The course examines the musical elements that form the theoretical framework for the reception and analysis of Greek traditional music. The most important chapters (or thematic areas) are indicated:
- Musical systems of the Eastern Mediterranean
- Historical chords: Natural (Ptolemaic) and Pythagorean
- The overlapping of strings in today’s practice
- Systems of 53 and 72 parts (theoretical basis of Turkish and Byzantine music) and their correlation with the historical chords and the equal temperament
- Basic genders and musical notation
- Basic scales/ macams/ sounds
- Tone maps of transitions in the basic scales
- Musical form and tonal contrasts
- Harmonization practices – correlation with urban popular music and the techniques of neo-tonality
- Analysis of a recorded piece of Greek traditional music
- Writing of analysis paper and literature review
Recommended literature
Andrikos, N. (2018). The Folk Roads in Interwar Urban Song: Drawing Folk Tropical Theory. Athens: Place
Aydemir, M. (2012) The Turkish Makam Guide (S. Kompotiati, Trans.). Athens: Fagottobooks
Belaiev, V. & Pring, S.W. (1935). “Turkish Music”, The Musical Quarterly, 21 (3), 356-367
Bozkurt, B., Yarman, O., Karaosmanoğlu, M.K. & Akkoç, C. (2009) Weighing Diverse Theoretical Models of Turkish Maqam Music Against Pitch Measurements: A Comparison of Peaks Automatically Derived from Frequency Histograms with Proposed Scale Tones, Journal of New Music Research, 38 (1), 45-70
D’ Erlanger, R. (1930-49) La Musique Arabe, Paris: Geuthner
During, J. & Mirabdholbaghi, Z. (1991) The Art of Persian Music, Washington: Mage
Elsner, J. & Pennanen, R.P. (Eds) (1997) The Structure and Idea of Maqam. Tampere: Tampere University
Farhat, H. (1990) TheDastgāhConcept in Persian Music, New York: Cambridge University Press.
Farraj, J. & Shumays S. A. (2019) Inside Arabic Music: Arabic Maqam Performance and Theory in the 20th Century New York: Oxford University Press
Fracile, N. (2003). The “Aksak” Rhythm, a Distinctive Feature of the Balkan Folklore, Studia Musicologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 44 (1/2), 197-210
Hall, R.W. (2009) Geometric Models for Modulation in Arabic Music, Philadelphia: Saint Joseph’s University.
Manuel, P. (1989). Modal Harmony in Andalusian, Eastern European, and Turkish Syncretic Musics, Yearbook for Traditional Music, 21, 70-94
Marcus, S.L. (1989) Arab Theory in the Modern Period (Doctoral Dissertation). Los Angeles: University of California
____(1992). Modulation in Arab Music: Documenting Oral Concepts, Performance Rules and Strategies, Ethnomusicology, 36 (2), 171-195
____(2007). Music in Egypt: Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture. New York: Oxford University Press.
Mavroidis, M. (1999). Musical Modes in the Eastern Mediterranean. Athens.
Mikosch, T. (2017) Makamlar: The Musical Scales of Turkey, Lulu Press (self-publication of the writer)
Muallem, D. (2010) The Maqam Book: A Doorway to Arab Scales and Modes, Kfar Sava, Israel: OR-TAV Music Publications
Mystakidis, D. (2013). Folk Guitar – Modality and Harmonization. Thessaloniki: Prigipessa
Nettl, B. & Riddle, R. (1973). Taqsim Nahawand: A Study of Sixteen Performances by Jihad Racy, Yearbook of the International Folk Music Council, 5, 11-50
Öztürk, O.M. (2018) How Was the Traditional Makam Theory Westernized for the Sake of Modernization?, RastMüzikolojiDergisi, 6 ( 1) 1769-1787
Pennanen, R.P. (1997). The Development of Chordal Harmony in Greek Rebetika and Laika Music, 1930s to 1960s, British Journal of Ethnomusicology, 6, 65-116
____(2008). Lost in Scales: Balkan Folk Music Research and the Ottoman Legacy, Musicology, 8, 127-147
Pyrgiotis, D. (2006). Harmony in Action (vol. 2). Athens: Fagottobooks
____(2004). Thesaurus of Music Scales. Athens.
Samson, J. (2013) Music in the Balkans, Leiden: Brill
Shumays, A.A. (2013). Maqam Analysis: A Primer, Music Theory Spectrum, 35 (2), 235-255
Signell, K.L. (1977) Makam: Modal Practice in Turkish Art Music, Seattle: Asian Music Publications.
____(2001). Contemporary Turkish Makam Practice. In V. Danielson, D. Reynolds & S. Marcus (Eds): The Middle East (Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, Vol. 6). New York: Routledge
Simms, R. (2004) The Repertoire of Iraqi Maqamat, Lanham: Scarecrow Press.
Skoulios, M. (2014). “The Eastern Makam and the “correct” Rast way”, Polyphony, 25, 103-126
Spector, J. (1970). Classical Ud Music in Egypt with Special Reference to Maqamat, Ethnomusicology, 14 (2), 243-257
Touma, H. (1971). The Maqam Phenomenon: An Improvisation Technique in the Music of the Middle East, Ethnomusicology, 15, 38-45
____(1995). The Music of the Arabs (new expanded edition). Portland (OR): Amadeus Press
Voulgaris, E. & Vandarakis, V. (2006). Urban Popular Song in interwar Greece: Smyrnaika and Piraeotika 1922-1940. Athens: Fagottobooks & T.E.I. Hpeirou.
Wright, O. (1978) The Modal System of Arab and Persian Music, London: Oxford University Press
Yekta, R. (1922). La Musique Turque. Nous reproduisons, en 4 parties, l’intégralité de son article conacre à la musique turque et publié en Français en 1922. https://www.turquie-culture.fr/pages/arts/musique- turque/yekta-rauf-la-musique-turque-1922-1.html
Yöre, S. (2012). Maqam in Music as a Concept, Scale and Phenomenon, Journal oftheWorld ofTurks, 4 (3), 267-286
Zannos, I. (1990). Intonation in Theory and Practice of Greek and Turkish Music, Yearbook for Traditional Music, 22, 42-59