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Mapping music: Melodies that travelled across continents

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  • Mapping music: Melodies that travelled across continents

    The Sunday Guardian , India
    August 24, 2013 Saturday


    Mapping music: Melodies that travelled across continents

    India

    India, Aug. 24 -- How do you define the Bhairav family of musical
    notes whose route you have studied across various geographies?

    A. I'm not trying to define a Bhairav family of musical notes. I am
    referring to various associations between clusters of notes that are
    seen in the Bhairav family. A lot of melodies in the areas that I am
    talking about are in the Bhairavi raga and are a part of the Bhairav
    family. It would be closest to the natural minor scale in Western
    classical music, the Phrygian scale in ancient Greek music. It
    corresponds to the Hijaz makam in Turkish, Persian or Egyptian
    classical music systems.

    There are variants of the Bhairavi in the Indian Subcontinent and
    neighbouring regions, which travelled via West Asia, the
    Mediterranean, Ethiopia, Nubia, Southern Europe and North Africa to
    reach Mali, and there appears to be a common aesthetic constellation
    defining these.

    Q. How did "musicality" move over land and ocean?

    A. It is important to note that there were fascinating connections
    between far flung places through music and musicians, connections that
    are not adequately acknowledged in historical or musicological work.
    For instance, we can identify distinct sites of intense interaction
    and ferment: Baghdad in the 8th-9th century, Kochi from the 7th
    century onwards, Delhi from the 12th century, Cordoba in Southern
    Spain from the 9th century onwards, Morocco and Tunis from around the
    same period.

    Q. How is it that the Flamenco music of the Gitanos is similar to the
    music in Sindh, Rajasthan and Punjab? Is the same commonality found in
    Andalusian music as well?

    A. Between 800 and 900 AD, a large number of people believed to be
    Chandalas, or the persecuted and shunned lowest castes from Sindh,
    Rajasthan and Punjab, migrated across to Persia by 1100 AD, after
    which they split into two migratory routes. One group went northwards
    through Armenia and Byzantium into Europe. This group split further -
    the Romas went to the Balkans while the Sintis went to Central Europe.
    The other group went through Syria and Egypt and finally settled in
    southern Spain. They came to be known as the 'kale' or 'black' Gitano
    people. Their left the echoes of the Bhairavi all across the places
    that they travelled through and settled in. The remarkable
    similarities in the scale used in the Phrygian, as well as nuance and
    mode of rendering is seen in the Soleares, Seguriyas and the Bulerias
    within Flamenco forms that are associated with the Gitanos. The
    Gitanos entered Spain by the late 14th and 15th centuries. By this
    time the Andalusian music tradition had already become quite
    established, but the Gitanos contributed their own metaphors of loss
    and movement.

    The music of the Gitanos is part of the Andalusian music tradition
    which in turn consists quite heavily of the kinds of melodies that I
    am talking about. Particular forms of the Flamenco, like the Bulerias,
    Seguriyas and Soleares in fact, bear a close resemblance to the Heer
    which is sung in many parts of north-western India.

    Q. Keeping in mind the Bhairavi connection, how has the love story of
    Shirin influenced the musical routes across the regions that it
    travelled?

    A. The history and the myth of Shirin are interesting in different
    ways. She belonged to the Eastern Syriac or the 'Nestorian' church,
    which, persecuted by the Byzantine church, spread eastward to India.
    Notably, it reached Kochi through the Silk Road to China and Central
    Asia and westwards and southwards to Ethiopia. Her own migration from
    Armenia to be with Khosrow after he pursued and implored her to join
    him was a distinct statement of autonomy, according to historical
    sources. The myth of her life therefore necessarily carried with it
    narratives of identity, loss and migration.

    The original love story has many versions. In the twelfth century,
    Azerbaijani poet Nezami wrote his epic Chosroes and Shirin in what
    historian William Baum refers to as a distinct stage in the life of
    the Shirin myth, inserting a love triangle through the character of
    the carpenter Ferhad. Contemporary preoccupations with the Shirin myth
    can be seen in Abbas Kierostami's film, Shirin, which juxtaposes the
    story against contemporary takes on separation, betrayal and
    nationhood. The Turkish Communist poet Nazim Hikmet wrote a play
    titled Shirin based on Nezami's epic and this was choreographed into a
    ballet at the Bolshoi by Azerbaijani director Arif Melikov.

    We can hear renderings of the Shirin story and myth across Iran,
    Azerbaijan, the Indian subcontinent, Turkey, Armenia and Iraq. Again,
    many of these are minor note based melodies like the ones I have been
    speaking about. The Shirin myth, it appears, is often invoked to
    express loss, longing, separation, migration and these melodies are
    associated with all these emotions.

    Q. Are the Syriacs musically connected with Kerala in terms of the
    minor-note based melody trail?

    A. Except for the knowledge that Syrian Christianity came to Kerala
    from the Middle East, there is no other narrative as such. Though the
    relationship of Syriacs to Kerala is well researched, but questions
    about musical connections have never been explored, except to note
    that early Syrian Christian music bears a stylistic resemblance to
    Arabic/Islamic music.

    There is as yet no work that shows the connection directly except that
    some of the Syrian Christian melodies are found to bear a resemblance
    to Arabic music. In fact, if it does, it is likely to be part of the
    minor note based melody trail that we are talking about.

    Q. Is there a musicological work that solely deals with the routes
    travelled by slaves in order to establish a comprehensive syncretism
    between Abrahamic traditions and Indian musical traditions?

    A. No, there is none as yet. In fact, except for fleeting references
    to the Gitanos with their supposed origins from India, there is hardly
    anything said about a relationship between the Abrahamic traditions
    and Indian music.

    Q. How did the rift between Zyriab, the black slave musician and
    Ibrahim al Mawsili in Baghdad give birth to the predecessor of the
    present day Spanish guitar?

    A. It is said that Zyriab was the slave and student of
    Ibrahim-al-Mawsili, the master theoretician and teacher of music in
    Abbasid Baghdad in the 9th century. Zyriab had a difference of opinion
    with his master and is said to have been banished from the Abbasid
    empire by Ibrahim's son, Ishaq. He went away first to Ifriqqiya, now
    modern Tunis and then settled in Cordoba in Southern Spain. Zyriab
    carried with him the Persian lute, added a string, changed its tuning,
    introduced a plectrum with an eagle's feather and this is said to have
    been the precursor to the Spanish guitar.

    Q. How did the interaction between musicians from India and Baghdad,
    during the 12th -14th centuries, culminate and then adopt a new
    identity?

    A. From the late 12th century onwards, North Indian classical music is
    known to have been influenced by Persian and 'Islamic' music
    traditions, including traditions from Baghdad. This is referred to as
    the Turko-Persian-Hindavi tradition in many works, which got
    established by the 14th century and then underwent more elaboration
    with Amir Khusrow and then the Mughals.

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