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Wikipedia

Music of Turkey

The music of Turkey includes mainly Turkic and Byzantine elements as well as partial influences ranging from Ottoman music, Middle Eastern music and Music of Southeastern Europe, as well as references to more modern European and American popular music. Turkey is a country on the northeastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea, and is a crossroad of cultures from across Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, the Caucasus and South and Central Asia.

The roots of traditional music in Turkey span across centuries to a time when the Seljuk Turks migrated to Anatolia and Persia in the 11th century and contains elements of both Turkic and pre-Turkic influences. Much of its modern popular music can trace its roots to the emergence in the early 1930s drive for Westernization.[1]

With the assimilation of immigrants from various regions the diversity of musical genres and musical instrumentation also expanded. Turkey has also seen documented folk music and recorded popular music produced in the ethnic styles of Greek, Armenian, Albanian, Polish, Azeri and Jewish communities, among others.[2] Many Turkish cities and towns have vibrant local music scenes which, in turn, support a number of regional musical styles. Despite this, however, western-style pop music lost popularity to arabesque in the late 1970s and 1980s, with even its greatest proponents, Ajda Pekkan and Sezen Aksu, falling in status. It became popular again by the beginning of the 1990s, as a result of an opening economy and society. With the support of Aksu, the resurging popularity of pop music gave rise to several international Turkish pop stars such as Tarkan and Sertab Erener. The late 1990s also saw an emergence of underground music producing alternative Turkish rock, electronica, hip-hop, rap and dance music in opposition to the mainstream corporate pop and arabesque genres, which many believe have become too commercial.[3]

Classical music

 
Front façade of Atatürk Cultural Center after completion. The main opera building in Istanbul

Ottoman court music has a large and varied system of modes or scales known as makams, and other rules of composition. A number of notation systems were used for transcribing classical music, the most dominant being the Hamparsum notation in use until the gradual introduction of western notation.[4] Turkish classical music is taught in conservatories and social clubs, the most respected of which is Istanbul's Üsküdar Musiki Cemiyeti.[5]

A specific sequence of classical Turkish musical forms becomes a fasıl, a suite consisting of an instrumental prelude (peṣrev), an instrumental postlude (saz semaisi), and in between, the main section of vocal compositions which begins with and is punctuated by instrumental improvisations taksim.[6] A full fasıl concert would include four different instrumental forms and three vocal forms, including a light classical song, şarkı. A strictly classical fasıl remains is the same makam throughout, from the introductory taksim and usually ending in a dance tune or oyun havası.[7] However shorter şarkı compositions, precursors to modern day songs, are a part of this tradition, many of them extremely old, dating back to the 14th century; many are newer, with late 19th century songwriter Haci Arif Bey being especially popular.

Composers and Performers

Other famous proponents of this genre include Sufi Dede Efendi, Prince Cantemir, Baba Hamparsum, Kemani Tatyos Efendi, Sultan Selim III and Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent. The most popular modern Turkish classical singer is Münir Nurettin Selçuk, who was the first to establish a lead singer position. Other performers include Bülent Ersoy, Zeki Müren, Müzeyyen Senar and Zekai Tunca.

Musical instruments

Traditional instruments in Turkish classical music today include tambur -generally use as tanbur - long-necked plucked lute, ney end-blown flute, kemençe bowed fiddle, oud plucked short-necked unfretted lute, kanun plucked zither, violin, and in Mevlevi music, küdüm drum and a harp.

Ottoman harem music: Belly dance

 
 
Female musical players. Ottoman miniature painting, 18th century.

From the makams of the royal courts to the melodies of the royal harems, a type of dance music emerged that was different from the oyun havası of fasıl music. In the Ottoman Empire, the harem was that part of a house set apart for the women of the family. It was a place in which non-family males were not allowed. Eunuchs guarded the sultan's harems, which were quite large, including several hundred women who were wives and concubines. There, female dancers and musicians entertained the women living in the harem. Belly dance was performed by women for women. This female dancer, known as a rakkase, which is the Arabic word for "female dancer", hardly ever appeared in public.[8]

This type of harem music was taken out of the sultan's private living quarters and to the public by male street entertainers and hired dancers of the Ottoman Empire, the male rakkas. These dancers performed publicly for wedding celebrations, feasts, festivals, and in the presence of the sultans.[8]

Modern oriental dance in Turkey is derived from this tradition of the Ottoman rakkas. Some mistakenly believe that Turkish oriental dancing is known as Çiftetelli due to the fact that this style of music has been incorporated into oriental dancing by Greeks, illustrated by the fact that the Greek belly dance is sometimes mistakenly called Tsifteteli. However, Çiftetelli is now a form of folk music, with names of songs that describe their local origins, whereas rakkas, as the name suggests, is from Arabic which means "male dancer".[8] Dancers are also known for their adept use of finger cymbals as instruments, also known as zils.

Romani influences

Romani are known throughout Turkey for their musicianship. Their urban music brought echoes of classical Turkish music to the public via the meyhane or taverna. This type of fasıl music (a style, not to be confused with the fasıl form of classical Turkish music) with food and alcoholic beverages is often associated with the underclass of Turkish society, though it also can be found in more respectable establishments in modern times.[1]

Roma have also influenced the fasıl itself. Played in music halls, the dance music (oyun havası) required at the end of each fasıl has been incorporated with Ottoman rakkas or belly dancing motifs. The rhythmic ostinato accompanying the instrumental improvisation (ritimli taksim) for the bellydance parallels that of the classical gazel, a vocal improvisation in free rhythm with rhythmic accompaniment. Popular musical instruments in this kind of fasıl are the clarinet, violin, kanun, and darbuka. Clarinetist Mustafa Kandıralı is a well-known fasil musician.

Military music

 
Surname-i Vebbi (fol. 172a), showing military band.

The Janissary bands or Mehter Takımı are considered to be the oldest type of military marching band in the world.[9] Individual instrumentalists were mentioned in the Orhun inscriptions, which are believed to be the oldest written sources of Turkish history, dating from the 8th century. However, they were not definitively mentioned as bands until the 13th century. The rest of Europe borrowed the notion of military marching bands from Turkey from the 16th century onwards.

Turkish influence on Western classical music

Musical relations between the Turks and the rest of Europe can be traced back many centuries,[10] and the first type of musical Orientalism was the Turkish Style.[11] European classical composers in the 18th century were fascinated by Turkish music, particularly the strong role given to the brass and percussion instruments in Janissary bands.

