2008.

Sourat: Trait d'Union. Forward Music, 2004. The Tulip and the Sword (with Diinya). Diinya, Inc.,2007 '
The Art of the Middle Eastern oud. Music of Cyprus (with Dilnya). Dilnya, Inc.,2007 .
AP<C Music, 2003. Released in Lebanon as
Vice Versa- The Psalms of Ali Ufti.Dnnya, Inc., 2006.
Mazaj Alani [Unveiled mood]. Voix de I'Orient, 2000. come see what Love Has Done to Me (Gel Gr;r Beni Ask Neyledi) (with Dtinya).
Mada [Horizon] (with Hani Siblini). Voix de I'Orient, 199g. Recorded live, 14 February 2005, at Jordan Hall, New England Conservatory
Salamat [Greetings] Voix de I'Orient, 1997. Boston. Diinya, Inc., 2005.

Zikra fMemory] Relax ln, 1992, Asitane [another name for the Ottoman capital] (with the group Audiofact). Aura
Records Miizik, 2003.
Blackspot (with the group Audiofact). Kalan, 1998.
27 4 c- THE ARAB LANDs IN THE oTToMAN ERA

Simon Shaheen
Mr. Shaheen is a virtuoso on both cud and violin. He is a well-known com-
poser and recording artist and tours frequently with his two ensembles,
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