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1 Popular Culture in Turkic Asia and Afghanistan: Performance and Belief ABSTRACTS FOR THE THIRD SYMPOSIUM AND WORKSHOP OF THE ICTM STUDY GROUP on MUSIC OF THE TURKIC SPEAKING WORLD, I -2 DECEMBER, 2012, CAMBRIDGE, UK ABSTRACTS ABDURAHMAN, Gulnara (National University of Arts, Astana, Kazakhstan) New images of Kazakh traditional songs: The contemporary state of traditional Kazakh songs For centuries, a performed song was the most popular and favourite genre of the Kazakh people. It was the bearer of their spirituality and national identity, the foundation of mythopoetic and musical thinking. In the genre of historical Kazakh song - the ancient ritual, vocalpoetic forms - music performed as a specific "magic tool", an intermediary between man and space, material and spiritual, present and past. The beginning of the process of desanctification of poetic and musical content of the song is associated with a period of professionalization of Kazakh musical culture in the first third of the 19th century. This period marked a new social status for the song as an independent genre intended for aesthetic perception, for "listening." Orally-professional song along with cult-ritual singing took its place in everyday life and culture of the Kazakh people. Awareness of the song as a fullyfledged artistic phenomenon was accompanied by its complexity and individualization, inclusion of compositional logic in the process of creating a literary text. The consequence was the emergence in the 19th century of a large number of high artistic song samples. 2 During the Soviet period of development of Kazakhstan's society, the traditional Kazakh song underwent a radical transformation. The socio-cultural modernization and computerization of society, accompanied by the persecution of religious sentiments, led to the extinction of authentic forms of cult-ritual song-creation. However, they have not disappeared entirely, but have rather moved to a passive, dormant state. Traditional forms of ritual singing of the Kazakhs (funeral songs and the wedding ceremony, for example) still occasionally appear in appropriate situations. They reflect a new cultural context and, to a large extent, adapt to it. The process of creating new models in the traditional genres of Kazakh folk and folk-art professional creation (lyrical lullabies, edifying lyrics, songs, dedications and eulogies, etc.) is part of the mass of domestic song-creation. In contemporary musical practice of Kazakhstan, it is represented by amateur copyright song-creation. However, despite a deep genetic relationship between modern Kazakh amateurism and traditional forms of songmaking, the poetic and musical language of modern songs in most cases is significantly different. It has changed a particular ethnic picture of the world and its perception, has transformed the principle of musical and poetic thought, and pronounced Eurocentric tendencies in the evolution of musical language. AGA RAHIM OGLY SALAH, Mahmud (Baku State conservatory, Azerbaijan) Daf-Qaval in holy books and religious ceremony The name of Daf or Qaval is mentioned in holy books like the Torah (of Prophet Moses), the Psalms (of Prophet David), the Gospel, the Old Testament, and in Prophet Mohammad’s hadiths. Although Daf has a very old history, nowadays it is used quite regularly in various Sufi brotherhoods. In Zoroastrian ceremonies, Shamanism worship, and Sufi-mystic creed, the Qaval or Daf is mainly used to create a religious atmosphere. It also helps people to remain quiet and appreciate the music. There is also a relationship between the changing rhythm of Qaval or Daf and the heartbeat. As the heart changes pulse in different conditions, the instrument changes rhythm to create different moods. AKAT, Abdullah (Karadeniz State Conservatory, Turkey) The Influences on the Crimean Tatars Music in the Process of Change Crimea is now an autonomous parliamentary republic which is governed by the Constitution of Crimea in accordance with the laws of Ukraine. Crimea, however, has been home to different nations throughout history. Its present cultural richness, therefore, has its roots in 3 history. Crimean Tatars are an important part of this wealth. The Crimean Tatars were forcibly expelled to Central Asia by Joseph Stalin's government after the Second World War. After the fall of the Soviet Union, some Crimean Tatars began to return to the region. Now, Crimean Tatars comprise an ethnic minority in Crimea and make up about 13% of the population. Therefore, Crimean Tatars’ music must be studied in two periods: before and after the exile. There are many networks in the music of the Crimea, and these networks can continue their existence even in small villages. At the same time, the effect of popular culture on Crimean Tatar music is increasing. The aim of this paper is to explain the variations in the music of Crimean Tatars from one generation to another. Through observation and analysis of their daily practices, it also tries to investigate such factors as people, places, and mass media that cause these changes. AZEMOUN, Yusuf (Girne American University, Cyprus) Musical and Religious Aspects of Turkmen Carpets Turkmen carpets are known to be among the oldest carpets in the world. Therefore they have preserved religious properties from Zoroastrianism, Shamanism and Islam. The colour of the carpet is red (earlier, it was orange). This resembles the cult of light in Zoroastrianism. The main design of Turkmen carpet is called Göl. This initially resembled the star in the sky, or Tengri in old Turkic, the god of Shamans. The design has developed from an eight-winged star. Later it assumed the character of water and was called Göl, meaning a 'lake', thus resembling the cult of water in Shamanism. The beginning and the end of the Turkmen carpet is called "toprak" meaning 'soil'; they are respectively followed and preceded by a design called "alem" meaning 'the world'. This represents the Islamic thought on humans being created from soil and going into the soil at the end of their lives. Three sections of Turkmen carpets represent "lower life", "middle life" and “upper life”. Carpet experts always talk of the musical aspects with no concrete proof. The oldest name of carpet in Turkic is "köwüz" or "köwür" (preserved in Russian as "kovyor") which comes from "kopuz", the oldest Turkic musical instrument. The loom of a carpet looks like a musical instrument and is tuned like one. Also there are many words and expressions which support the relationship between carpets and music, thus making it possible to prove linguistically that a carpet is related to a musical instrument. BAILY, John (Goldsmiths College, London, UK) 4 Return of the Nightingales, the Afghanistan National Institute of Music In the 1960s Slobin recorded a number of examples of a tune played on the fretless longnecked lute dambura. Since this composition seemed to lack a name, he dubbed it “The Uzbek Rag”, in part because it is associated with dance (Slobin 1969: 214–5; 2003: disc 1, #9). Baily (1988: 92) discusses this type of piece under the name of “Naghmeh Uzbeki” and gives an example played on the Herati dutar by Gada Mohammad, heard on the accompanying audiocassette (Example 12). Gada Mohammad asserted that the tanbur player Bahauddin in Mazar-e Sharif was responsible for developing Naghmeh Uzbeki. Again, the piece was connected with dance. In the last decade or two the Naghmeh Uzbeki type of composition has become one of the most prominent features of contemporary popular music both in the Afghan diaspora and in Afghanistan itself, part of the broader genre of Fast Muzik [sic] played, usually very loud, on keyboards and drumpads for dancing at wedding parties and other celebrations. It has become differentiated into the song melody Dard-e Dandan Daram (“I’ve got toothache”) and a series of variations known as Pardeh Awal, Pardeh Dovum etc. (“First Fret”, “Second Fret” etc). This paper will look at examples of Naghmeh Uzbaki recorded over the last forty years and reach some tentative conclusions about the political significance of this music from northern Afghanistan in the current political situation. BAIRAMOVA, Alla (The Azerbaijani state Museum of Musical Culture, Azerbaijan) Traditional Azerbaijani music: some peculiarities of modern interpretation In Azerbaijan, traditional music and musical instruments are the symbols of national identity and tools for the development of national self-consciousness. Azerbaijani musical traditions and diverse genres developed and have become enriched over the centuries. Traditional and modern types of music are known to be sources of pride and inspiration for the Azerbaijani people. Nevertheless, in a globalized world, one finds two opposite ways of approaching tradition in the music of Azerbaijan, mainly Mugham, Ashigs art, folk songs and dances, and traditional musical instruments. On one hand, we may notice the increase in interest towards traditional music among some experts and authorities through a number