Joseph Haydn wrote his Military Symphony to include Turkish instruments, as well as some of his operas. Turkish instruments were included in Ludwig van Beethoven's Symphony Number 9, and he composed a "Turkish March" for his Incidental Music to The Ruins of Athens, Op. 113. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote the "Ronda alla turca" in his Sonata in A major and also used Turkish themes in his operas, such as the Chorus of Janissaries from his Die Entführung aus dem Serail (1782). This Turkish influence introduced the cymbals, bass drum, and bells into the symphony orchestra, where they remain. Jazz musician Dave Brubeck wrote his "Blue Rondo á la Turk" as a tribute to Mozart and Turkish music.[citation needed]

Western Influence on Turkish classical music

 
CSO Ada Ankara serves as Presidential Symphony Orchestra Concert Hall in the capital


While the European military bands of the 18th century introduced the percussion instruments of the Ottoman janissary bands, a reciprocal influence emerged in the 19th century in the form of the Europeanisation of the Ottoman army band. In 1827, Giuseppe Donizetti, the elder brother of the renowned Italian opera composer Gaetano Donizetti, was invited to become Master of Music to Sultan Mahmud II.[12] A successor of Donizetti was the German musician Paul Lange, formerly music lecturer at the American College for Girls and at the German High School, who took over the position of Master of the Sultan's Music after the Young Turk Revolution in 1908 and kept it until his death in 1920. A son of Paul Lange was the Istanbul-born American conductor Hans Lange. The Ottoman composer Leyla Saz (1850–1936) provides an account of musical training in the Imperial Palace in her memoirs. As the daughter of the Palace surgeon, she grew up in the Imperial harem where girls were also given music lessons in both Turkish and Western styles.[13]

After the decline of the Ottoman Empire and the creation of a Turkish republic, the transfer of the former Imperial Orchestra or Mızıka-ı Hümayun from Istanbul to the new capital of the state Ankara, and renaming it as the Orchestra of the Presidency of the Republic, Riyaset-i Cumhur Orkestrası, signaled a Westernization of Turkish music. The name would later be changed to the Presidential Symphony Orchestra or Cumhurbaşkanlığı Senfoni Orkestrası.[1]

Further inroads came with the founding of a new school for the training of Western-style music instructors in 1924, renaming the Istanbul Oriental Music School as the Istanbul Conservatory in 1926, and sending talented young musicians abroad for further music education. These students include well-known Turkish composers such as Cemal Reşit Rey, Ulvi Cemal Erkin, Ahmet Adnan Saygun, Necil Kazım Akses and Hasan Ferit Alnar, who became known as the Turkish Five.[14] The founding of the Ankara State Conservatory with the aid of the German composer and music theorist Paul Hindemith in 1936 showed that Turkey in terms of music wanted to be like the West.[1]

However, on the order of the founder of the republic, Atatürk, following his philosophy to take from the West but to remain Turkish in essence, a wide-scale classification and archiving of samples of Turkish folk music from around Anatolia was launched in 1924 and continued until 1953 to collect around 10,000 folk songs. Hungarian composer Béla Bartók visited Ankara and south-eastern Turkey in 1936 within the context of these works.[15]

By 1976, Turkish classical music had undergone a renaissance and a state musical conservatory in Istanbul was founded to give classical musicians the same support as folk musicians. Modern-day advocates of Western classical music in Turkey include Fazıl Say, İdil Biret, Suna Kan and the Pekinel sisters.

Early Years of The Republic

After the Turkish War of Independence ended in 1923, and the borders were drawn, there was a social and political revolution under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. This revolution opted to Westernize the way of living in Turkey. By 1929, all public and commercial communications were made in Latin alphabet, completely taking written Ottoman Turkish language out of circulation. A new constitution was written, one that was modeled after the French. This new constitution was designed to make the new Republic of Turkey into a secular, modern, nation-state. Every aspect of the revolution, from major policy changes to clothing reforms, was made in accordance with the Kemalist Ideology. All affairs were carried out followed by a chain of military command for the purpose of reaching the level of Western civilization. Both religious and Turkish classical music was impacted by this top to bottom revolution.

On November 1, 1934 Atatürk made a speech in the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. Alaturca music was banned on radios, public places as well as private properties.[16] Here is the excerpt from the speech, concerning Turkish music, "Folks, we all know how sensitive we, the Turkish, are towards the matters of our cultural legacy…. I am aware what kind of progress that my people want to see within fine arts delivered by the new generation of artists, and musicians. If you ask me, what would be most efficient and quick to tackle first within the fine arts is Turkish Music. The music we are made to listen to these days is far from being a point of pride for Turkish people. We must all know this. We must take our great nation's idioms, stories, experiences and compose them, but only complying to the general rules of music. I wish that the Ministry of Cultural Affairs take this matter seriously, and work alongside the law-makers of our country."[17]

Right after this speech, on November 2, 1934, The Department of Publishing and Press banned Alaturca music, knowing what Mustafa Kemal meant when he said "… but only complying to the general rules of music…" was that the only acceptable type of music available to the public will be music following the principles of western tonal music. The Turkish composers, who were educated abroad in the beginning of the century and came back to Turkey, were assigned to teach classical Turkish musicians the western way of writing and playing music. The Presidential Symphony Orchestra, established back in 1924 started giving weekly free performances in schools specifying in Music Education. New instruments like pianos, trumpets, and saxophones were bought for cultural centers in villages, not just in Istanbul, but in many places like Bursa, Çorum, Gümüşhane, and Samsun.[17]

Along with the radical ideology change, and the sudden application of these new ideas came an obvious tear in the fabric of the society. People who couldn't listen to Turkish music on Turkish Radio sought out the next best thing and started listening to the Arabic Radio. There are records of Turkish people calling into Egyptian, Crimean, and Haifan radio stations requesting Turkish songs they were used to listening to, since The Middle East already consumed and re-created a lot of Turkish Music since the rise of the Ottoman Empire in the middle of the millennium.[18] Turkish people started listening to other nations' version of Turkish songs. This cleared the way for the Arabesque music to become hugely popular in the 70s. Today, there are still prolific and popular Arabesque musicians in Turkey. The ban in the early years of the Republic is exactly why Arabesque Music became a cultural phenomenon.[19]

Folk music

 
Kemençe is a popular folk music instrument on Turkey's Black Sea coast

Folk music or Türkü generally deals with subjects surrounding daily life in less grandiose terms than the love and emotion usually contained in its traditional counterpart, Ottoman court music.[6]

Most songs recount stories of real-life events and Turkish folklore, or have developed through song contests between troubadour poets.[20] Corresponding to their origins, folk songs are usually played at weddings, funerals and special festivals.

Regional folk music generally accompanies folk dances, which vary significantly across regions. For example, at marriage ceremonies in the Aegean guests will dance the Zeybek, while in other Rumeli regions the upbeat dance music Çiftetelli is usually played, and in the southeastern regions of Turkey the Halay is the customary form of local wedding music and dance.[1] Greeks from Thrace and Cyprus that have adopted çiftetelli music sometimes use it synonymously to mean Oriental dance, which indicates a misunderstanding of its roots. Çiftetelli is a folk dance, differing from a solo performance dance of a hired entertainer.

The regional mood also affects the subject of the folk songs, e.g. folk songs from the Black Sea are lively in general and express the customs of the region. Songs about betrayal have an air of defiance about them instead of sadness, whereas the further south travelled in Turkey the more the melodies resemble a lament.[21]

As this genre is viewed as a music of the people, musicians in socialist movements began to adapt folk music with contemporary sounds and arrangements in the form of protest music.

In the 70s and 80s, modern bards following the aşık tradition such as Aşik Veysel and Mahsuni Şerif moved away from spiritual invocations to socio-politically active lyrics.

