| Middle Eastern Rhythms |
|
Unfinished
sections: Q: What's in a
name? ( A note on naming conventions ) Q: What's the
deal with 4/4, 6/8? ( Time Signatures, Music Theory ) Q:
What is this "D t k" stuff? ( Notation ) Text Key:D
Dum (right hand clear low tone)
T
Tek (right hand high crisp tone)
K
Ka (left hand, sounds like Tek)
-
space after note (sustain)
_
space during a rest
.
shortened space
P
Pop (Ka while deadening head w/ other hand cupped)
S
Slap (loud or accented right hand, non-clear tone)
G
Grab (or Stop, like Grab)
m
Alternate "Dum" (left hand low tone, often muffled)
r
finger roll
3
triplet
:
inter-segment break
|
inter-measure break
Note: Accented (fundamental) strikes are indicated with an UPPERCASE letter. Most of the rhythms shown below are shown in simple (non-filled) form and then various ways to fill the rhythm are shown. Use a fixed width font to view the rhythms if you cut and paste them into another document. Also if you have messed up your browser preferences so that it somehow uses a non-fixed width font for the rhythms on this page, they are going to look messed up. Q: What difference
does a "rest" make anyway? Q: Where did all
of this tradition come from? ( A Grossly Over-simplified Bit of Percussion
History ) See below for more technical analysis of historical sources. Q: So I want to
learn some rhythms. Where do we start? maqsuum 4/4
"baladii", which is a more folksy version of the basic Middle Eastern "maqsuum", is characterized by the familiar two DUMs that lead the phrase. It is probably more properly called "maSmuudii saghiir" ("small maSmuudii") since it has the "maSmuudii" accent and phrase but is played in 4 beats rather than 8. Some say that to play it with the traditional "feel" the accents (after the first) should lag slightly. The rhythm is generally known as "baladii" (beledi, baladi, balady) among the American belly dance community. The word "baladii" means "of the country" or "old fashion" and, I've heard, implies (in Egypt) a bit of a "hick-ness" or folk-ness. This rhythm is very typical (to the point of overuse) for modern belly dance, but the double-DUMs tend to drown out melodic accompaniment -- therefore when playing with a subtle melodic instrument that cannot easily be heard, a simpler version of "maqsuum" is usually preferred. "baladii" is usually played more slowly that a 4/4 "maqsuum". baladii 4/4
"walking" maqsuum
4/4 The couple of beats
you are finding near the end of some of these variations are known as
a "bridge" or "chain" -- they are not basic to the rhythm, but are often
played as a pick up into the next measure. sayyidii 4/4
sombati 4/4
I've heard some
Egyptians refer to the simple maqsuum as "waaHida wa niSf". Or possibly
"waaHida wa noSS" (half wahida) -- possibly because it (at least theoretically)
derives from the simple form of of the first half of "waaHida". waaHida 4/4
"bambii" is a modern
rhythm similar to a waaHida that has a 3 DUM sequence either by finishing
waaHida with 2 DUMs or rotating it so that the 3 are at the beginning.
Notice
how the "saghiira" variation of "waaHida" leaves the 3rd beat empty. This
seems a strange accent pattern -- more on this below.
If you take this "waaHida" and finish with another common 4 beat segment (making an 8),you have another rhythm, "ciftitelli", that is considered a Turkish or Greek rhythm. It is presumably named after the Turkish instrument that has strings tuned an octave apart. It is, at its basis (if you cross your eyes a lot), similar to a maqsuum. It is usually filled as an 8-beat rhythm and has a much different feel. It is common in Turkish (and other) belly dance -- usually it is play moderately slowly and preferably (I think) with a lot of space (i.e. not all "filled in"). Drummers tend to have fun filling in the end of the rhythm in various, sometimes unexpected, ways. It is sometimes used to accompany a taaqasiim (melodic improvisation). Some drummers (confusingly) call the rhythm "taa-qa-siim". It is very confusing because a very similar Arabic word "taq-sim" means "split" or "divided" and can be used to refer generally to "maqsuum". Egyptians tend to play simpler version of Ciftetelli than you might find in Turkey and call it "waaHida taaqasiim" or maybe "waaHida kabiir". ciftitelli (shiftaatellii)
8/4 Often
rhythms are combined like this, or have versions that are half or twice
as long. The basic maqsuum played half as quickly is known as "maSmuudii".
