ABOUT IRAQI Maqam
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Maqam
is the urban classical vocal tradition of Iraq. Found primarily in the
cities of Baghdad, Mosul, Kirkuk, and Basra, the maqam repertoire
draws upon musical styles of the many populations in Iraq, such as the
Bedouins, rural Arabs, Kurds, and Turkmen as well as neighboring
Persians, Turks, and other populations that have had extensive contact
with Iraq throughout history. The use of the word maqam in Iraq
is distinct from its use in the rest of the Arab world and Turkey, where
the term refers to a musical mode on which compositions and
improvisations are based. In Iraq, maqam
refers to the composition itself.
The
exact beginning of the maqam
tradition in Iraq is unknown, and is a subject of debate among maqam
musicians and connoisseurs. Some believe that the maqam is a several
hundred years old tradition, brought in by the conquering Ottoman Empire
in the 16th century. Others postulate that it began during
the Abbasid period (8th-13th century A.D.), when
Baghdad was the seat of the Islamic caliphate and was a great center of
art, learning, and technological achievement. Still others believe that
the maqam may reach to a much further past, to Iraq’s ancient
civilizations, the Babylonian or perhaps the Sumerian. Until
the 20th century, the maqam was ubiquitous in the
urban centers of modern-day Iraq, its melodies heard in various
settings. In religious contexts, maqam
melodies were used in the call to prayer, during mawlud
rituals (celebrations of the birth of the prophet Mohammed), as well as
in Qur’anic recitation. Maqam was also sung in the zurkhanes (athletic houses), to energize the participants performing
physical activity. It was even sung by street vendors advertising their
products. Tradition often dictated which types of vendors would sing
what melodies. Formal maqam concerts took place in private homes
during celebrations and in gahawi (coffeehouses), which were the
primary venues for maqam performance. There
were several coffeehouses in Baghdad that specialized in maqam.
Among these were Gahwat Shaabander,
Gahwat al-Qaysariya, and Gahwat
‘Azzawi. These places functioned both as performance spaces as
well as institutions wherein the maqam was transmitted. During
the day, experts, amateurs, and novices, known collectively as ushshaaq al-maqam,
or lovers of the maqam, would sit for hours, philosophizing about
the inner meanings of a maqam melody, discussing a particular maqam’s
possibilities, debating who was a more skilled singer, or critiquing a
recent performance. Every evening in these gahawi,
a maqam concert would take place that, when performed in its
complete sequence, would last about nine hours. The
main performer was the qari’
(pl. qurra’), or reciter.
The word qari’, which is the
same word used for a Qur’an reciter, was used, as opposed to mughenni,
or singer, to emphasize the spiritual nature of the maqam and to
elevate the maqam to a status higher than other, lighter vocal
genres, which were not held in such esteem. These qurra’
were usually craftsmen or merchants, coming from the lower strata of
Baghdadi society, for whom singing was a not a full-time profession.
Most did not have a formal education, and some were even illiterate, yet
they were masters of a highly intellectual, complex vocal form, which
could be perfected only after years of disciplined, concentrated work.
They also possessed an encyclopedic knowledge of Arabic poetry, from
which they would choose lines to recite to a maqam. When
performing a maqam, the qari’
would enter a state of deep spiritual exaltation, which would spread to
the listeners in the room, who would often let out expressions of joy
and ecstasy, engaging in an interplay and exchange of emotion with the
performers. In
performance, the qari’ was
accompanied by a four-piece ensemble, known as a chalghi baghdadi, which consisted of a jowza (a four-stringed
spike-fiddle with a coconut shell resonator), a santur (a
box-zither with steel strings, played with wooden sticks), a dumbug (goblet-shaped
drum), a riqq (tambourine), and naqqarat
(two small kettle drums played with sticks).
Elements of the MaqamEach
maqam is a semi-improvised musical recitation of poetry,
performed within a formal structure that governs the use of melodies,
structure, rhythm, and poetic genre. The following details apply
specifically to the maqamat of the Baghdadi repertoire. Melody
The Baghdadi maqam system consists of some 100 melodies,
each of which has a unique name, and to which is often ascribed some
other attribute: an association with a geographical region, a tribe, a
historical event or person, or some other aspect of Iraqi society. These
melodies are performed in a rhythmically free and semi-improvised
manner, with ample room for interpretation, ornamentation, and
variation, such that every performance is unique. Each singer is
expected to develop a personal approach to performing these melodies.