Other contemporary progenitors took their lead such as Zülfü Livaneli, known for his mid-80s innovation of combining poet Nazım Hikmet's radical poems with folk music and rural melodies, and is well regarded by left-wing supporters in politics.[1]

In more recent times, saz orchestras, accompanied with many other traditional instruments and a merger with arabesque melodies have kept modern folk songs popular in Turkey.[1]

Folk instruments

Folk instruments range from string groups as bağlama, bow instruments such as the kemençe (a type of stave fiddle), and percussion and wind, including the zurna, ney and davul. Regional variations place importance on different instruments, e.g. the darbuka in Rumeli and the kemençe around the Eastern Black Sea region. The folklore of Turkey is extremely diverse. Nevertheless, Turkish folk music is dominantly marked by a single musical instrument called saz or bağlama, a type of long-necked lute. Traditionally, saz is played solely by traveling musicians known as ozan or religious Alevi troubadours called aşık.[22]

Due to the cultural crossbreeding prevalent during the Ottoman Empire, the bağlama has influenced various cultures in the Eastern Mediterranean, e.g. the Greek baglamas. In Turkish bağlamak means 'to tie' as a reference to the tied, movable frets of the instrument. Like many other plucked lutes, it can be played with a plectrum (i.e., pick), with a fingerpicking style, or strummed with the backs of fingernails. The zurna and davul duo is also popular in rural areas, and played at weddings and other local celebrations.

Folk literature

A large body of folk songs are derived from minstrels or bard-poets called ozan in Turkish. They have been developing Turkish folk literature since the beginning of 11th century. The musical instrument used by these bard-poets is the saz or bağlama. They are often taught by other senior minstrels, learning expert idioms, procedures, and methods in the performance of the art.[23] These lessons often take place at minstrel meetings and the coffeehouses they frequent. Those bard-poets who become experts or alaylı then take apprentices for themselves and continue the tradition.[23]

A minstrel's creative output usually takes two major forms. One, in musical rhyming contests with other bards, where the competition ends with the defeat of the minstrel who cannot find an appropriate quatrain to the rhyme and two, storytelling.[20] These folk stories are extracted from real life, folklore, dreams and legends.[23] One of the most well-known followings are those bards that put the title aşık in front of their names.

Arabesque

Arabic music had been banned in Turkey in 1948, but starting in the 1970s immigration from predominantly southeastern rural areas to big cities and particularly to Istanbul gave rise to a new cultural synthesis. This changed the musical makeup of Istanbul. The old tavernas and music halls of fasıl music were to shut down in place of a new type of music.[1] These new urban residents brought their own taste of music, which due to their locality was largely middle eastern. Musicologists derogatively termed this genre as arabesque due to the high-pitched wailing that is synonymous with Arabic singing.

Its mainstream popularity rose so much in the 1980s that it even threatened the existence of Turkish pop, with rising stars such as Müslüm Gürses and İbrahim Tatlıses.[1] The genre has underbeat forms that include Ottoman forms of belly-dancing music known as fantazi from singers like Gülben Ergen and with performers like Serdar Ortaç who added Anglo-American rock and roll to arabesque music.

It is not really accurate to group Arabesk with folk music. It owes little to folk music, and would be more accurately described as form of popular music based on the makam scales found in Ottoman and Turkish classical music. Though Arabesk was accused of having been derived from Arabic music, the scales (makam) used identify it as music, that, though influenced by both Arabic and Western music, is much more Turkish in origin.

Religious music

Islamic Recitation

"Islamic Recitation," a term associated with mainstream religion in Turkey, includes the azan (call-to-prayer), Kur'an-ı Kerim (Koran recitation), Mevlit (Ascension Poem), and ilahi (hymns usually sung in a group, often outside a mosque). On musical grounds, mosque music in large urban areas often resembles classical Turkish music in its learned use of makam and poetry, e.g., a Mevlit sung at Sultan Ahmet mosque in Istanbul. Dervish/Sufi music is rarely associated with a mosque. Kâni Karaca was a leading performer of mosque music in recent times.[24]

Alevi influences: The Aşık (Ashik) traditions

It is suggested that about a fifth of the Turkish population are Alevis, whose folk music is performed by a type of travelling bard or ozan called aşık, who travels with the saz or baglama, an iconic image of Turkish folk music.[22] These songs, which hail from the central northeastern area, are about mystical revelations, invocations to Alevi saints and Muhammad's son-in-law, Ali, whom they hold in high esteem. In Turkish aşık literally means 'in love'. Whoever follows this tradition has the Aşık assignation put before their names, because it is suggested that music becomes an essential facet of their being, for example as in Aşık Veysel.

Middle Anatolia is home to the bozlak, a type of declamatory, partially improvised music by the bards. Neşet Ertaş has so far been the most prominent contemporary voice of Middle Anatolian music, singing songs of a large spectrum, including works of premodern Turkoman aşıks like Karacaoğlan and Dadaloğlu and the modern aşıks like his father, the late Muharrem Ertaş. Around the city of Sivas, aşık music has a more spiritual bent, afeaturing ritualized song contests, although modern bards have brought it into the political arena.[20]

Sufi influences: The Mevlevi traditions

Followers of the Mevlevi Order or whirling dervishes are a religious sufi sect unique to Turkey but well known outside of its boundaries.

Dervishes of the Mevlevi sect simply dance a sema by turning continuously to music that consists of long, complex compositions called ayin. These pieces are both preceded and followed by songs using lyrics by the founder and poet Mevlana Jelaleddin Rumi.[25] With the musical instrument known as the ney at the forefront of this music, internationally well-known musicians include Necdet Yasar, Niyazi Sayin, Kudsi Ergüner and Ömer Faruk Tekbilek.

Regional folk styles

Minorities and indigenous peoples have added and enhanced Turkish folk styles, while they have adopted Turkish folk traditions and instruments. Folk songs are identifiable and distinguished by regions.

Aegean and Rumeli regions

Rumelia (or Trakya) refers to the region of Turkey which is part of Southeast Europe (the provinces of Edirne, Kırklareli, Tekirdağ, the northern part of Çanakkale Province and the western part of Istanbul Province). Folk songs from this region share similarities with Balkan, Albanian and Greek folk musics, especially from the ethnic minorities and natives of Thrace. Cypriot folk music also shares folk tunes with this region, e.g. the Çiftetelli dance. These types of folk songs also share close similarities with Ottoman court music, suggesting that the distinction between court and folk music was not always so clear.[2][6] However, folk songs from Istanbul may have been closely influenced by its locality, which would include Ottoman rakkas and court music.

Cities like İzmir share similar motifs, such as the zeybek dance.

Black Sea and Caspian Sea regions

Central Asian Turkic peoples from the Caspian Sea and areas have had a huge influence in the purest forms of Turkish folk music, most notably from the Azeris and Turkmen.

Pontic Greeks on the eastern shore of the Black Sea or Karadeniz regions have their own distinct Greek style of folk music, motifs from which were used with great success by Helena Paparizou.[26] The diaspora of Greek speaking Pontic people from that region introduced Pontic music to Greece after 1924 population exchange between Turkey and Greece. The region's dance style uses unique techniques like odd shoulder tremors and knee bends. Folk dances include the gerasari, trygona, kots, omal, serra, kotsari and tik.[26]

Southeastern regions

Southeastern regions carry influences from Turkmen music, Zaza motifs and Armenian music. These usually include epic laments.