The Masmoudi (I've reverted to the common transliteration) rhythm is characteristically a joining of two 4-beat phrases. Sometimes it is called "Masmoudi kabiir(big)" to differentiate it from a 4-beat rhythm (Masmoudi saghiir). Often the first phrase has 2 leading beats. One of these versions is sometimes called "warring masmoudi" -- supposedly it sounds like a man and woman arguing. A 3 leading beat version is called "walking masmoudi" -- the even stride making it particularly suited for marching. Masmoudi's are fairly common in belly dance music -- historically they are also used in muwashashat -- they are particularly percussion-intense and make a quite convenient and recognizable rhythm in which a dancer can accent a dance. This, as I said, is at its core the same rhythm as maqsum but it is filled as an 8 rather than a four and played more slowly. Generally speaking Masmoudi's sound big (kabiir) and the maqsums quick and nibble (khafiif). There is some evidence that the masmoudi rhythms were used in early muwashahat music and have a more art-music basis than the maqsum which is currently found in a lot of folk songs. The Masmouda are one of the three main groups of Berbers in Morocco. They live west of the Rif and Grand and Middle Atlas in Morocco. "Masmouda" may also be used to refer to the region. maSmuudii 8/4
A
maqsuum played as a 2 beat rhythm is called "falaahii". It is usually
very fast and often evenly filled. It is a common folk version used for
dance ("falaah" is another word for country-folk or peasant). It is common
in upper Egypt. It is usually played about twice as fast as a maqsum and
therefore is often considered a 2 beat rhythm -- played more slowly (as
a 4) it is the "walking maqsuum" discussed above.
falaahii 2/4
Ayyuub
is similar. It is a common and fairly simple 2/4 rhythm. It is played
in areas of the Middle East from Turkey through to Egypt. It is used in
a slow form for a tribal north African (Egyptian) trance dance known as
the Zar (the rhythm is sometimes called "Zar") -- toward the west (Morocco)
these same sorts of trance dances are generally done to a 6 beat rhythm.
Ayyuub is also quite common at a faster (or much faster) pace in belly
dance music and music for folk line dances. Some say that Ayyuub is supposed
to sound like a camel walking. Bayou is a rhythm with the same time pattern
but has a double DUM and is usually played more slowly -- it is often
used in belly dance drum solos.
ayyuub 2/4
bayou
2/4
1-+-2-+-| D--DD-T-| [MIDI] D-kDD-S-| [MIDI] If you exchange the fundamental DUMs and TEKs in ayyuub you have another rhythm: karAtshi (Karatchi). Karatchi is a fast 2/4. Note that the second DUM somehow comes out less accented than the other accented beats. It is used in modern Egyptian music and sometimes alternated with similar rhythms as a part of a song. Hossam Ramzy says of Karatchi: "From the word 'Karatchi' you can tell that the next rhythm is not Egyptian. it's also very unusual because it starts with a TAK, which is the treble beat rather than the DOM, which is the bass beat. However it is widely used in Egyptian music and North African music." karAtshi 2/4
Here
are a couple of other simple 2 and 4 beat rhythms. "vox" or "foks" (could
it be "fox", and named after the "foxtrot"?) is very simple 2 (essentially
a march -- probably inspired by western music) often accented in sets
of 4 or 8. Used in modern Egyptian compositions. Used by Egyptian composer
Mohamed Abdel Wahab.
foks/vox 2/4
"Jerk"
is a Modern Nubian rhythm inspired by a dance of the same name. (Similar
to Samba?) In Egyptian songs (e.g. Fi Yom Wi Leyla) I've heard the double-Dums
very close together -- although someone told me that Souhail Kaspar (a
Lebonese teacher in California) taught them the less syncopated (second)
version below.
jerk/jaark 4/4
Bolero
and a very similar rhythm, Rhumba, are used in many places in the Middle
East. Bolero is usually played more slowly and often with a sort of triplet
near the beginning -- it is used to accompany songs like "Erev Shel Shoshanim"
and "Miserlu". Rhumba is often played almost twice as fast (Rihlat El
Ghawzia by Hossam Shaker). Although fundamentally these are 3-3-2 rhythms
(like malfuf/waaHida saghiira) -- the feeling is rather different. This
family of rhythms (it's ancestors) and variations were probably brought
to Spain by Middle Eastern musicians (and gypsies?), adopted into Latin
music and probably re-introduced in various ways into modern Middle Eastern
tunes.