of projects and activities. On the other, many traditions are losing their place among ordinary people as some people are no longer concerned about authentic presentation of musical traditions of the past. For instance, the tradition of getting a bride from her parents’ house has long been associated with the strong sound of wind instruments such as zurna and balaban, and percussion like nagara. In the twentieth century the clarinet was introduced to this set of the 5 instruments, sometimes replacing the balaban. Also the tar, which used to be the leading instrument at wedding parties, is nowadays almost replaced by electronic guitar. BAIZA, Yahia (The Institute of Ismaili Studies, London) Music, religion and culture: a study of traditional Turkic music in Afghanistan The traditional concept of music among the Turkic people of Afghanistan is closely connected with damburah (also pronounced as danburah), also known as dotar, a Persian word for “two strings” (do = two and tar = string). The damburah or dotar has a long history in Afghanistan. It has not only been the main musical instrument among the Turkic people of Afghanistan, namely the Hazaras, the Uzbeks and the Turkmens, but also among the northern Tajiks of Afghanistan. Being located at the crossroads of Asia, music in Afghanistan did influence, and was influenced by, other cultural traditions in the region, from Central to South Asia. In modern times, music in Afghanistan has been specifically influenced by Indian and Western musical concepts, styles and instruments. The impact of foreign influences on music in Afghanistan has primarily been noticed in urban music, particularly in the capital city and major provincial capitals. This influence can particularly be seen in the structure and composition of modern music composed in these urban areas. This paper argues that, despite the fact that Turkic music has been influenced by popular culture, the damburah or dotar has maintained its traditional features and continues to represent the identity of Turkic music in Afghanistan. An important aspect of this has been the reverence and the spiritual connection between music and religion expressed through the damburah. Thus the paper also examines whether this traditional reverence, and the spiritual connection between the damburah and religion, has been maintained, or has been influenced by, modern music in Afghanistan. BAYLAV, Cahit (Godlsmith College, London, UK) Life and Works of Ottoman Turkish Composer Buhurizade Mustafa Itri Efendi (1640-1712) This year, on the 300th anniversary of his death, the great composer of the traditional Ottoman Turkish music Buhurizade Mustafa Itri Efendi is being commemorated with concerts and conferences within and outside Turkey. Commonly known as Itri, he is regarded as the most important composer of his time. He composed many religious and non-religious works of various forms, in various makams. In this paper, after briefly summarising his life, I shall present the extent of his compositions and give more detailed information about some of his 6 works, with recorded examples. This genre of music has been suppressed - along with many other Ottoman practices - at certain periods during the republican era in Turkey. In the aftermath of the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in WW1, the new Turkish Republic was being rebuilt adopting Western values and way of life, renouncing a cultural legacy going back several centuries. Traditional Ottoman art music perfected by composers such as Itri took its share of neglect in the process. However, this precious cultural legacy has lived on despite the pressures of westernisation and globalisation on local cultures as well as official obstacles and negligence lasting several decades. CSAKI, Éva (Peter Pazmany Catholic University, Hungary) The role of music performance of Bektashis rituals in Thrace Bektashis are a heterodox Islam minority living mainly in the western parts of present-day Turkey. They are mostly recognized for the mystic ways they used in order to preserve preIslamic traditions like Shamanism combined with ideas of Christianity, Buddhism, and Judaism. Music has a particular role in their secret gatherings where they whole-heartedly sing the poems of such Sufi poets as Yunus Emre, Ahmed Yesevi, Pir Sultan Abdal, Shah Ismail and others. In their gatherings, they glorify their greatest saint Ali and teach his ideas to followers. The communities that we visited on our fieldwork lacked the active participation of younger generations. Therefore, it seems that the tradition is dying out. However, similar practices among Alevi people keep us expectant of continuation of such practices. Between 1999 and 2003, together with János Sipos, we carried out extended field work among them. Our comprehensive book on their psalms and folksongs came out in Budapest in 2009. DE ZORZI, Giovanni (University ‘Ca’ Foscari’ of Venice, Italy) Jâhri zikr Used as Therapy for Teenagers in Nowadays Kazakhstan The paper’s focus is on a very ancient practice, the jâhri (‘loud, vocal’) zikr, as it was adapted in 2003 Almaty, nowadays Kazakhstan, in order to cure teenagers and youngsters from different addictions. Zikr (Arabic dhikr), literally meaning ‘remembrance’, is a widespread practice among Muslims all over the world. However it is more a Sufi practice always present as the core of every Sufi Tariqa (path, way, brotherhood). In the Central Asian area, the main methods for the Zikr are jâhri (vocal, loud, manifest) and khâfi (silent, secret, hidden). Both of these methods have their virtues exposed in ancient treatises and both are traditionally linked to particular linguistic groups. The first one is considered peculiar to Turkic-speaking 7 and nomadic peoples, the second to Persian-speaking and urbanized, sedentary peoples. During my field research in Central Asia, I noticed that this ritual was mostly, but not exclusively, practised by respected members of society, middle-aged or older, called oq saqol (white beards). Worthy of note is the musical and poetical elements of such zikr rituals: over the ostinato of the zakîrs performing elaborate rhythmical zikr-s, experts named hâfiz sing poems of mystical argument composed by well-known Middle Age Turkic language poets. As stated above, in Almaty the situation was radically different and the ambience was composed almost exclusively by teenagers. If the environment was different, one of the ancient therapeutic, curative, functions of jâhri zikr was simply taken to new life. This situation, and its implications, documented by personal audiovisual recordings in the field, will be the theme of my paper. DUPAIGNE, Bernard (SNRS, Paris, France) Popular music and religion in Northern Afghanistan in the 1966- 1976 period Music has been present in every occasion of life in Afghanistan, both pre-war and today. In northern Afghanistan, one could hear the sound of drums announcing the break of fasting during the holy month of Ramadan. Tea-houses were the place of night-long singing by professional and amateur musicians coming from nearby villages. A significant number of Uzbek musicians could be seen in Mazar-i Sharif, Tash-Qorghan, Aqcha, and Andkhoy. Turkmen amateurs would play the nay near Aqcha or would sing secular or old religious stories. Shamanist rituals were even found around old Uzbek centres, like Tash- Qorghan and Sar-i Pol. The shaman would use a drum, mixing Islamic formulas with older utterings. FIRKAVICIUTE, Karina (Lithuanian Academy of Music and Theatre, Lithuania) Popular Music in Lithuanian Karaim Society – A Different Case The paper addresses the issue of popular music among Karaim minorities, a Turkic nation in Lithuania. Karaim minorities have lived in Lithuania since the 14th century. Popular music is not approved of by religious laws that are quite powerful as part of the nation’s identity. Until the late 19th and early 20th century the Karaim community in Lithuania had no kind of ‘popular music’. The demands of the younger generation, however, changed musical culture and led to the emergence of ‘popular music’. Its production was mostly based on borrowing popular motifs and songs from the local, mainly Slavonic, environment. At the time, this music became a very powerful tool for national self-expression and identity representation amongst others who had also begun to perceive themselves as nations rather than just 8 religions. Later, at the end of the 20th century, history was repeated. The Lithuanian state regained its independence and all its ethnic groups and minorities actively participated in the processes of nation building, using basically the same musical ‘tools’ as 100 years ago. However, the beginning of the 21st century calls for totally new, more authentic musical expressions. How and why do these relate to popular music? What solution could be the right one for the 21st century Turkic nation in Lithuania, consisting of 250 people? GULLYEV, Shakhym (Kysyl Orda, Turkmenistan-Kazakhstan) Turkmen Traditional Music at Home and Abroad The historical motherland