Kanto (Cantare music)

Italian theater and opera have had a profound effect on Turkish culture in the past century. Like the terminology of seamanship, the terminology of music and theater is derived from Italian. In the argot of the improvisational theater of Istanbul the stage was called "sahano", the backstage was referred to as "koyuntu", backdrops depicting countryside were "bosko", the applause was "furi" and the songs sung between the acts and plays were called "kanto".

The improvised pieces were stage adaptations of the Karagöz (shadow puppet) and Ortaoyunu (traditional form of Turkish theatre performed in the open) traditions, although in a much more simplified form. The themes explored in these traditional theater arts as well as their stock characterizations and stereotypes were used as the framework for the new extemporaneous performances of the tuluat (improvised) theater.

As with their Italian counterparts, the Turkish troupes employed songs and music before the show and between the acts to pique people's interest and draw in customers.

Kanto: songs sung between the acts as solos or duets, based on traditional eastern makam (modes) but performed on western instruments.

Kanto: "first the introduction, then the lyrics, shake your shoulders to a violin, solo, cock your head and shimmy in oriental dance style, leap around like a partridge, then slowly disappear behind the curtain."

Kanto: the irreplaceable unifying feature of ali Turkish tuluat theater. We can divide kanto into two periods. The division, particularly in terms of musical structure, is very clear between the early kanto and the kanto of the Post-Republic period. It is further possible to identify two styles within the early period. Galata and Direklerarası (both neighbourhoods of Old Istanbul).

Kanto first took root in the musical theaters of Galata, a part of town frequented by sailors, rowdies and roustabouts. Ahmed Rasim Bey paints a vivid picture of the Galata theaters in his 1922 memoir entitled Fuhş-i Atik (Prostitution in the Old Days):

Everyone thought Peruz was the most flirtatious, most skillful and the most provocative. The seats closest to the stage were always crammed full... They said of Peruz, 'she is a trollop who has ensnared the heart of many a young man and has made herself the enemy of many. 'Her songs would hardly be finished when chairs, flowers, bouquets and beribboned letters. Come flying from the boxseats. It seemed the building would be shaken to the ground.

Direklerarası was a little off the beaten track and in comparison to Galata was a more refined center of entertainment. Direklerarası was said to be quite lively at night during the month of Ramadan (Ramazan in Turkish) and certainly once its attraction was its family atmosphere. It was here that the troupes of Kel Hasan and Abdi Efendi and later that of Neshid enjoyed a great popularity. It was under the influence of these masters that kanto experienced its golden years.

The troupes orchestra would be made up of such instruments as the trumpet, trombone, violin, trap drum and cymbals. The orchestra would start to play popular songs of the day and marches in front of the theatre about an hour before the show to drum up interest. This intermission or Antrak music ended up with the well-known Izmir March, a sign that the show time was approaching. The play began as the musicians went in and took their places at the side of the stage.

The kanto singers of the period were also composers. Set to extraordinarily simple melodies which were the fashion of the day, the lyrics relied heavily of tensions between men and women as well as reflecting topical events. The compositions were in such fundamental makams as Rast, Hüzzam, Hicaz, Hüseyni and Nihavent. Kanto songs are remembered both by the names of their interpreters and by their creators, artists such as Peruz, Shamran, Kamelya, Eleni. Küçük and Büyük Amelya, Mari Ferha and Virjin. That kanto brought an erotic element to the stage performance was an important aspect and one that should not be overlooked or separated out.

Art and cultural life gained new dimensions with the changes brought about by the 1923 formation of the Turkish Republic. It was a period of rapid transformation and its effects were widespread. Turkish women had finally won the freedom to appear on the stage, breaking the monopoly previously held by Rûm (Istanbul Greek) and Armenian women who performed in musical and non-musical theatre. Institutions like Darulbedayi (Istanbul City Theatre) and Darulelhan (Istanbul Conservatory of Music) had long been turning out trained artists.

Western lifestyles and Western-style art put pressure on the traditional Turkish formats and these were swept off to the side. The operetta, the tango, then later the Charleston and the foxtrot overshadowed kanto. Kanto's popularity began to fade, the city's centers of entertainment shifted, and the theaters of Galata and Direklerarası were closed down. Turkish female artists were unreceptive to kanto's inherent ribairy and chose to keep their distance from it.

Around 1935, there was a revival of interest in the kanto form. Although rather far from its fundamental principles, a new type of kanto was once again popular.

It is important to point out that kanto had now moved from the stage to the recording studio. While the subjects dealt with in the lyrics were still the same old quarrels between men and women, mixed in with satirical takes on fashion and current events, the songs were being written with the 78 rpm phonograph in mind. So much so that every record label hired their own kanto composers—and rather famous ones at that. With Columbia at the fore, record labels commissioned kanto from Kaptanzade Ali Rıza Bey, Refik Fersan, Dramalı Hasan, Sadettin Kaynak, Cümbüş Mehmet and Mildan Niyazi Bey. The makams were the same but the instrumentation had changed. Kanto were now accompanied by cümbüş (a fretlees banjo like instrument) the ud (a fretless) lute, and calpara (castenets). Foxtrot, Charleston and rumba rhythms dominated. The tunes were being written and sung more tor listening than tor dancing. Female soloists include Makbule Enver, Mahmure, and Neriman; Beşiktaşlı Kemal Senman was the most sought after male singer for duets.

Among the topics explored by the new kantocu (singer or composer of kanto) perhaps the most frequent subject of satire was the new role of women brought about by the formation of the Republic. Songs like Sarhoş Kızlar (Drunken Girls) or Şoför Kadınlar (Women Drivers) were sung seemingly in revenge for all the suffering they had endured at the hands of men in the past. Other topical songs include Daktilo (The Typewriter) which brought to mind the newly formed Secretaires 7 Society. Songs such as Bereli Kız (The Girl with the Beret) and Kadın Asker Olursa (If Women Were Soldiers) were full of mockery and ridicule.

The early period kanto were largely nourished by Istanbul culture. It was much the same in the Post-Republican period. The city's large and diverse population provided both the characters and the events that were the mainstay of kanto. Kanto was heavily influenced by musical theatre. Roman (gypsy) music and culture, which was itself the subject of satire, left its mark on kanto form. Another major influence was Rum music. The importance of the Istanbul Rum, who were so fond of entertainment and of singing and playing, must not be underestimated. It is a natural and inevitable result of cultural exchange. As it was, almost all the kanto singers were either Rum or Armenian, artists like Pepron, Karakas, Haim, Samran and Peruz who performed during the period following 1903.

Eventually kanto became more of a definition, a generalized genre than a musical term. Any tune that was outside of the day's musical conventions, anything light that appealed to current trends and tastes, was labeled kanto. Any music played with different instruments that was free rhythmic or somehow novel was labeled kanto; it was the product of the middie-class, urban culture of Istanbul.

Kanto has been viewed as a forerunner of today's pop culture.

Popular music

Popular music is distinguished from the traditional genres as those styles that entered the Turkish musicality after the fall of the Ottoman Empire, either due to attempts of national modernization from 1924 onwards, the opening of the republic to Western musical influences or modern fusions and innovations from artists themselves.[1]

Mainstream pop

 
Tarkan in Vienna with fans from Hungary

Turkish pop music had its humble beginnings in the late 1950s with Turkish cover versions of a wide range of imported popular styles, including rock and roll, tango, and jazz. As more styles emerged, they were also adopted, such as hip hop, heavy metal and reggae.