bolero 4/4
rumbaa/rhumba
2/4
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-| D---____T---D---| [MIDI] D-tkt-K-T-K-D-k-| [MIDI] "zaffah" is a rhythm used in the Egyptian wedding processional. Its basic nature is that of a march. It is used in the wedding processional itself and also sometimes for belly dances that are reminiscent of these events. (Note that the related "candelabra dance" is usually done to a more up-beat 2 or 4 beat rhythm -- e.g. Saidi). It may also be called "Murrabba Jaza'ira". zaffah 4/4 (or
8/4) Q: OK, I've got
that. What's next? ( Middle Eastern rhythm theory and more rhythms ) waaHida saghiira
4/4 More traditionally this rhythm would be broken into segments of 2s and 3s. It would be 3+3+2 in this case: D---__T-____T---| 1-2-3 1-2-3 1-2 | 3 + 3 + 2 You
might see it written indicating the segment breaks:
D---__:T-____:T---| There are a number of rhythms of this form where 8 beats are divided 3+3+2 to be found in the music of the Middle East and Mediterranean. The Macedonian gypsy (Romany) version is called "cocek" (CHO-CHEK) and has a spacey swing to it. In other areas of Greece these rhythms are used to accompany many songs and line dances and tend to be known as "syrto" (which is the name of a particular line dance, and also is used to describe the style of music). Syrto's tend to rock back-and-forth on alternating measures changing accent slightly (or dramatically) and sometimes are far from "straight" -- being pulled back sometimes to almost a 7-beat. In the gulf region (Saudi Arabia) this type of rhythm is called "sa`udI" (Saudi) or "khaliijii" and is played more slowly and less filled with DUMs on both 1 and 3. It is sometimes played polyrhythmically with other 8-beat rhythms e.g. "karaatshii" (Karatshi) -- polyrhythm being an oddity in Middle Eastern music. Apparently this is a fairly modern musical trend influenced by workers imported from other countries (especially from continental Africa) to support the oil economy. In Egypt and Lebanon this rhythm is called "malfuuf" or "laf" and is more filled and often accented -- most often with a DUM only on 1. "malfuuf" is used to accompany line dances and also used in more modern, popular music. Western musicians would count many of these rhythms a 2, since the music tends to swing in and out finding accents on the first beat and then on "everything else". cocek 4/4=3+3+2
"Muwashshat" is
a form of spoken/sung Arabic poetry. Ali Jihad Racy and Jack Logan, Ph.D.
in Arab Music : "Moorish Spain also witnessed the development of a literary-musical
form that utilized romantic subject matter and featured strophic texts
with refrains, in contrast to the classical Arabic qasidah, which followed
a continuous flow of lines or of couplets using a single poetical meter
and a single rhyme ending. The muwashshah form, which was utilized by
major poets, also emerged as a musical form and survived as such in North
African cities and in the Levant, an area covering what is known historically
as greater Syria and Palestine. In this area, the muwashshah genre became
popular in Aleppo, Syria." muHajjar 14/4
darj 6/8 "Dawr"
is used in Arab, Persian, and Turkish music lingo; it refers to a scale
or rhythmic cycle that returns to its starting point. "Dawr Hindi" is
first documented in "Ma'refat-e 'elm-e musiqi" an anonymous work from
about the 17th century (probably Persian).
dawr hindii/"Andalus"
7/8 Rhythms
that make use of segments(feet) of 3 are known as "aqsaaq" -- it means
"broken" or "limping". This type of rhythm is still part of a lot of traditional
Middle Eastern music. The term "aqsaaq" is used by Turkish musicians (and
others) to describe a wide variety of rhythms counted in groups of 2s
and 3s that are not even. Aqsaq rhythms do not necessarily well fit our
western traditions of ratioed measures -- playing correctly is more about
fitting the phrasing and timing of the song than some mathematical structure.