of contemporary Turkmens is considered to be the area of Turkmenistan where Turkmens form the majority of the population. However, the same number of Turkmens today live in different countries abroad (in Iran, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Russia) for various reasons. To study questions of Turkmen national identity, traditional culture, and music, I visited many regions of Turkmenistan and Karakalpakistan, and Stavropol in Russia. Though I had no chance to visit Iran, Afghanistan or Tajikistan I have made some observations through listening their radio programmes and website links. My paper, based on audio and video material, will focus on such aspects of Turkmen music as traditional forms of performance and its modern transformations. HADISI, Hossein (University of Cambridge) Ballet Zahhak, the Dragon King, Its Compositional Methods and the Art of Naqqali Travelling musicians, known as Ashiks, tell interwoven stories of love and epic heroes such as Kūr Oghlū as they improvise on and sing along with the Saz. This tradition of re-enacting stories, known as the art of Naqqāli, combines elements from folk music, theatre, dance and literature, and has roots in the local political history and the culture of the region. The subjects of Naqqāli are epics based on actual events and the mythological desires of a nation, embodied in an improvised theatrical performance. The Naqqāl, usually a travelling musician, typically gathers people around by standing on a podium, in the middle of the bazaar or a tea-house, for instance, and attracts his audience by reciting poetry from the familiar ancient texts. He and his side act(s) re-enact stories that are well known to the audience, but add their own twists to their rendition. The performers take many different roles, differentiated by intonation, theatrical gestures and stage positioning as well as various props. During each performance, usually one story is recited, which is centred around one 9 character, such as a king or a hero. Just like improvisation in the music of the region, Naqqāli is an instantaneous response in the course of performance to the space, the audience, and the performance itself. Studying the improvisational methods used in the tradition shows the common structures and the mindsets behind them. Unlike in music, with Naqqāli the course of the story and the text dictate the direction of the performance. In writing the ballet Zahhāk, I have looked at the basic modal structures and improvisational models of Turkish, Persian and Arabic traditional music and have married them with the traditional dances that are conventionally associated with the epics and accompany Naqqāli. In doing so, as a composer, I place myself at a deliberate historical (and even geographical) distance from the literature and its conventions and reconstruct a rhetoric that results from a reading of the epic of Zahhāk, from Ferdowsi’s masterpiece the Shāhnāma, that can be thought to be a logical contemporary continuation of the extinct tradition of Naqqāli. There is also a strong connection between the context of this ballet and the opera Özsoy by Ahmet Adnan Saygun, also drawn from the book of Shāhnāma. Özsoy (Fereydoon) has two sons that are separated after birth by the devil and live in two different lands (Iran and Turkey), until they later discover they are twins. In the story of Zahhak, Özsoy is the hero who overthrows Zahhak and his childhood and youth is in focus. The end of the ballet Zahhak marks the beginning of Özsoy's kingdom, whose two sons symbolise the brotherhood between Turks and Persians. HOWARD, Keith (London, UK) & MALTSEV, Misha (London, UK) Siberia at the Centre of the World: Music, Dance and Ritual in Sakha-Yakutia This film, filmed and scripted by Misha Maltsev and Keith Howard, explores the cultural revival of music, dance and ritual in Sakha-Yakutia, the northernmost outpost of the Turkicspeaking people. It places Sakha-Yakutian voices at the centre, to uncover the respect and pride that people have for their beliefs and culture; how they regard their land; and how the maintenance of their traditions fits into broader themes of global ecological and environmental degradation. Focused around the 2006 Ysyakh festival, an ancient summer solstice and New Year festival that has undergone considerable transition since the Soviet era, the film contrasts memories and survivals, traditions and re-enactments. It asks how a small nation of 400,000 people has been able to preserve olonkho, one of the most significant oral epics in the world that UNESCO in 2005 recognised as a ‘Masterpiece in the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Mankind’; how the khomus (jew’s harp) has taken on national iconicity; and how particular styles of singing and dancing have been maintained. It quickly 10 becomes apparent that shamanism, although now practised by very few, has, unlike in Siberia further south, resisted the influence of western New Age groups, but retains great power, while many Sakha work as healers, still using the khomus and sung algys (blessings). IMAMUTDINOVA, Zilya (State Arts Study Institute, Moscow, Russia) The Transformation of Muslim Religious Musical Genres at the Beginning of the 21st Century: Maulid in the Culture of the Ural-Volga Tatars and Bashkirs Religious musical genres are quite important in the popular culture of Muslims. Most of the changes in the forms and styles of religious music, however, take place outside the mosques. Two factors have been essential in shaping this culture. Firstly, during Soviet times there were severe prohibitions on religious musical forms, and secondly the new religious musical forms were greatly influenced by modern European (Russian) popular culture. My research examines the changes in the genre of Maulid, which historically developed in various Muslim cultures to celebrate the birthday of the Prophet Muhammad. I shall present recordings which illustrate various forms of the functioning of the genre in the culture of Russia’s contemporary Muslim Turks (Tatars and Bashkirs). I shall highlight the variability of attitudes to Maulid, which also influenced general stylistics and regional expansion of this genre in the Islamic world. JUNG, Angelika (Galerie Mani, Weimar, Germany) Sufi Ideas in the Music of Bukharan Shashmaqam Although Shashmaqam is not directly connected with Sufi Rituals, there is evidence in the music itself. Many things could be said about Sufi influence in Shashmaqam, but I shall concentrate on two main principles: expressing ecstasy and help for cleaning the self and opening the heart. One is the extension of the melody to the highest point possible (awj), the other is the acceleration of the rhythmical motion ending with the last vocal parts (ufar). But what is the meaning of the inclusion of other melodic parts functioning as a kind of pacification? This will be demonstrated with examples from the Shashmaqam edition of Ari Babakhanov (Berlin 2010) and complemented by music and video demonstrations. JUSUPJAN CHYTYRBAEVA, Janyl (Radio Ozodlik, Prague, Czech Republic) New Religious Music in Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstan has experienced a religious boom in its twenty years of independence. Before liberal religious laws were tightened in recent years, Protestant, Baha’i, Krishnaids and other 11 denominations appeared, while so-called traditional religions – Orthodox Christianity and Islam – experienced an unprecedented revival. Some of these denominations have created songs in the Kyrgyz language to improve their appeal to potential converts. There are also reports and specific cases of musicians giving up performing after becoming devout Muslims. Мukhtar Atanaliev became famous in 1990s with his pop song “Daughter of Chui Valley”. Later he apparently withdrew from the stage after reportedly becoming a devout Muslim. This is more widespread in neighbouring Tajikistan. Malika Saidova became the latest of a string of singers quitting music for good. Kyrgyzstan has become a battlefield of hard-liners who demand the prohibition of music, while traditionalists calling themselves Tengirists (worshipers of Tengir – God of Sky) are attempting to counter what they call “alien culture”. The Tengirists are especially hardened by the attacks on what they call sacred traditions. They say the worship of ancestor spirits, burials traditions, even “koshok” (polyphonic mourning songs at funerals) are under threat from Islamists. Singing especially in a community context is traditional among Kyrgyz. But part of the younger generation more steeped in Islamic culture seem more willing to bypass the pleasures of music and entertainment than their parents who grew up during communism. KHALIG-ZADE, Fattakh ( National Academy of Music, Baku, Azerbaijan) Islam and Music in Modern Azerbaijan The main purpose of this paper is to give an overview of the religious music of the Republic of Azerbaijan. The relationship between religion and music has a long history in Azerbaijan and can be found in the ancient Turkic