The self-named "superstar" of the "arrangement" (aranjman) era of the 70s was Ajda Pekkan who also debuted, along with Enrico Macias, at Olympia, Paris, while MFÖ (Mazhar, Fuat, Özkan) was the celebrated group of the pop scene with an outstanding dexterity in their use of Turkish prosody and their success of amalgamating Western and Turkish cultural ingredients and perspectives. Also one of the most renowned Turkish pop stars of the last decades is probably Sezen Aksu. She contributed considerably to the unique Turkish pop sound of this period, allowing it gain ground from its humble beginnings in the early 50s and 60s to the popular genre it is today. She was also one of the strongest advocates for Turkey to enter the Eurovision Song Contest. Her one-time vocalist and later protégé Sertab Erener won the contest in 2003.

The biggest male pop stars in Turkey are arguably Tarkan, Mustafa Sandal and Kenan Doğulu. Tarkan achieved chart success in Europe and Latin America with his single "Şımarık", also composed by Sezen Aksu, which has been covered by numerous artists.[27] Mustafa Sandal has also enjoyed chart success in Europe with his 2005 single "İsyankar", which peaked at number 4 and went gold.

Turkish hip hop

Turkish hip hop or oriental hip hop is a creation of the Turkish migrant worker community in Germany, which some suggest was a suitable outlet for a young generation disillusioned with Germany's treatment of its migrant class.[28] In 1995, the Turkish-German community produced a major hip hop crew named Cartel which caused controversy in Turkey and Germany for its revolutionary lyrics. Hip hop now enjoys wide popularity among the younger generation in Turkey. Ceza, Dr.Fuchs (formerly "Nefret") and Sagopa Kajmer, Sansar Salvo, Pit10, Şehinşah, Hayki, Saian, Allâme are popular figures of contemporary rap music in Turkey.

Anatolian rock

The Turkish rock scene began in the mid- to late 1960s, when popular United States and United Kingdom bands became well-known. Soon, a distinctively Turkish fusion of rock and folk emerged; this was called Anatolian rock, a term which nowadays may be generically ascribed to most of Turkish rock.[1] Barış Manço, Cem Karaca and Erkin Koray are the best known performers; Moğollar and Kurtalan Ekspres are the best known groups of older classical Anatolian rock music.

Islamic anasheed

Islamic anasheed are also very popular among some of the Turkish people. The most popular artist in Turkey is the British Azeri, Sami Yusuf, a concert in Istanbul drew an audience of over 200,000, his biggest concert so far around the world.[29] He is one of the most notable singers of anasheed, and can speak in many different languages, which includes Turkish.[citation needed] To date he has performed at sell out concerts in over 30 countries across the world from Istanbul to Casablanca, United States to Germany. Some albums selling more than a million copies in comparison to western music. In Jan 2009 Sami travelled to Turkey where he was invited by Emine Erdoğan, wife of the Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, to attend a rally in support of peace in Gaza.[30] Another popular Turkish singer is Feridun Özdemir, who mainly sings of God and true faith. His records are most successful in the anasheed genre.[31]

Heavy metal and industrial

Heavy metal and industrial groups from Turkey include Pentagram (known as Mezarkabul outside Turkey) and Almora.[32] Individual musicians in these genres include Ogün Sanlısoy and Hayko Cepkin.

Underground black metal and death metal

Underground black metal and death metal bands known from Turkey are Witchtrap, Ehrimen, Satanized, Godslaying Hellblast, Burial Invocation, Deggial, Decaying Purity.

Turkish Trance

Trance is a rare musical genre in Turkey but it also has specific listeners. This genre gained when the first Turkish trance music composed by Murtaza Khojami and the song named for Yalnızlık Düşünceler[33] with mixed criticism.

Pop-rock and rock

As a singular phenomenon amidst popular currents since the mid-1970s, Bülent Ortaçgil appeared as an urban songwriter/musician with a distinct musical quality, and became a role model for aspiring young musicians.[citation needed] He was the only Turkish musician for whom a tribute album was compiled that included several prominent performers from a wide gamut of different genres.

Other recent rock bands with a more Western sound who have enjoyed mainstream success include maNga, Duman and Mor ve Ötesi. Şebnem Ferah, Özlem Tekin and Teoman are examples of individual rock artists with substantial fan bases. Turkey also boasts numerous large-scale rock festivals and events. Annual rock festivals in Turkey include Barışarock, H2000 Music Festival, Rock'n Coke, and RockIstanbul.

Underground and club music

There are many clubs across Turkey, especially across its Aegean region. The alternative music scene however is derived mostly from Istanbul's thriving underground club scene that sees DJs merging the past with the present, using traditional motifs with new age sounds and electronic music. Mercan Dede is one of Turkey's most successful DJs, mixing trance with historical and mystic Sufi songs. Another worldwide recognized name from the underground music scene of Turkey is Mert Yücel. Yücel was responsible for the first house music album to be released in Turkey. He also had worldwide acclaimed and respected releases on US and UK dance labels.[34] He is one of the key names defining the underground house sound emerging from Istanbul.[35][36]

Musical influence of Syrian refugees and other immigrants

The influx of immigrants and refugees from Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, Pakistan, Central Asian, and African countries has affected the Turkish musical landscape, particularly in Istanbul.[37][38] Bands such as Country for Syria, and Saktat explicitly blend the music of different refugee communities in Istanbul to create a mix of Turkish, Arab, Greek, Persian, and Western influences.[39] Busking has played an important role in the development of this style.[40]

Music industry

The Turkish music industry includes a number of fields, ranging from record companies to radio stations and community and state orchestras. Most of the major record companies are based in Istanbul's region of Unkapanı and they are represented by the Turkish Phonographic Industry Society (MÜ-YAP).[41] The major record companies produce material by artists that have signed to one of their record labels, a brand name often associated with a particular genre or record producer. Record companies may also promote and market their artists, through advertising, public performances and concerts, and television appearances.

In recent years, the music industry has been embroiled in turmoil over the rise of the Internet downloading of copyrighted music and general piracy; many musicians and MÜ-YAP have sought to punish fans who illegally download copyrighted music.[41] On 13 June 2006 it was reported that MÜ-YAP and The Orchard, the world's leading distributor and marketer of independent music, had reached an agreement on digital global distribution, representing approximately 80% of the Turkish music market.[42]

There is not a substantial singles market in Turkey.[1] It is album orientated, although popular singers such as Yonca Evcimik and Tarkan have released singles with success.[43] Most music charts not related to album sales, measure popularity by music video feedback and radio airplay.[44]

Turkish radio stations often broadcast popular music. Each music station has a format, or a category of songs to be played; these are generally similar to but not the same as ordinary generic classification. With the introduction of commercial radio and television in the early 1990s ending the monopoly of the Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (TRT), a multitude of radio and TV stations were opened by newspaper media moguls.[1] These media chains sponsor award ceremonies such as the Kral TV awards for music, but most accredited music awards are based on sales given out by industry societies such as MÜ-YAP and the Magazine Journalists Society (MJS).[45][46]

Though major record companies dominate the Turkish industry, an independent music industry (indie music) does exist. Indie music is mostly based around local record labels with limited, if any, retail distribution outside a small region. Artists sometimes record for an indie label and gain enough acclaim to be signed to a major label; others choose to remain at an indie label for their entire careers. Indie music may be in styles generally similar to mainstream music, but is often inaccessible, unusual or otherwise unappealing to many people. Indie musicians often release some or all of their songs over the Internet for fans and others to download and listen to.[3]

Perhaps the most successful Turkish name associated with indie music outside of Turkey is Ahmet Ertegun of Atlantic Records. His promotion of some of the most famous R&B and soul artists in North America and his contribution to the American music industry has earned a place in Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, together with his brother Nesuhi.