Several of the rhythms mentioned have been aqsaaq rhythms, including "samaa'ii thaqiil"; here are some more rhythms: Karsilama means "face-to-face" in Turkish. This 9 beat rhythm is a popular belly dance beat, and is also used in Turkish and Greek folk songs (e.g. "Rompi Rompi", "Mastika") and modern Turkish "jazz". The rhythm is grouped as 2+2+2+3 or can be counted in two uneven groups of 3 (slow-then-fast) 1 2 3 123. This 9-beat aqsaaq rhythm is so popular it issometimes simple called "aqsaaq". karsilama 9/8=2+2+2+3 Curcuna
(JOOR-joon-nuh) is an Armenian rhythm (I've also heard it in Afgani tunes
-- often times nearly straightened to a 6). It is a 10 rhythm being grouped
3+2+2+3. When played it can almost sound like ayyuub (a 2) with just a
bit more space in it -- or like a 6 beat rhythm. It is not even -- it
has a bit of syncopation which is hard to describe. Be careful not to
"straighten it out" into a 2 or a 6. I have sometimes heard the rhythm
called "Nubar" -- probably because it is used for the song "Nubar Nubar".
Arabic speaking non-Armenians probably call it "jurjina" which if you
are Egyptian probably comes out "gurgina".
curcuna 10/8 There
are basically two ways used to form a simple 7-beat rhythm: either 2+2+3
or 3+2+2. I already mentioned "dawr hindii" which is a 3+2+2. In Greece
and Turkey the 223's are generally known as "laz" or "laz bar" and the
322's as "kalamantiano" (Kalamata is a port in south Greece). Both forms
are used for various folk line dances and songs.
laz 7/8=2+2+3 kalamantiano
7/8=3+2+2
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-| D-t-t-D-t-D-t-| [MIDI] D-----T---T---| [MIDI] D-ktk-D-k-S-k-| [MIDI] D-tkt-D-tkT-t-| [MIDI] Another
Greek rhythm is called "zeybek" and is used in "zeymbekiko" music. Zembekiko
is a popular (traditional) Greek solo dance for men -- I have heard it
described as "a guy dancing around a glass of ouzo on the floor looking
like he's rolling dice" (this description is perhaps "tourist-ish").
Samra sent me a description from a Greek folk dance teacher: ...Zembekiko was born from Rembetika and came out of the war periods (20's - 40's). It was a way for people to express their pain - the songs then were all about hardship, poverty, loss, etc. (Now they are mostly songs about love songs - usually loss in love). The dance is traditionally done solo, usually with a hunched stance and often with a smoke in one hand and a drink in the other, representing the sorrow they feel and the fact that they're drowning it in drink. It's an improvised dance. There are no set steps, it's a set style. Big leg kicks, lots of swaying, often low to the ground, arms outstretched and in a hunched stance, head bowed and eyes to the ground. Generally known as 'the drunk man's dance' among Greek people, but according to Mary this is erroneous. It comes from the history of Zembekiko (see above), but of course one does not need to be drunk to do it. ... It's not an ancient dance like other folk dances. It's like the blues of Greek dancing. Apparently the Zeymbekiko is somewhat older than that -- Mantos Garlofis mentions more about it in his letter to me. This is a 9-beat rhythm with a completely different feel than the Karsilama we discussed previously. It is grouped 4+4+1 and is usually much slower that the 9 of Karsilama -- perhaps it sounds more like 8 very spacey measures of 2 or 4 beats plus a half measure. As written here it is fundamentally two measures of a 4 beat phrase (similar to the basic waHiidaa) followed by a single beat -- however, in practice it is much more important that the beats match the music being played. The "extra beat" can be used by a good dancer to add particularly noticeable accents to a dance arrangement. zeymbekiko/zeybek
9/4=4+4+1 Another
family of Greek rhythms is the Tsamikos. They are approximately a 3 or
6-beat rhythm and are not "even"; they feel "slow-quick-quick". It is
important to match the rhythm of the music -- perhaps sometimes they sound
like "long 2s" or "short 7s".
tsamiko 6/8 or
3/4 For
more information about these rhythms and a bunch of other Greek rhythms
look at a letter that Manthos Garlofis wrote me about Greek rhythms.