beliefs and mythology, pre-Islamic religions such as fire worshipping, Zoroastrianism etc. Some of these customs and beliefs are present in 20th century Azerbaijan, which gives us a good opportunity to re-evaluate the interplay between secular and religious music and investigate new trends in the religious music in Azerbaijan. Despite the strict ideological and atheistic propaganda of the Soviets, Azerbaijanis always adhered to Islam (both Shia and Sunni branches), performing the rituals in secret. Mowlud and Dhikr ceremonies, for instance, are performed mainly by Sunnis, whereas mourning rituals and Taziye theatrical performances are exclusive to the Shia population. But the most remarkable is the revival of the Dervish wedding ceremonies. Such ceremonies include traditional mugam music and the Ilahi devotional songs. The genre was first borrowed from neighbouring Turkey, mainly through TV shows. However, the performers 12 usually do not know the origins and the pop music features of Ilahi. These features and origins will be examined from different perspectives in the paper. KLEBE, Dorit (Berlin, Germany) The role of music among the cultures of Turkic-speaking communities (Kazakhs, Kyrgyzs, Tatars) in the Berlin diaspora, 2006-2012 The paper begins with a short overview of the history of immigration, outlining the current cultural life of Kazakhs, Kyrgyzs, and Tatars living in Berlin. It includes their own cultural activities and those in relation to the guest society, especially performances of music and dance in ritual or non-ritual contexts. For ritual performances, for instance, I shall introduce Saban tuyı [feast of the plough], a summer festival of the Tatar communities, and the various kinds of Nowrūz celebrations, a spring festival for the New Year. Non-ritual events can have a political or academic context, such as music performances in seminars at universities. The following questions arise: What is the main role that music plays in such events? What is the nationality of the performers? Are they members of the communities living in Berlin, or have they only come by reason of the performance? Which of the processes of change is it more important to observe? Are the religiously-related performances still being performed in their original context? Which genres and forms of music and dance are more prevalent? In which sense are they representative for each of the cultures? KLENKE, Kerstin (Stiftung Universität Hildesheim, Germany) The Hajj Does Not Go Pop: Uzbek Estrada and Islam Promoting Islam and promoting popular music are both staple items on the agenda of Uzbek state rhetoric. And indeed, these spheres of spiritual and cultural life seem to have flourished since independence. Initiatives like the restoration of mosques and the founding of the Islamic University are a visible testimony to the end of officially-prescribed atheism under Socialism. Similarly, the establishment of a state agency for estrada and the inauguration of a special faculty for estrada at the conservatory speak clearly of the government’s attention to Uzbekistan’s most prolific – and most audible – genre of popular music. Often policies towards Islam and estrada even follow similar patterns and are framed by an identical terminology of development, support and advice. Knowing this – and knowing popular music from other countries influenced by Islam – one might expect estrada to be infused by religious content. There is, however, a conspicuous absence of Islamic references in this genre, and despite the official advocacy for Islam, estrada musicians face harsh consequences when trying to incorporate religious content into their lyrics or video clips. 13 Drawing on field and archival research in Tashkent, in my paper I shall address the reasons for this apparent contradiction and its consequences. This will lead me from the current legislation on estrada and its underlying regime of values via Soviet approaches to the institutionalization and canonization of music to Uzbekistan’s role in the so-called ‘war on terror’ and the Tashkent wedding circuit. By taking on diverse perspectives on the presumed – and officially promoted – incompatibility between estrada and Islam I aim to explore the complexity of factors shaping this relation, which seem to range from geopolitical strategies to teenagers’ pleasure in dancing. KUZBAKOVA, Gulya (Kazakh National university of Arts, Astana) Kazakh Popular Music in 1990-2010: Metamorphosis of Development The birth of jazz-influenced music around the world was important for its development. The face of music changed. The concept and the phenomenon of mass culture and popular music came into the space of sounds. The interaction of Kazakh traditional music in all its variety and popular American and British music led to a variety of synthetic conditions. There was a creative laboratory in popular music of Kazakhstan in 1990-2010 which experimented with instrumental compositions, the search for the ideal ethnic sound, the introduction of various methods of sound production. This was etnorok, (the group - "Roksonaki", leader Ruslan Kara "Urker", leader and frontman Aydos Sagatov, the group "Ulytau" with its crossing of cultures between East and West.) New forms of ensemble appeared. There are "Saz otau", dombra and kobyz; Quartet of four kobyz "Art-dala" and other works of numerous solo artists with ethnic vocals. This was dictated by the reflexive tendency of musicians to feel the heirs of Turkic culture. One project is of interest, “The Magic of Nomads”, (leader Renat Gaissin). This is a jazz-fusion band performing the national Kazakh music in modern jazz arrangements. The band is comprised of professional musicians, each of whom is a bright individual, which makes their music an outstanding cultural experience. This is fine Kazakh jazz of our days, melding traditions with the freedom of improvisation. The band's style is determined by the synthesis of folk and jazz, quite unique. Burning a CD of the recording took place at the famous British Abbey Road studios, London. The studio has a worldwide reputation that is here recorded their legendary song "The Beatles". Well-known Kazakh folk songs and kui are written to the disk of “Magic of Nomads” band. Samples of folklore and traditional music get into the audience, of course, in modified form in the works of popular bands and pop singers. Kazakh songs and kui inevitably lose their authentic character, but the traditional genres become prevalent in the listening 14 environment through a new reading, a new interpretation of folklore. Band members include Gaziza Gabdrahimova, a professional performer on the ancient Kazakh instrument the kobyz, which is one of the brightest instruments in Kazakh culture. Her style is a synthesis of traditional and modern music. Yedil Khussainov is a composer and folk-music researcher who plays the ancient Kazakh musical instruments the zhetygen, sybyzgy, sazsyrnay, kamys syrnay and shankobyz. Yedil has a unique type of vocals – throat-singing, where you can hear two sounds. There two types of throat singing: kargyr (low), and sagyt (high). Shamans used throat signing in ritual dancing in the past. His music combines the ancient and the modern, connecting the ancestors of the Kazakhs, the Saki, the Huns and the Turks, in music. Viktor Khomenkov is a composer, arranger, teacher and leading jazz pianist of Kazakhstan. His talent and virtuoso technique, playing different instruments and understanding the music materials, is a great benefit to the project. Viktor has participated in many jazz festivals and conferences as a member of various jazz groups. Salimgerey Sadykov is a performer on the traditional Kazakh instrument, the dombra and a gifted musician who combines a unique technique with traditional singing. He is active on the concert platform and has presented the culture of Kazakhstan in Russia, Switzerland, Germany and elsewhere. Salimgerey is the Dean of the dombra department at the Kurmangazy National Conservatory. MANYAKIN, Vladimir (Kazakh National University of Arts, Astana) Kazakh Folk Songs: from Preservation to Readjustment and Development Ethnomusicologists consider that traditional folk music has sacral features. Taking into account this fact as original point of our research, we examine the appeal of the revised versions of folk songs, namely the revised versions of Abai’s songs, in the musical culture of Kazakhstan in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The revised versions are a new musical-original kind (MOK) which combines national and European elements tied with the specificity of Kazakh monody on the one hand, with harmony, polyphony and texture of the homophonic-harmonic range on the other. These revised versions of Kazakh folk songs have become popular and have had a persistent and wide audience from the time of their appearance (approximately at the beginning of the 1920s). We want to retrace the occurrence of the semantics of the revised songs, to see whether the substantial plan of the primary pattern and sacral features is