Music education

Music has a place in education in Turkey, and is a part of most or all school systems in the country. High schools generally offer classes in singing, mostly choral, and instrumentation in the form of a large school band or social clubs and communities for Turkish classical or folk music, known as cemiyets.[1] Music may also be a part of theatrical productions put on by a school's drama department. Many public and private schools have sponsored music clubs and groups, most commonly including the marching band that performs Mehter marches at school festivals. However, class time given to music in schools is restricted, and a large proportion of Turkish children and adults seem to have limited musical ability, e.g. they are unable to join a melody singing at the same pitch.

Higher education in the field of music in Turkey is mostly based around large universities, connected to state music academies and conservatories. A conservatory is usually a department of a university, not a separate institution. While many students join conservatories at the usual university entrance age, some conservatories also include a 'Lise' (Lycee), in effect a specialist music school for children aged 14 to 18 years. Conservatories often have a musicology department, and do research on many styles of music especially the Turkish traditional genres, while also keeping a database of sounds in their sound libraries.[1]

Holidays and festivals

 
Children's folklore ensemble from Turkey during a festival.

Music is an important part of several Turkish holidays and festivals, especially playing a major part in the springtime celebration of Newroz and religious festivities such as Ramadan.[1] New year is a traditional time for the belly dancer and weddings are celebrated with upbeat tunes, while funerals are mourned with musical laments. Patriotic songs like the national anthem, "The Independence March", are a major part of public holiday celebrations such as National Independence & International Children's Day celebrations on 23 April and 30 August Victory Day celebrations, a holiday that marks Turkish independence.[1] Music also plays a role at many regional festivals that aren't celebrated nationwide, for example a music and dance parade and festival in Zonguldak.

Istanbul, Ankara and İzmir are also home to numerous music festivals which showcase styles ranging from the blues and jazz to indie rock and heavy metal. Some music festivals are strictly local in scope, including few or no performers with a national reputation, and are generally operated by local promoters. Recently large soft drink companies have operated their own music festivals, such as Rock'n Coke and Fanta parties, which draw huge crowds.

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Stokes, Martin (2000). Sounds of Anatolia. Penguin Books. ISBN 1-85828-636-0., pp 396-410.
  2. ^ a b "History of music in Turkey". Les Arts Turcs. May 1, 1999.
  3. ^ a b "Istanbul Music Scene". Yildirim, Ali. Tarkan DeLuxe. Retrieved May 16, 2005.
  4. ^ Karabaşoğlu, Cemal (2015-02-12). "Tradition of Notation in the History of Turkish Music". Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences. International Conference on New Horizons in Education, INTE 2014, 25–27 June 2014, Paris, France. 174: 3832–3837. doi:10.1016/j.sbspro.2015.01.1121.
  5. ^ "Les Arts Turcs - Instruments Workshop in ıstanbul, Turkish Music Enstrument Lesson in Istanbul, Turkish Music Lesson in Istanbul, Istanbul, istambul, Turkish Music Workshop, Music Lesson, Lessons, Lesson Workshops, Ney Lessons & Classical Turkish Musical Instruments Workshop, Turkish Music Workshops in Istanbul, Turkish Musical Instrument Workshops in Istanbul, Les Arts Turc Team, Traditional Turkish Music, Turkish Instruments, Ney, Ud, Kanun, Saz, Tanbur, Buzuki, Darbuka, Bendir, Kemence, Zil, Tef, Tar, Rebab, Turkish Classical Music, Istanbul Üsküdar Musiki Cemiyeti, saz semaisi, taksim, Turkish Sufi Music, whirling dervishes, Mevlana Jelaleddin Rumi, TURKISH MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, Traditional Turkish music, zither, tambur, lute, tef, tambourine, darbuka and ney, reed flute, piano, violin, viola and clarinet, Istanbul, Turkey, Estambul, Istambul". lesartsturcs.com. Retrieved 2017-09-11.
  6. ^ a b c . Tanrıkorur, Cinuçen (Abridged and translated by Savaş Ş. Barkçin). Archived from the original on December 15, 2006. Tanrıkorur argues that the perceived differences between the traditional music genres stemmed from the cultural clash between the East and the West that emerged during the Tanzîmat Era (1839-1908).
  7. ^ "The Fasil". Ottoman Souvenir. Retrieved April 15, 2004.
  8. ^ a b c "Male belly dance in Turkey". Jahal, Jasmin. Retrieved February 2, 2002.
  9. ^ . MilitaryMusic.com. Archived from the original on February 22, 2003. Retrieved February 11, 2003.
  10. ^ . Araci, Emre. The Musical Times. Archived from the original on December 20, 2005. Retrieved October 3, 2002. Famous opera composer Gaetano Donizetti's brother, Giuseppe Donizetti, was invited to become Master of Music to Sultan Mahmud II in 1827.
  11. ^ Bellman, Jonathan (1993). The Style Hongrois in the Music of Western Europe. Northeastern University Press. ISBN 1-55553-169-5. pp.13-14; see also pp.31-2. According to Jonathan Bellman, it was "evolved from a sort of battle music played by Turkish military bands outside the walls of Vienna during the siege of that city in 1683."
  12. ^ . Araci, Emre. Trinity College Chapel, Cambridge. Archived from the original on July 20, 2001. Retrieved July 15, 2001.
  13. ^ Woodard, Kathryn. "Music in the Imperial Harem and the Life of Ottoman Composer Leyla Saz". Sonic Crossroads.
  14. ^ Woodard, Kathryn (2007). "Music Mediating Politics in Turkey: The Case of Ahmed Adnan Saygun". Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 27 (3): 552–562. doi:10.1215/1089201x-2007-032.
  15. ^ Bartok, Bela & Suchoff, Benjamin (1976). Turkish Folk Music from Asia Minor (The New York Bartok Archive Studies in Musicology, No. 7). Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-09120-X., p 50
  16. ^ USTA, Nazlı. "The Transformation Of Music In Early Republican Period In Turkey." Researchgate.net, July 2010, .
  17. ^ a b TUNÇAY, Çağlar. "Musical Implementations of Atatürk's Term." 9 Eylül Üniversitesi, Atatürk İlkeleri Ve İnkılap, 2009, pp. 54–95.
  18. ^ ADIGÜZEL, Adnan. "WESTERNIZATION OF TURKISH (CLASSIC) MUSIC FROM OTTOMAN EMPIRE TO TURKISH REPUBLIC AND PROHIBITED YEARS OF TURKISH MUSIC." Eskişehir Osmangazi Üniversitesi, Eskişehir Osmangazi Üniversitesi, İlahiyat Fakültesi, İslam Tarihi Ve Sanatları Bölümü, 0AD, pp. 4–10.
  19. ^ Karşıcı, Gülay. "MÜZİK TÜRLERİNE İDEOLOJİK YAKLAŞIM: 1970-1990 YILLARI ARASINDAKİ TRT SANSÜRÜ." CIU, Jan. 2010, pp. 170–177.
  20. ^ a b c Erderner, Yildiray (1995). The Song Contests of Turkish Minstrels: Improvised Poetry Sung to Traditional Music (Milman Parry Studies in Oral Tradition). Garland Science. ISBN 0-8153-1239-3., p 36
  21. ^ . Turkishculture.org. Archived from the original on August 10, 2003. Retrieved November 10, 2003.
  22. ^ a b . Middle East Studies Association of North America. December 18, 1995. Archived from the original on April 8, 2007. The tradition of regional variations in the character of folk music prevails all around Anatolia and Thrace even today. The troubadour or minstrel (singer-poets) known as aşık contributed anonymously to this genre for ages.
  23. ^ a b c "Minstrel Literature". Turkish Ministry of Culture. Archived from the original on September 14, 2002. Retrieved March 28, 2005.
  24. ^ See the audio selection from Mevlit at External links below
  25. ^ . Mevlana.Net Owned by Mevlana's family. Archived from the original on January 24, 2005. Retrieved January 11, 2005. The sema dance is very ritualistic and full of symbolism.
  26. ^ a b "Pontic Music Page". Cline, Leigh. Retrieved February 2, 2006.
  27. ^ Such as Holly Valance with the "Kiss Kiss" song.
  28. ^ "Migrant Workers in Germany - "The Lowest of the Low"". Qantara.de. Retrieved October 10, 2005.
  29. ^ "Awakening Music - YouTube". Retrieved 9 June 2022 – via YouTube.
  30. ^ "Sami in Turkey". Samiyusufofficial.com. Retrieved 2009-03-16.
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-04-03. Retrieved 2008-09-25.
  32. ^ tr:Almora
  33. ^ "Günün albümü: Trance müziğe 'Yalnızlık Düşünceler". Soundcloud.com.
  34. ^ "Yurtdışında 16 albüm". Hurriyet.com.tr.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-11-12. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  36. ^ "Mert Yucel". Discogs.
  37. ^ "Refugee musicians play in Turkey's camps - MUSIC". Hürriyet Daily News | LEADING NEWS SOURCE FOR TURKEY AND THE REGION. Retrieved 2017-02-09.
  38. ^ "This Syrian Composer Is Now a Refugee Writing Music on the Street - VICE". Vice. Retrieved 2017-02-09.
  39. ^ "'Country for Syria' band uses music to highlight refugee woes". English.alarabiya.net. 21 November 2016. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
  40. ^ "Meet the migrant musicians bringing new sounds to Istanbul", BBC News, 2016-05-21, retrieved 2017-02-09
  41. ^ a b "Turkish Phonographic Industry Society". MÜ-YAP. Retrieved April 10, 2005. They are part of the IFPI National group. The first long-term punishment for piracy distribution had been handed out in 2006.
  42. ^ "The Orchard Signs Global Distribution and Marketing Agreement With MU-YAP". PR Newswire. Retrieved June 13, 2006.
  43. ^ See information on his domestic singles "Kuzu Kuzu" and "Hüp".
  44. ^ "Powerturk Charts". Powerturk TV. Retrieved December 8, 2001.
  45. ^ "Kral TV Music Channel". Kral. Retrieved June 11, 2001.
  46. ^ . MJS. Archived from the original on June 6, 2004. Retrieved December 18, 2005.

