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Thursday, September 9, 2010
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Italian Design
Culture and Arts
Music in the Islamic World
Documenting diversity
Manfred Ewel

A recent conference brought together music experts from all five continents in the Moroccan town of Assilah. The event defined itself as an initiative to take stock of the diverse musical forms in all the countries of Islamic culture. Manfred Ewel reports

The responsibility of cultural policy for music education is of essential importance for musical development, but this issue was not discussed at the conference | The first conference on Arab music was held in Cairo in 1932, attended by music experts and musicians from Europe and the most important Arab countries.

Due to the fundamental changes that the world and the Islamic-influenced countries have been through since then, the subject area was broadened this time around to cover the entire Islamic world and phenomena such as music and the mass media, global trends in music consumption and the influence of state cultural policy.

The event was organised by the Assilah Forum, a Moroccan cultural initiative that has been running a cultural festival with workshops, exhibitions, concerts and a summer school on cultural policy for nearly 30 years, and by the "Maison des Cultures du Monde" in Paris, which has a very good reputation for promoting world music and ethno-musicology.

Local traditions and external influences
On closer inspection, music proves to be a central element for cultural identity in Islamic countries, despite its rejection on religious grounds by some conservative Muslims. Music can be heard at every wedding, accompanies farmers' seasonal festivals, and is part of Sufi rituals and private evenings where sophisticated music-lovers meet up.

Nevertheless, the wealth and specific forms of music are often not sufficiently recognised in the countries themselves or internationally. In fact, the great diversity of past and present music in the Islamic world and the omnipresent phenomenon of interchange between local musical traditions and external influences make it an indisputable example of openness and creativity.

For instance, the non-Arab, Islamic-influenced countries of Asia and sub-Saharan Africa have adopted numerous aspects of Arabic music in their own traditions with regard to instruments, musical forms or the role of poetry.

On the East African coast of Kenya and Tanzania, for example, the extremely popular taarab developed from Omani and Egyptian forerunners. Musicians and singers have long been adding African rhythms and new forms of lyrics in Swahili rather than Arabic.

Academic nature of the conference

To document the vitality of music in the Islamic world, various themes and approaches were presented during the six-day conference: studies on the history and unique nature of the respective musical forms of expression, local developments on the Indian subcontinent, in Indonesia or Nigeria for instance.

Other subjects included music forms at risk of extinction, for example in Yemen or Iraq, emphasising that passing on the wealth of a country's music is in the interest of global diversity and the cultural identity of future generations.

Overall, however, the academic nature of the conference meant that many questions concerning contemporary music were not addressed. Apart from one presentation on the history of rai, urban music in Islamic-influenced countries and the global world music scene were only ever mentioned in passing.

Developing the wealth of music

There was no discussion on the adaptation of international trends and their local integration into young people's everyday lives through audiovisual media, music consumption in discos, on fast-circulating CDs or via the Internet or the significance of these phenomena for the multi-dimensional cultural identity of music consumers, beyond a few phrases.

Nor was the responsibility of cultural policy for music education and training musicians, of essential importance for musical development, a central issue.

The outcomes of the conference are to be published on the Internet, and taken further by new conferences every three years. If the possibilities for maintaining and developing the wealth of music in the Islamic world are to be used responsibly in the face of the needs of mainly urban young people, however, the experts still have a long way to go.

Translated from the German by Katy Derbyshire

Source: Qantara.de


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Readers Comments...

Comments 1 to 2 of 2
Response to Jess Sadick:

Music is analogous to rhetoric, in that it can be used by anyone to promote any cause. Music has long been known to inspire nationalist fervour and bravery in battle—think of the existence of military and janissary bands, or the songs of Hitler Youth or Eastern European communist regimes, to mention only a few examples. Recent research has revealed that American soldiers in Iraq listen to heavy metal on their way to an operation in order to harden themselves, and that music is used at Guantanamo Bay in methods of torture. Rarely will you find a national anthem that does not include a reference to defense or a call to arms.

While your comments may be correct, how is it constructive to make them here? Conferences such as the one described can only be good for freedom, pluralism, and democracy. The most fundamentalist reading of Shari’ah calls for the taboo of most forms of music. If we are concerned about the growth of radical Islam, it is especially important to expose and celebrate the vitality of music in Muslim countries, and to encourage scholarship and public discussion of those areas that Ewel claims have not yet been tapped into. Doing so chips away at the power of ultra-conservative Muslim leaders who aim to suppress artistic and musical expression in the name of Islam.

2007-10-19 02:57:09
TS
Obviously, there is much to be enjoyed about the positive impact of music on Islamic society and vice versa. But we also should be aware that music has been and continues to be employed in popularizing Islamic-inspired violence. As Mohammad Hafez notes in “Manufacturing Human Bombs: The Making of Palestinian Suicide Bombers,” images, in the Palestinian media, of youth battling Israel are accompanied by “melodramatic music and nationalistic songs by such renowned singers as Marcel Khalifa and Fayrouz, both of whom personalize the conflict with their poignant lyrics and powerful, extraordinary voices. Such reporting heightened emotions and venerated valiant death.”

Hafez quotes one researcher who observed: “Music is a prominent feature, sometimes with a martial beat; gripping, pronouncedly rhythmic, maybe with a repetitive single drum-beat, sometimes triumphal, otherwise quiet, plaintive, nostalgic, then rising to a crescendo accompanying evocative lyrics. The chants are often of those heard at funerals of martyrs; underlying stirring martial connotations are unmistakable. In many places one hears, almost sub-threshold, buried in long stretches of music to the slow beat of rhythm, repeated endlessly like a mantra, the quietly spoken word ‘shaheed’.”

Thus, truth be told that for those who choose to conduct violence in the name of Islam, music serves a much more nefarious purpose.
2007-09-11 19:25:29
Jess Sadick
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