preserved. The issue of the semantics of the intermediate, transitional musical forms appearing during the interaction of the cultures is open and complicated. One cannot always speak about full or partial 15 preservation of the substantial plan of each of the interacting traditions. Part of the content, the semantics of these compositions are better preserved, namely in the revised versions, in contradistinction from the other patterns of the interplay. The typological resemblance of the Kazakh folk songs with instrumental accompaniment to arranged songs with piano accompaniment promotes this process. Abai Qunanbaev (1845-1904) is a great poet, philosopher, and author of the songs, which are loved by the people. Having been the grandiose person, in his works Abai suggests new substance, new sacral features for Kazakh culture. First of all is a feeling of the art person’s solitude, which is characteristic of the philosophy of Sufism, a passionate impulse for unity with the divine origin. Abai is a significant part of Kazakh culture, Kazakh spirituality. He became a recognized mouthpiece of that spirituality in music due to his genial musical gift. Despite the fact that he acts as a reformer (A. Baygaskina) of the Kazakh musical language in his song art, his songs have emerged deeply folk and close to the people’s spirit. Abai’s songs in the revised versions have become the expressive sign of the new Kazakh musical culture. MAKAROV, Gennadiy (Kazan state Conservatory, Russia) Muslim Spiritual Poems as a Cultural Phenomenon of the Volga Tatars Tatars from the Volga river have inherited a strong tradition of reciting Muslim spiritual poems which was still popular in the mid 20th century. The style of performance is based on a classical metro-rhythmical system from late medieval times of Tatar history. During religious holidays such as Ramazan or Mavlyud, the poems of Ahmad Yassavi, Suleman Bykyrgani, Muhammed Chelebi and other Sufi poets were performed. They were named according to the genre of gathering, Ilyahi Bayit, Robagyi, Munojat, Kasyda, Gazel and Sikr. Preservation of this tradition was based on the knowledge and experience of people of the older generation who graduated from religious institutions before the Soviets came to those lands. That situation changed when the old tradition faded away and newcomers, having no religious education, started to perform it using tunes and rhythms from local ethnic pop songs. After the collapse of the USSR, however, no significant changes have been made in transmission of this rare tradition, though a few attempts have been made. These days the few remaining recordings of that traditional religious genre give us an opportunity to find out how strong the influence of various Aruz classical metres on recitations of Tatar spiritual poems was. Here are the most obvious examples: 1) eight syllables Aruz Metre Hazadj (hazadj-i mussamani-i- salim): ᴗ – – – / ᴗ – – – / ᴗ – – – 16 / ᴗ – – – //. reflected in Munojat “I moemin, sahar torgyl” (see example n1 in bibliography) 2) eight syllables Aruz Metre Ramal (ramal-i-murabba-i-mahzuf) : – ᴗ – – / – ᴗ – – / – ᴗ – – / – ᴗ – //. reflected in Munojat “Eia Rabbym, dide Musa” (see example n2) . 3) six syllables Aruz Metre Ramal (ramal –i-mussadas –i mahzuf): – ᴗ – – / – ᴗ – – / – ᴗ – //. It is used in popular songs and also in the famous Kasyda «Emine hanym Mehemmet anasy” (see example n 3 below) which is included in the repertoire of Tatar ethnographic groups. 4) six syllables transformed Aruz Metre Ramal (ramal-i-mussadas-i-mahbun-i mahzuf) ᴗ ᴗ – – /ᴗ ᴗ – – / ᴗ ᴗ – //. This Aruz metre influenced the rhythmical structure of many Bayits becoming very popular with the local Tatar audience. The best example is the famous song «Туган тел», set to lyrics by Tatar poet Gabdulla Tukai (1886-1913). Its rhythmic structure is characterised by similarity to the classical Aruz rhythm Ramal. Sometimes a performer could sing it in an even more complicated 7/8 rhythm (see ex. № 4), with eight syllables metre Basyt (basyt –i- mussaman-i calim): – ᴗ – / – – ᴗ – / – – ᴗ – / – – ᴗ – //. This metre is famous in Tatar Bayit recitations in two rhythmical versions (see examples n 5 and n 6 below). In the memory of the old generation living in the rural area of Tatarstan and in Tatar villages outside Tatarstan in Russia there are examples of traditional religious recitations. No doubt these have a close relationship with Central Asian Muslim recitations. Our ethnomusicological task is to concentrate on audio recordings and documentation of such recitations. Reconstruction of such genres as Bayit, Zikr, Kasyd is the most important contribution to the cultural preservation of Volga Tatars. MOZAFARI, Parmis (University of Cambridge) The ritual music of Turkmens of Iran The paper introduces the music of Turkmens of Iran who reside in the North-East of the country. It investigates the issue of continuity and change in the current musical culture of Turkmens, focusing on the following subjects: major instrumental and non-instrumental musical genres and their functions; singing techniques like jogh jogh; musical instruments of Dotar, Zanburak, Nei, Kamancheh and their function; Turkmen Maqams and non-Maqami pieces; major musical figures like Bakhsi(s) and Porkhan(s); women’s musical genres like La’leh Khani; and the changing scope of female involvement with music. NEDLINA, Valeriya (Kazakh State Conservatory, Kazakhstan) Folklorismus in Popular Music of Kazakhstan: Returning to Spiritual Roots 17 In all times Kazakh people have had access to popular culture. Songs of such composers of the 19th century as Birjan-sal, Akan-sere, Muhit, Sara, Mayra, Jayau Musa, Madi, Uskembai, Medet kuys (instrumental pieces) of Kurmangazy, Dauletkerey, Dina, Tattimbet etc. are still very popular among Kazakhs. The Soviet period was equivocal. On one hand, thanks to the national policy of the Soviets, Kazakh music was situated in the attention of ethnomusicology. There are many large collections of folk and oral-professional music of the 19th and 20th centuries. On the other hand, hunger and the collectivization of the 1930s, World War II, and the urbanization of the 1950s-1990s changed the cultural environment. Traditional popular music could not develop. Pop music was usually written in the same European way without any national references. The beginning of independence years has raised a question on updating of musical massculture. Many musicians had intentions to make pop-culture more national. We can find different understandings and ways to realize the national character of music. Ulytau ensemble started from transcriptions of popular dombra kuys for violin, electro-guitar and dombra with percussion rhythm; now they also compose their own kuys. Many singers and instrumentalists (such as singer B. Shukeev, A. Sagatov and his Urker and violinist J. Serkebayeva) are using folk motifs and principles in pop and rock compositions on new themes. One of the contemporary trends is to show Kazakh auyl (village) and its life or some legends of ancient times in video-clips. There is also a trend to create folk instrument ensembles (such as Turan or Babalar sazy) to perform contemporary compositions using traditional musical means. All the trends are coming to life against a background of searching for a new national identity based on ancient Tengry beliefs and the outlook of previous generations. NYSSEN, Liesbet (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) Khuday, Khay, and Khuray: Connections to Religion in Khakas Popular Music The focus of this paper is on Khakas music performed on stage and aimed at a broad audience. It not only includes the genres of estrada, rap, rock, ethno-rock, and other ethnic fusion, but also less obvious musics, like some traditional songs, a considerable part of professional traditional music and ‘composers’ music, and the relatively new genre which I call ‘shamanic music’. Part of it is being widely distributed by various media. Since 1991 in most of these genres songs popped up that connect to spiritual notions and practices in various ways. Most widespread are the expression and transmission of shamanist and tengrianist notions in lyrics, attributes, gestures, and sound. Many songs also incorporate (part of) former ritual performances, like the shaman’s kamlanie and community and personal 18 prayers. Conversely, some old secular sounds took on a ritual-like function in popular music. Finally, an exceptional and invisible/inaudible connection to religion in popular music is the re-emerging notion of the spiritual origin of talent and creativity, which occurs across all art forms and may well appear to pop singers. While some religious connections in music transmit or reinstate culturally relevant values and consciously aim at community building, other references seem to heighten the musician’s status within the community, facilitate a position in the world music market, or serve the local tourist industry. In my presentation I shall explore how musicians of various popular music genres incorporate