Further reading

  • Bartók, Béla & Suchoff, Benjamin (1976). Turkish Folk Music from Asia Minor (The New York Bartok Archive Studies in Musicology, No. 7). Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-09120-X.
  • Bates, Eliot (2011). Music in Turkey: Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture (Global Music Series). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-195-39414-6.
  • Head, Matthew (2000). Orientalism, Masquerade and Mozart's Turkish Music (Royal Musical Association Monographs S.). Ashgate. ISBN 0-306-76248-X.
  • Jäger, Ralf Martin (1996). Türkische Kunstmusik und ihre handschriftlichen Quellen aus dem 19. Jahrhundert (Schriften zur Musikwissenschaft aus Münster 7). Wagner: Eisenach. ISBN 3-88979-072-0.
  • Karakayali, Nedim (2010). "Two Assemblages of Cultural Transmission: Musicians, Political Actors and Educational Techniques in the Ottoman Empire and Western Europe". Journal of Historical Sociology, 23 (3): 343-371. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Popescu-Judetz, Eugenia (1999). Prince Dimitrie Cantemir: Theorist and Composer of Turkish music. Pan Books. ISBN 975-7652-82-2.
  • Signell, Karl (1977). Makam: Modal practice in Turkish Art Music. Asian Music Publications. ISBN 0-306-76248-X.
  • Stokes, Martin (2010). The Republic of Love: Cultural Intimacy in Turkish Popular Music. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-77505-0.
  • Tietze, Andreas & Yahalom, Joseph (1995). Ottoman Melodies - Hebrew Hymns: A 16th Century Cross-Cultural Adventure. Akademiai Kiado, Bibliotheca Orientalis Hungarica. ISBN 963-05-6864-0.
  • "Whose Song is it?". Tarkan Deluxe. Retrieved November 9, 2004.
  • "Yunus Emre: Sufi and Mystic". Tarkan Deluxe. Retrieved December 18, 2004.
  • . Turkish Embassy. Archived from the original on February 14, 2007. Retrieved April 16, 2006.

External links

  • : Turkish music performed by Hungarian musicians, Budapest.
  • Turkish music publications by Karl Signell.
  • Turkish music performed by Hungarian musicians, Budapest.
  • .
  • BBC Radio 3 Audio (60 minutes): Selim Sesler, troubadour songs and an Alevi ceremony. Accessed November 25, 2010.
  • BBC Radio 3 Audio (60 minutes): Aynur, Erkan Ogur, Kirike and Rembetiko. Accessed November 25, 2010.
  • (in French) Audio clips: Traditional music of Turkey. Musée d'ethnographie de Genève. Accessed November 25, 2010.
  • Turkish Music Portal All about Turkish Music
  • Music of Turkey
  • Crossing The Bridge: Sounds from Istanbul
  • Music at the Uysal-Walker Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative
  • Golden Horn Records
  • Turkish Musical Instruments Shop
  • Insomnia Radio: Turkiye (Turkish Indie Music Available in English & Turkish)
  • Turkey Music Listings
  • Mevlit "Merhaba bahrı" excerpt sung by Kâni Karaca
  • Kanto
  • Interesting instrumental music composed by Mehmet Gencler
  • Anthology of Turkish Piano Music, Vol. I on SheetMusicPlus.com
  • Anthology of Turkish Piano Music, Vol. II on SheetMusicPlus.com
  • Anthology of Turkish Piano Music, Vol. III on SheetMusicPlus.com
  • Rock Music Turkey
  • Turkish Top 20