Further east, the music of the Mahgreb (Morocco, Tunisia, and Andalusia) have been greatly affected by Arabic influences. Modern Spain still has remnants of Arabic influences despite a reaction to purge as much Moorish culture from the region as possible after the Moors were driven from the country. The flamenco rhythm tradition partially grew upon roots of Arabic tradition and the nuba is still considered primarily "Andalusian" although it is also a part of the traditional classical music of most of north Africa. Here are some rhythms are traditionally used in this form of Andalusian musical presentation known as "nubaat". Each section of a nuba contains some number of songs that share one of these rhythms and are played without break (or sometimes with a brief taaqasiim). BasiiT sort of has the feel of a bolero or rhumba, but in 6. I suspect that they are related somewhere in the distant past in the blending of Arabic tradition. Quddaam, although written as a 3 often comes out (at least in songs I've heard) sounding like a 2 or a 4 -- especially when it gets fast (and it does). This may be the effect of a "modernization" of Andalusian music. basiiT 6/4 or
12/8 qayIm
wa niSf 8/4 or 8/8
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-| quddaam
3/4 or 6/8
1-+-2-+-3-+-| inSiraaf
5/8
1-+-2-+-3-| khlaS
or makhlaS 3/8
1-+-2-| D-tT-_| [MIDI] D-D-TT| [MIDI]Algeria "sha'bia"
is a Moroccan polyrhythm (unusual in Middle Eastern music -- and hardly
a polyrhythm by the standards of continental African rhythm) played on
at least two drums. The 6 beat rhythm is supposed to represent "heart"
and the 12 "lung".
sha'bia 6/8x2
and 12/8 This
is a bit "unnatural sounding" to the western ear since the most specific
accent is not at the start of the measure. Although even some Moroccan
music seems to rotate it so that the "one" is on a DUM.
Here is another version (according to Hassan Erraji and Salah Dawson-Miller): sha'bia 6/8x2 and 12/8 1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-5-+-6-+-| Persia awfar 19/8=6+4+2+7 Mukhammas
is a form of five line Persian verse. Presumably this rhythm accompanies
a vocal or musical form of this poetry.
mukhammas 16/4=7+3+2+4 Persia / Sufi Of course the rhythms can also be played on other instruments. Many of these rhythms are rather syncopated in practice. It's very difficult to get the nuance or "feel" of the rhythm just by reading the musical notation or by listening to an perfectly counted MIDI sample (there are some live samples at the site above). Daem 4 Garyan 14 HalGerten
16
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-| Saghghezi
12
1-+-2-+-3-+-| DttDt-TttDt-| [MIDI] ZekrEDovvom
16
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-| D-ttD-ttD---T-T-| [MIDI] The
Balkans dajchovo 9/4 D---T---D---T----- 1 2 3 4(long) Another "nine" called
"Grantchasko" (used in the song "Sto Me Je Mile Em Drago"), has a "long
2" (I think Grantchasko means "potter"): 1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-5-| D---D-----D---T---| [MIDI] D---D---t-D---T-T-| [MIDI] D---D-----D---T---, 1 2long 3 4 Or,
a more complicated rhythm, "sandasko" is counted a "10 with a long 4 and
long 8". A western musician would probably consider this a 22 beat rhythm
with a very slightly shortened 9 and 11. A Bulgarian musician would probably
break it into 2 phrases: 10=6+4 (or 22=13+9, if you are using a western
system -- even so the rhythm sounds 22=9+9+4 to a western ear). Hard to
explain, no?
sandasko 22/16 1 2 3 4+ 5 6 7 8+ 9 10 Here
are a few more:
sedi donka 25/16=7+7+11 Break Sedi Donka down like this: two 7s=3+2+2 (like the Greek Kalamantiano) and then an 11 or "5 with a long 3". Notice how you could wrap the rhythm around the measure break and it would have 3 repeating segments followed by a bit of couple of beats "at the end". |<-real start |<- real end t-t-D--t-t-D--t-t-D-t-t-.t-t- 1----- 1----- 1----- *** |<-but it might sound like it starts here be
careful though, the placement of the beginning of the rhythm cycle is
important to fitting in to the music and ornamenting or accenting the
rhythm. This type of pattern (where it sounds to the western ear like
the end of the cycle seems to wrap into the beginning of the next) is
common in Balkan rhythms.