spiritual notions and practices, which audiences they target, and who benefits from this. RANCIER, Megan (Bowling Green State University, USA) “The Sound of Modern Kazakh Nomads”: Discourses of Ancientness and Nationhood in the Music of Contemporary Kazakh Qyl-qobyz Performers The Kazakh two-stringed horsehair fiddle qyl-qobyz contains a veritable archive of cultural information, encompassing Kazakh legends, traditions, and history, as well as the twin legacies of Russian Imperial and Soviet cultural influences. In many ways, the biography of the qyl-qobyz echoes the experiences of the Kazakh nation itself, through periods of persecution and adaptation to new political systems and cultural institutions. This close identification between the qyl-qobyz and Kazakh ethnic identity appears in statements by individual musicians, government-sponsored cultural heritage propaganda, and commercial venues such as advertising and tourism expositions. In light of these facts, the contemporary qyl-qobyz and the musicians who perform it carry with them a substantial weight of historical baggage in terms of the instrument’s shifting uses and significance. Although it is still considered one of the most “ancient” Kazakh musical instruments, the acceptability, associations, and meanings of the qyl-qobyz have changed dramatically over the past century. Therefore, any discussion of a qyl-qobyz “tradition” – and an individual musician’s approach to understanding and playing the instrument – must confront this complex history and decide how to negotiate “ancientness” with history, legend with historical fact. This paper will highlight the approaches the qyl-qobyz performer and instructor Raushan Orazbaeva, the Conservatory-trained folk ensemble “Turan,” and the “pop-folk” performer Akyerke Tajibaeva. These individual artists represent, respectively, the traditionalist, “neotraditionalist,” and innovationist perspectives. In this diversity of musical approaches to the 19 qyl-qobyz, we can observe an implied diversity of perspectives on how Kazakhs perceive their own national identity in terms of their culture, history, and musical traditions. SIPOS, János (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary) From the Spiritual to the Profane and Back: the Relationship between Folk Religion and Folk Songs of Some Turkic People In our media-saturated world, the winds of change easily blow away old cultural values, including some ancient layers of folk music. Culture of course has always been characterized by continuous change, but these newer layers replacing older ones are not given enough time to be burnished and become more complete. However, older musical layers do not surrender easily. Tunes believed to have disappeared find new life as a hidden stream, jumping a generation, or with the help of a revival. And sometimes they change genre, and religious music "saves" their life. There are several connections between the religious and secular repertoires of the Turkic peoples. Relying on my Asian researches I introduce some of them in my paper, illustrated by my audio and video recordings. In the repertoire of some Turkish groups, for example that of the Tahtajis in Turkey, religious tunes dominate the melody treasury and folk music is represented by a single melody form. Also, an instructive example is the Turkmen zikr which, having been persecuted in Soviet times, lost its religious content and became profane. A third example, some melodies thought by the Caucasian Karachays to be “ancient” songs, are demonstrably takeovers, while some of their old folk melodies crept into the religious melody stock. We introduce more thoroughly our research among Bektashis living in the European part of Turkey. Their religious music is closely related to their folk music, and besides extinct folk melodies it incorporates several layers of Turkish art music (Türk Sanat Müziği). Using our examples, we also research the connections between spiritual and profane forms. SADIKOVA, Aziza (Berlin, Germany) New Music Technique and Koran Recitation: “Untitled”, the piece for amplified violoncello and tape 20 In new music today the influence of religious music and specific sound systems of other cultures is very prominent. In my works, I have been trying to find the connection between new music techniques (especially in instruments such as cello, double bass or flute) and the ancient tones of Koran reading with their elegant nuances of Arab language recitation. One of the first examples in my music was the theatre play Black White Stork (A. Kadiry), where Azan (the morning prayer) was used to depict the scene. However, later in my instrumental works, this experiment took on another level, and I introduced Azan in combination with other Western and Uzbek instruments. Untitled, the piece for amplified violoncello and tape, composed in 2010, uses recordings of the Koran as a climax in the piece, where those mysterious sounds dramatically and dynamically (fff) appear on the cellist’s highest note of the piece. At this point, the effect is that the music of another level and space is interacting with the earthly sounds of human emotions (cellist), and then slowly disappears back into darkness. Those various mystical, philosophical, linguistic and theological currents of the Koran recitation are predominant in the latest phase of the whole twelve-minute work. On the tape, the quarter-tones and ornamentation of the recitation are placed together on multiple levels, repeating each other, therefore creating an effect of surprising complex harmonies of such ‘choral’ singing. In this case, each sound starts to have a distinctive rhythm and mystical makeup by which it differs from other interwoven traditional sounds (sato - uzbek stringed instrument, tanbur - longnecked plucked lute, and violoncello). SOLOMON, Tom (University of Bergen, Norway) & NARODITSKYAYA, Inna (Northwestern University, USA) Azeri rap music and oral poetry: between tradition and modernity The Azeri hip-hop group Dəyirman (usually anglicized as Dayirman), founded in the mid1990s, is generally acknowledged as being the first group to make rap music at a professional level in the Azeri language. Much writing about the group and their music, especially popular journalistic coverage, evokes connections between the group’s use of the idiom of rap and the longstanding Azeri folk and literary tradition of meyxana (anglicized as meykhana), the unaccompanied rhythmic recitation of oral poetry. While the discursive connection between meyxana and rapping has become commonplace, there has not been a careful examination of the extent to which there are actual specific stylistic continuities between the two genres in terms of poetics and performance style. 21 This paper first presents a brief general overview of the meyxana oral poetry tradition. It then turns to some examples of Azeri rap, concentrating in particular on songs by Dəyirman and focusing on the poetic organization of the texts. Finally, the paper addresses the question of whether there is a direct link between traditional meyxana recitation and contemporary rapping in terms of specific aspects of poetic form and style in performance. The paper argues that whether or not such specific and direct continuities can be empirically demonstrated, the discursive connection between what are represented as respectively traditional and modern genres serves powerfully to anchor the contemporary popular music expression of rap in Azeri history and culture. Representing rapping as an organic outgrowth from meyxana works to construct an authenticity for rapping as an appropriate vehicle for performing contemporary Azeri identity. SOYSAL, Fikri (Dicle University State Conservatory Diyarbakır, Turkey) Music Culture of Islam Civilization and Popular Culture in the 21st Century in Turkey Popular culture is a mass culture which develops with the culture industry (Adorno, 1975, s. 12-19). It is more interesting to explore the benefits to a community rather than considering it as an art form. Cultural erosion in which strong structures are suppressed and weak structures disappear is not significant. Popular culture is directed by the directors who were educated with advanced and intensified techniques, and who do not have economic concerns. Popular culture appeared in Turkey and began to show its impact with the westernization movements in music. The closure of places of worship, the tekke and zaviye, where religious music was played, the repressive (Yarman, 2010, s. 1-37) and insulting attitudes towards public and Ottoman classical (art) music, and westernization policies, created an emptiness and obscurity in the musical background of the Turkish people. As a result, the work of the culture industry, which was equipped with advanced administration and marketing techniques, became easier. This period should be called the era of the culture industry. It can be said that this era is highly influenced by the spread of internet connection to every house. From the sale of millions of popular music albums in