What must remain in any interpretation is the ruhiyya
(spirit or spiritual essence) of each given melody. Totally free
improvisation does not exist in maqam performance. Structure
Each melody in a maqam
composition functions as one of six structural components that make up
the maqam’s form. These components are the tahrir,
which is the opening melody/main theme that is repeated throughout the maqam;
qita‘ (sing. qita‘a) and awsal
(sing. wusla), or secondary
melodies, which form the building blocks of the composition; the meyana, or climax, which is usually a qita‘a or a wusla
sung in the high register; a small cadence known as a jelsa,
which precedes the meyana; a qarar,
or a descent into the lower register; and the teslim,
which is the final, closing cadence that signals the end of the maqam
and the coming pesteh (defined
later). Each maqam begins with
a tahrir and concludes with a teslim,
and contains one or more of the rest of the structural components. Some maqamat
follow a predetermined sequence of melodies that each performer is
expected to adhere to, whereas others contain a relatively free form. PoetryPoetic
tradition and the maqam are closely intertwined in Baghdadi
culture. Most maqam listeners
are also avid readers of poetry, and pay as much attention, if not more,
to the words of the poem as they do to the musical aspects of a maqam
performance. At its essence, maqam singing is a form of poetic
recitation. The
rules of performance practice dictate which genre of poetry is sung with
each maqam, although the choice of the specific poem is left to
the singer. Almost all of the maqamat use one of two genres of
poetry. The first, known as the qasida (pl. qasa’id), is
an ode written in Classical Arabic and is found throughout the Arab
world. The second genre of poetry, called zuheiri, is a native Iraqi form that is sung in Iraqi dialect. It
consists of seven lines, arranged according to the rhyme scheme AAA BBB
A, where the final word of each line is homophonous, but yields a
different meaning in each repetition. Several maqamat
were traditionally sung with Turkish or Persian poems, though in recent
years, these poems have been replaced by qasa’id.
Rhythm
Although maqam
singing is rhythmically free, many maqamat
contain a rhythm, or iqa‘ (pl. iqa‘at),
which is performed by the accompanying instruments. In the Baghdadi maqam
repertoire, eight iqa‘at are used (six of which are heard on
this recording). Each iqa‘ is performed on the percussion instruments as a pattern of
“dums” (sustained, low-pitched strokes) and “teks” (short,
high-pitched strokes) and silences that fit into a meter of a fixed
number of beats. The iqa‘ and the melodies exist concurrently,
converging and diverging spontaneously, creating a polyrhythmic effect. The Classification of the Iraqi Maqam by Mode In
Baghdad, there are approximately 56 maqamat (this number varies
according to different sources). From each maqam can be extracted
a seven-note mode, or scale, on which the tahrir and other melodies are based. Maqamat are classified
based on their mode, which results in eight families, which are Rast,
Bayat, Hijaz, Segah,
Nawa, Hussaini, Ajam,
and Saba. Almost all maqamat fit into one of these families. Each
family has a primary maqam, which bears the name of the mode, and
several secondary maqamat. The primary maqamat
tend to have a fixed sequence and long, elaborate structures, whereas
the secondary maqamat are often of a lighter and simpler nature,
though there are exceptions. Additional
Musical Pieces: Muqaddima and Pesteh In
performance, each maqam is preceded by a rhythmic instrumental
piece, known as a muqaddima, and is followed by one or more pestat
(sing. pesteh). Pestat
are rhythmic songs with repetitive melodies that often contain simple,
humorous, texts dealing with day-to-day life and various aspects of
society. The light-hearted nature of the pesteh
serves to counterbalance the heavy, complex, introspective nature of the
maqam. Members of the instrumental ensemble and the audience
usually join in singing these songs. Unlike the maqamat, these
songs have remained popular in Iraq to the present day. |