The Balkan 7 that is phrased 2+2+3 (similar to the Greek "laz") is called rachenitsa 7/8=2+2+3 The Balkan 7 that is phrased 3+2+2 (similar to the Greek "kalamentiano") may be called "lesnoto" -- which is usually used for the name of a dance (or family of dances) to a slow-quick-quick rhythm or "chetvorno". lesnoto 7/8=3+2+3 However, just looking at the count will not give you a good indication of how to play these rhythms -- they really have to fit the style of the music.Many tunes are in measures of 2 with a tendency to use triplets to fill the rhythm -- so they may sound or count more like 6s. We find this in a similar but probably unrelated way in music in the Mahgreb. pravo 2/4
or in the same time as above but filled as if in 6 (i.e. sounds like a 6 but is really a 2). pravo 6/8 Other 2s are relatively straight and non-syncopated, such as "triti puti" which is similar to "ayyuub": triti puti 2/4 neda voda 11/8 Yemen das'a kabIr 11/8 das'a mutawassit/medium das'a 7/8 das'a
saghIr/fast or split das'a 7/8
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-| D-----T---T---| [MIDI] Darb
al-wasta/"medium wasta" 4/4
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-| D---T-T---T-T---| [MIDI] D---T-T---T-D---| [MIDI] Darb
as-sarI'/"fast wasta" 4/4
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-| D---T-D---T-T---| [MIDI] Adoni
might be considered a wasta:
"adoni" 4/4
Q:
So where are more rhythms? Rhythm Collection Okay, that said: here is a list of a whole bunch of Middle Eastern and Mediterranean rhythms. Q:
What's the earliest documented rhythm?A Brief Analysis of Historical Sources al-thaqiil al-awwal
16/8=3+3+4+2+4 al-thaqiil
al-thaanii 16/8=3+3+2+3+3+2
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-| al-thaqiil
al-thaanii 8/8
1-+-2-+-| Tt_Tt_Tt| [MIDI] khafiif
al-thaqiil 16/8=2+2+2+2+2+2+2+2
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-| T_TtT_TtT_TtT_Tt| [MIDI] khafiif
al-thaqiil 2/4=2+2
1-+-| T_Tt| [MIDI] Ttt_| [MIDI]Risaala al-sharafiyya thaqiil
al-ramal 20/8=4+4+2+2+2+2+2+2+4
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-5-+-6-+-| Ttt_Ttt_T_T_T_T_T_T_Ttt_| [MIDI] T-________________T-____| [MIDI]al-aSl al-ramal
12/8
1-+-2-+-3-+-| T_T_T_T_Ttt_| [MIDI]Safii al_Diin: Kitaab al-adwaar; T_T_Ttt_Ttt_| [MIDI]Safii al-Diin; Kitaab al-adwaar; also Risaala al-sharafiyya T-______T___| [MIDI]al-aSl; Safii al-Diin: Kitaab al-adwaar; T_Ttt_T_Ttt_| [MIDI]Risaala al-sharafiyya Ttt_T_Ttt_T_| [MIDI]Risaala al-sharafiyya khafiif
al-ramal 10/8=2+3+2+3
1-+-2-+-3-| T_Tt_T_Tt_| [MIDI] T______T__| [MIDI]al-aSl khafiif
al-ramal 12/8=2+4+2+4
1-+-2-+-3-+-| T_Ttt_T_Ttt_| [MIDI]Risaala al-sharafiyya version khafiif
al-ramal 6/8=2+4
1-+-2-| T_Ttt_| [MIDI] muDaa`af
al-ramal 24/8
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-5-+-6-+-| Ttt_T_Ttt_T_Ttt_T_Ttt_T_| [MIDI] T-________________T-____| [MIDI]al-aSl al-hazaj
12/8=4+3+3+2
1-+-2-+-3-+-| Ttt_Tt_Tt_T_| [MIDI] T-______T-__| [MIDI] al-hazaj
6/8=4+2
1-+-2-| Ttt_T_| [MIDI] T-__T_| [MIDI]al-aSl Tt_Tt_| [MIDI]Risaala al-sharafiyya version al-faakhitii
20/8
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-5-+-| T-__T_T-__T-__T_T-__| [MIDI] T_T-__T-__T_T-__T-__| [MIDI] T_Ttt_Ttt_T_Ttt_Ttt_| [MIDI]Risaala al-sharafiyyaversion al-faakhitii
28/8
1-+-2-+-3-+-4-+-5-+-6-+-7-+-| T_T-__T-__T-__T_T-__T-__T-__| [MIDI]Risaala al-sharafiyya variation in 28 T_Ttt_Ttt_Ttt_T_Ttt_Ttt_Ttt_| [MIDI]Risaala al-sharafiyya variation in 28 Q: Where else can I read about Middle Eastern rhythm history? ( Bibliography )Check the bibliography
of my notes for a class I taught on documenting rhythmic modes in pre-1600
Middle Eastern music. |
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Information provided by:http://www.ghawazee.org |