the past, today sales do not reach even half a million. The culture industry now has control over radio and TV broadcasts which were common communication tools in the old culture industry periods, so it can be said that audiences are manipulated via these communication tools. However, the expansion of the internet has created an environment where audiences have a choice. Although popular culture provided certain technical advancements, it also caused corruption in music. In this paper, we 22 shall examine the factors that have affected the development of oriental music in relation to religious music; we shall discuss today’s popular culture elements and the definition of popular culture in the 21st century. SUMMITS, Will (University of Central Asia) The Tawārīkh-i Mūsīqīyūn: the Posthumous Popularization of Musicians from Afghanistan in a 19th century Chaghatai treatise While ‘pop’ culture is usually associated with phenomena born out of the advent of the sound recording industry and the distribution of mass media in the 21st century, it also has precedents and analogues in earlier times. This paper will look at musicians who gained starlike status in earlier centuries and will examine what factors played a role in their popularization and glorification. The Tawārīkh-i Mūsīqīyūn, written in Khotan in 1854, will be examined in order to show how legend and fact can become indistinguishable in the popular imagination, and how the historical dissemination of literature and oral traditions often joins together biographies and hagiographies to produce ‘stars’ whose status continues to be increasingly glorified long after their death. In considering some of the great musicians of Afghanistan and Xinjiang found in the Tawārīkh-i Mūsīqīyūn, I shall compare some of the earlier sources used by its author, as well as later sources, in order to explore manifestations of ‘pop’ culture in earlier centuries. SUZUKI, Valentina (Tuva Academy of Science) Traditional and Popular Music in Tuva The formation of the Tuvans' traditional complex of sound perception and origin of their music was influenced by early forms of pre-shamanic beliefs (totemism, animism), shamanism, and somewhat later syncretized with the philosophical-religious worldview of Buddhism. It must be emphasized that the propagation of Buddhism in Tuva was characterized by its interweaving with local shamanic cults. The shamanists' mythological complex of cosmogenic perceptions reflects the nomadic sense of sacred space and nourishes the feeling of an indissoluble connection with nature. For Tuvans, nature is populated with spirit-lords, evil spirits and supernatural forces. Under these conditions, it becomes clear why images of nature occupy a central place in the music art of the Tuvans. Singing a materially perceptible picture of the natural environment is not ideal contemplation, but a social manifestation of shamanic ideology rooted in an animistic perception of deified nature. Essentially all traditional music, especially 23 instrumental music and throat singing, was sacred music which appealed to the spirits of nature. “Throat-singing, for example, was part of a highly personal dialogue between humans and the natural world. Putting throat-singing on a stage, where it was subjected to the demands of showmanship, represented a perversion of its original intent” (T. Levin & V. Suzukei, Where Rivers and Mountains Sing: sound, music and nomadism in Tuva and beyond. Indiana University Press, 2006, р.24.). The context of the contemporary functioning of Tuvan music is changing and it has become more popular art. Spatial spreading, temporary evolution and modern modification of the musical culture of Tuvans at present are amongst the interesting objects of scientific studies. TANSUĞ, Feza (Yeditepe University, Turkey) American Popular Music in Central Asia Aiming at integration with the world economy compels developing Central Asian Turkic Republics to rely on reinterpreting and reconstructing meanings of ‘imported’ cultural artefacts, traditions and symbols to cultivate national identity and redefine cultural boundaries. One example of this is the diffusion of American-, British- and Russianinfluenced popular music into Central Asian countries. Modernized international traditions incorporate а wide variety of electronically-produced styles and genres produced and distributed by the American, British, and Russian recording industry, including blues, folk, country, disco, slow ballad, rock and roll, punk and new wave, which have become transplanted into Central Asia. The globalization of world culture, with its social, political, economic and cultural ramifications, has necessitated the formulation of new analytical approaches to understand cultural interactions and global cultural flows. During my field research in Central Asia, I traced the development of Estrada by collecting historical, sociological and ethnographic data. The data was compiled in order to analyse the impact of the dissemination of popular music transmitted into Central Asia by the international media and recording industry. This diffusion has resulted in 1. the transplantation of ‘foreign’ music into Central Asian popular culture, and 2. the incorporation of this music into Central Asian music traditions, manifested in what is termed Estrada. Central Asian Estrada has evolved throughout successive waves of international innovations and currently encompasses а range of musical styles and genres. My project helped me arrive at a hypothesis on how Estrada, which represents а symbolic form, behaviour, and value in Central Asian societies, promulgates national cultural identities and awareness on the basis of the ‘globally shared system of political economy’ and the de- 24 territorialization of culture. Results also tested the hypothesis that economically-motivated cross-border flow of popular culture through the mass media from the industries of the major Western countries impels the recipient developing countries to redefine their cultural boundaries and traditions. Based upon my field research both in Central Asia and in the USA, I shall discuss in this paper the place of American popular music in Central Asian Estrada. I shall conclude that the homogeneity of modern American life, and particularly the prominence of radio, television, internet and the record industry, have also homogenized musical life in Central Asia. VARLI, Ersen (Karadeniz State Conservatory, Turkey) The process of popularity of religious musical examples with the aspect of Performance Theory among women and men: music of Sunni and Alevi sects in Turkey (1) There are different perceptions and evaluations about the concept of popularity of religious music in different times and places. Although those examples which include religious doctrine are not involved, their musical aspect is accepted and valuable. We investigate the process of popularity of religious music of Sunni and Alevi sects. We also look into the differences between men and women and the ways that they get involved in religious ceremonies. The function of musical instruments is of great importance. For instance, Ney is a popular instrument to express religious identity in the Sunni Sect, while in the Alevi sect it is the Bağlama. VARLI, Özlem (Karadeniz State Conservatory, Turkey) The mediums of mysticism during the process of popularity in the Sunni sect, Turkey (2) The differences between Sunni and Alevi sects are quite significant. For instance, men and women worship separately in Sunni mosques while Alevi people do it together in “Cem House- especially in city”, “Dede House”. Also, Sunni women have resumed some special religious events different from those of from men and the Alevi sect like Mevlüt (for babies, new houses, jobs, asure ), Friday meeting, 40 Yasin (a special group of verses), meeting to read the Quran, Mukabele (for one month, Ramadan). During the presentation, we shall examine the most common “ilahis” (a kind of religious musical example) and the reasons behind their popularity. We shall also look at the process of popularity of religious music through two main examples. The first example is Mercan Dede, a Ney player who is famous for his mystic melodies. The other example is a music piece 25 which was sung by Tülay German, a prominent singer of the early 1980s in Turkey. She sung Salavat-ı Şerif, composed by Itri; the verses are about the Meryem Mother. VLAEVA, Ivanka (University of Sofia, Bulgaria) Music Images of Istanbul: from Fatih Akin’s films to stage and street performances The starting point of my research is the music of Istanbul as included in Fatih Akin’s films. Next is a tour of musicians from Istanbul which I saw in Bulgaria as well as my experience as a ‘mobile musicologist’ in Istanbul. I am looking for some answers which are crucial for the understanding of cosmopolitan popular urban cultures such as that in Istanbul. Some of the answers are connected to current music images of Istanbul presented in the films and the music types that the audience outside learn about. What