[Asia] Traditional Instrumental Music Of Turkey Mix #2 [HD]
Turkish traditional music (Türk Halk Müziği) combines the distinct cultural values of all civilisations that have lived in
Turkey and its former territories in
Europe and
Asia. Its unique structure includes regional differences under one umbrella. It was the most popular music genre in the
Ottoman Empire era. After the foundation of the
Turkish Republic,
Atatürk asked to make a wide-scale classification and archiving of samples of
Turkish folk music from around the country, which was launched in 1924 and continued until
1953 to collect around 10,
000 folk songs
. In the 1960s, Turkish folk music met
with radio and folk musicians like
Aşık Veysel,
Neşet Ertaş,
Bedia Akartürk became the most popular names of the Turkish folk music. In the
1970s and
1980s, with the rising popularity of arabesque and Turkish light western, Turkish folk music has lost some ground, but singers like
Belkıs Akkale, İzzet Altınmeşe,
Selda Bağcan and
Arif Sağ made successful hit songs and became important representatives of the genre.
Music accompanied by words can be classified under the following headings: Türkü (folksongs), Koşma (free-form folk songs about love or nature), Semai (folk song in Semai poetic form),
Mani (a traditional Turkish quatrain form),
Dastan (epic), Deyiş (speech), Uzun Hava (long melody), Bozlak (a folk song form), Ağıt (a lament), Hoyrat,
Maya (a variety of Turkish folksong),
Boğaz Havası (throat tune), Teke Zorlatması, Ninni (lullaby), Tekerleme (a playful form in folk narrative), etc. These are divided into free-forms or improvisations with no obligatory metrical or rhythmic form, known as "Uzun Hava", and those that have a set metrical or rhythmic structure, known as "Kırık Havalar" (broken melodies). Both can also be employed at the same time.
Music generally played without words, and dance tunes, go by the names Halay, Bengi, Karsilamas, Zeybek, Horon, Bar, etc. Each region in Turkey has its own special folk dances and costumes.
Here are some of the most popular:
Hora - A type of circle dance, also known as Syrtos.
Horon - This dance is from
Black Sea region, was performed by men only living in
Trabzon, dressed in black with silver trimmings.
Today, the dancers link arms and quiver to the vibrations of the kemenche (an instrument similar to violin).
Kasap Havası/Hasapiko -
Kaşık Oyunu - The
Spoon Dance is performed from
Konya to
Silifke and consists of gaily dressed male and female dancers 'clicking' out the dance rhythm with a pair of wooden spoons in each hand.
Kılıç
Kalkan -
The Sword and
Shield Dance of
Bursa represents the Ottoman conquest of the city. It is performed by men only, in Ottoman battle-dress, who dance to the sound of clashing swords and shields, without music.
Zeybek - In this
Aegean dance, dancers, called "efe", symbolize courage and heroism.
Although some of the scales ('ayak' - foot) employed in Turkish folk music melodies are similar to the some of the 'makam' scales of traditional
Ottoman/Turkish Classical Music, not all of the folk music scales have
Classical music counterparts, and there are important differences between the two concepts. The 'makam' of
Turkish Classical Music is not just a scale, but has certain rules of progression, which in some cases are quite detailed, and in the course of the development the whole scale of the makam is used. Though sometimes referred to as makams by exponents of Turkish Classical Music, the scales of Turkish
Folk Music are more properly called 'ayak' (foot) and are simply scales, with no rules of progression, thus bearing closer comparison with the concept of medieval church modes than do makams. Furthermore, in many Turkish folk songs only part of the scale is used. Both forms of music are diatonic, but use notes that are additional to the 12 semitones of western music. In Turkish folk music, for example, some scales include the note B, others
B flat, and still others a note roughly halfway between B and B flat.
The scales of Turkish folk music are associated with different regions, and can be known by different names depending on the region, such as:
Beşiri, Garip, Kerem, Misket, and Müstezad.
Melodies of differing types and styles have been created by the people in various spheres and stages of life, joyful or sad, from birth to death.
Minstrels, accompanying themselves on the saz, played the most important role in the development and spread of Turkish folk music. (
Wikipedia.com)
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Turk music, Turk music mix, turk music
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