role do the religious music forms play in popular culture in Istanbul? What is a part of daily or festivity life? Who perceives the music as one or another kind? Istanbul is a cosmopolitan city – a place in both Europe and Asia where many different traditions correlate and mix. The city is a good example of a hybrid culture in which many groups of people and their heritage coexist. The popular culture of this place is specific and contains many different genres in which the traditional music elements have their own space. Thus the music of Istanbul is like a bridge between traditional and modern, local and foreign, religious and secular. In my research I also try to find some of these links which coexist in the popular music there. YELEMANOVA, Saida (Kazakh National University of Arts) The study of Kazakh music in its sacred and spiritual dimensions The study of traditional music culture today is a significant problem for Kazakh ethnomusicology, but this theme attracts little attention. The general opinion of scholars of folklore is that traditional culture, by definition, is sacred, especially concerning early and ritual genres. The belief of the people that music is a link between this world and the other world lies in these genres. Kazakhs call kui (instrumental piece) the whisper of God. The musician in traditional culture is an intermediary between humans and the higher world. The sanctity of traditional culture is always preserved, even when it forms a layer of classical (oral-professional) music for listening only. In connection with the theme of this symposium, we are interested in contemporary manifestations of traditional music, which continue to exist 26 in the context of urban society. This is the memory of the ritual genres (we still write them on expeditions), the epic tradition, and instrumental performing in regional traditions. With regard to current practice, here, first of all, the changed status of the musician should be noted. Today, the musician is the staff. Music has become background noise, at best entertainment. Most of the professional life of Kazakh musicians is associated with the design of festivities – Toy – or participation in formal concerts. YUNUSOVA, Violetta (Moscow State Conservatory, Russia) Popular music forms of Turkic-speaking peoples in the Russian Federation Three developments in popular music are presented a return to the ancient (archaic) art and its new regions of Turkic-speaking peoples can be picked out in modern Russia: in the Volga region, Siberia and North Caucasus. People who live there have different traditions and religions: Buddhism and shamanism in Siberia; Islam and Christianity in the Volga Region and North Caucasus. But in the former USSR some main traditions of popular music were formed. There were popular interpretations of folk songs and dances, some classical traditions (mugams in Daghestan), which were heard at folklore festivals, on TV and in amateur performances; popular songs of national composers as professional as amateurs; and, rarely, popular interpretations of religious music, which were disguised as folk music. Turkic-speaking music was also popular. Nowadays some new tendencies and interpretations can be found on the stage: an increase in the role of religious music (in academic and stage forms); and new forms of popular culture like national rock music, jazz and jazz-rock which on the national music traditions are based. YELSHIBAYEVA, Aigul (Kazakhstan) At the beginning of 20th century, the folk music has increased in its capacity and created strong vocal-instrumental culture particularly “zhyrau” school which is brought singers with national musical instrument “dombra”. This school had three basic foundation school, which are Western Kazakhstan, Syrdarya region (river in Kyzyl Orda oblast), Zhetysu (“seven lakes”) schools. The style of singer was specific to the regions mentioned and varied due to the types of tempo of voice and skill of the person bring with him or her: some played dombra by finger clicking the strings, some by flow of movements of hands. The “akyns”, singers, using the natural style of their poetry skills along with their strong vocal tempo sang with the help of larynx (throat) and roof of the mouth linking with strong lungs for longer air flow. Moreover, structural, string, finger notation, terminological and vocal specifications are 27 determined due to usage of musical instruments and all these factored into the specific regional zhyrau schools. These zhyrau schools are subdivided into the following types: Aqtobe zhyrau school, Mangystau zhyrau school, Zhayik (Ural) zhyrau school, Aral-Kazaly zhyrau school, Kete-Shomen zhyrau school and Zhetysu zhyrau schools. Since zhyrau culture are considered as instrumental and vocal genre, we will analyze the link and rules between dombra and melody used by zhyraus, dombra rhythm and method of playing this instrument by various users. Nauryzbek zhyrau had opened an importance of individualism of dombra in music drama. He added new features and creations into the various ways of playing dombra by traditional zhyrau. He flourished the music and sound by professionalism in dombra playing, and he created a new classic sample of zhyrau performance by mixing different sounds of the instrument. Dombra – adds up front and background support while singing or playing dombra. Dombra – fine tunes the music by following certain rules of rhythms. Dombra – adds flourishing characteristics to the music. Dombra – does not break the rhythms, but helps to retain the longer singing support to the singer. In Western Kazakhstan zhyrau school, one could segregate the differences between rhythms and zhyrau performances of Nauryzbek zhyrau, Garifolla Kurmangaliyev, Mangystau and Arai region. Flowing zhyr method of West Kazakhstan zhyrau school has been set up by Nauryzbek, Zhaiyk region school due to Garifolla, Aral region is due to Zhanabergen zhyrau impact and all these differences could be noted and differentiated by content of the poetry structure (3+2+2) and by method of playing the national instrument dombra. It should be noted that the musical differences are due to intonation features as well. In general, it can easily be concluded that the different characteristics of zhyrau school in different areas are really due to various approaches in playing the instrument, singing method and professionalism and skills of the zhyrau. Book Presentations During the conference tea breaks there will be presentations of recently published books by the following scholars: John Baily, Keith Howard, Janos Sipos/Eva Csaki, Tom Solomon, Inna Naroditskaya, Razia Sultanova, Saida Yelemanova, and Giovanni De Zorzi. Visual art Exhibition “Musical instruments of the Turkic speaking world” 28 Artist: Elena Tchibor (University of Oxford), Curator: Irene Kukota (University of Oxford, Sotheby’s Institute of Art) Convenor, Academic Consultant, Dr. Razia Sultanova; Musical instruments have always been an integral part of Turkic Asian culture. Their idiosyncrasies correspond to the history of each particular region and its material culture, beliefs, superstitions and aspirations. For ancient Asian cultures, musical instruments are almost living beings; their makeup and sounds represent the elemental forces. Materials the instruments are made of invoke the powers of nature (wood, mother of pearl, tusks, animal leather and hair, fish skin, intestines etc.). Their tunes are based on natural rhythms, such as the rhythm of the heartbeat, breath, the slow and dignified gait of a camel in a caravan. Everything is taken from nature and returns to nature. Everything moves in unison with elemental forces and upholds the pre-ordained rhythm of the universe. These instruments remind us, the people of the 21st century, of the holistic and ecological vision of the world of the primeval cultures, where men and nature were an inseparable whole. The musical universe of Turkic-speaking peoples is not a subject contemporary artists explore. The artist Elena Tchibor attempts to breach this gap and offers a closer view of these magnificent musical artefacts, revealing the light, the smell, and the colours of the land changing with the seasons. Another main attraction for the artist was how the elemental forces and everyday objects were turned into art or served to produce art – a subject very close and relevant for many a serious contemporary artist. The mini-exhibition Musical Instruments of the Turkic Speaking World is the exploration of a magical terra incognita – the life and beliefs of the Turkic-speaking nations through images of musical instruments. Such practice-based research, focusing on the metaphors, values and meanings shaping Asian civilizations and their material musical culture, in particular, hopes once again to raise the question formulated by John Blacking: “How musical is the man?” - in this particular case, “How musical is Asian Turkic-speaking man”? Convener of the Symposium: Dr Razia Sultanova [email protected] Symposium Assistant: Dr Parmis Mozafari: [email protected]