music, turkey, music, turkey, includes, mainly, turkic, byzantine, elements, well, partial, influences, ranging, from, ottoman, music, middle, eastern, music, music, southeastern, europe, well, references, more, modern, european, american, popular, music, turk. The music of Turkey includes mainly Turkic and Byzantine elements as well as partial influences ranging from Ottoman music Middle Eastern music and Music of Southeastern Europe as well as references to more modern European and American popular music Turkey is a country on the northeastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea and is a crossroad of cultures from across Europe North Africa the Middle East the Caucasus and South and Central Asia The roots of traditional music in Turkey span across centuries to a time when the Seljuk Turks migrated to Anatolia and Persia in the 11th century and contains elements of both Turkic and pre Turkic influences Much of its modern popular music can trace its roots to the emergence in the early 1930s drive for Westernization 1 With the assimilation of immigrants from various regions the diversity of musical genres and musical instrumentation also expanded Turkey has also seen documented folk music and recorded popular music produced in the ethnic styles of Greek Armenian Albanian Polish Azeri and Jewish communities among others 2 Many Turkish cities and towns have vibrant local music scenes which in turn support a number of regional musical styles Despite this however western style pop music lost popularity to arabesque in the late 1970s and 1980s with even its greatest proponents Ajda Pekkan and Sezen Aksu falling in status It became popular again by the beginning of the 1990s as a result of an opening economy and society With the support of Aksu the resurging popularity of pop music gave rise to several international Turkish pop stars such as Tarkan and Sertab Erener The late 1990s also saw an emergence of underground music producing alternative Turkish rock electronica hip hop rap and dance music in opposition to the mainstream corporate pop and arabesque genres which many believe have become too commercial 3 Contents 1 Classical music 1 1 Musical instruments 1 2 Ottoman harem music Belly dance 1 3 Romani influences 1 4 Military music 1 5 Turkish influence on Western classical music 1 6 Western Influence on Turkish classical music 2 Early Years of The Republic 3 Folk music 3 1 Folk instruments 3 2 Folk literature 3 3 Arabesque 3 4 Religious music 3 4 1 Islamic Recitation 3 4 2 Alevi influences The Asik Ashik traditions 3 4 3 Sufi influences The Mevlevi traditions 3 5 Regional folk styles 3 5 1 Aegean and Rumeli regions 3 5 2 Black Sea and Caspian Sea regions 3 5 3 Southeastern regions 4 Kanto Cantare music 5 Popular music 5 1 Mainstream pop 5 2 Turkish hip hop 5 3 Anatolian rock 5 4 Islamic anasheed 5 5 Heavy metal and industrial 5 6 Underground black metal and death metal 5 7 Turkish Trance 5 8 Pop rock and rock 5 9 Underground and club music 5 10 Musical influence of Syrian refugees and other immigrants 6 Music industry 7 Music education 8 Holidays and festivals 9 See also 10 Notes and references 11 Further reading 12 External linksClassical music Edit Front facade of Ataturk Cultural Center after completion The main opera building in Istanbul Main article Turkish classical music Katibim Uskudar a Gider iken source source An example of Turkish classical music Problems playing this file See media help Ottoman court music has a large and varied system of modes or scales known as makams and other rules of composition A number of notation systems were used for transcribing classical music the most dominant being the Hamparsum notation in use until the gradual introduction of western notation 4 Turkish classical music is taught in conservatories and social clubs the most respected of which is Istanbul s Uskudar Musiki Cemiyeti 5 A specific sequence of classical Turkish musical forms becomes a fasil a suite consisting of an instrumental prelude peṣrev an instrumental postlude saz semaisi and in between the main section of vocal compositions which begins with and is punctuated by instrumental improvisations taksim 6 A full fasil concert would include four different instrumental forms and three vocal forms including a light classical song sarki A strictly classical fasil remains is the same makam throughout from the introductory taksim and usually ending in a dance tune or oyun havasi 7 However shorter sarki compositions precursors to modern day songs are a part of this tradition many of them extremely old dating back to the 14th century many are newer with late 19th century songwriter Haci Arif Bey being especially popular Composers and PerformersOther famous proponents of this genre include Sufi Dede Efendi Prince Cantemir Baba Hamparsum Kemani Tatyos Efendi Sultan Selim III and Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent The most popular modern Turkish classical singer is Munir Nurettin Selcuk who was the first to establish a lead singer position Other performers include Bulent Ersoy Zeki Muren Muzeyyen Senar and Zekai Tunca Musical instruments Edit Traditional instruments in Turkish classical music today include tambur generally use as tanbur long necked plucked lute ney end blown flute kemence bowed fiddle oud plucked short necked unfretted lute kanun plucked zither violin and in Mevlevi music kudum drum and a harp Ottoman harem music Belly dance Edit Female musical players Ottoman miniature painting 18th century Further information Belly dance From the makams of the royal courts to the melodies of the royal harems a type of dance music emerged that was different from the oyun havasi of fasil music In the Ottoman Empire the harem was that part of a house set apart for the women of the family It was a place in which non family males were not allowed Eunuchs guarded the sultan s harems which were quite large including several hundred women who were wives and concubines There female dancers and musicians entertained the women living in the harem Belly dance was performed by women for women This female dancer known as a rakkase which is the Arabic word for female dancer hardly ever appeared in public 8 This type of harem music was taken out of the sultan s private living quarters and to the public by male street entertainers and hired dancers of the Ottoman Empire the male rakkas These dancers performed publicly for wedding celebrations feasts festivals and in the presence of the sultans 8 Modern oriental dance in Turkey is derived from this tradition of the Ottoman rakkas Some mistakenly believe that Turkish oriental dancing is known as Ciftetelli due to the fact that this style of music has been incorporated into oriental dancing by Greeks illustrated by the fact that the Greek belly dance is sometimes mistakenly called Tsifteteli However Ciftetelli is now a form of folk music with names of songs that describe their local origins whereas rakkas as the name suggests is from Arabic which means male dancer 8 Dancers are also known for their adept use of finger cymbals as instruments also known as zils Romani influences Edit Further information Romani music Romani are known throughout Turkey for their musicianship Their urban music brought echoes of classical Turkish music to the public via the meyhane or taverna This type of fasil music a style not to be confused with the fasil form of classical Turkish music with food and alcoholic beverages is often associated with the underclass of Turkish society though it also can be found in more respectable establishments in modern times 1 Roma have also influenced the fasil itself Played in music halls the dance music oyun havasi required at the end of each fasil has been incorporated with Ottoman rakkas or belly dancing motifs The rhythmic ostinato accompanying the instrumental improvisation ritimli taksim for the bellydance parallels that of the classical gazel a vocal improvisation in free rhythm with rhythmic accompaniment Popular musical instruments in this kind of fasil are the clarinet violin kanun and darbuka Clarinetist Mustafa Kandirali is a well known fasil musician Military music Edit Main article Ottoman military band Surname i Vebbi fol 172a showing military band The Janissary bands or Mehter Takimi are considered to be the oldest type of military marching band in the world 9 Individual instrumentalists were mentioned in the Orhun inscriptions which are believed to be the oldest written sources of Turkish history dating from the 8th century However they were not definitively mentioned as bands until the 13th century The rest of Europe borrowed the notion of military marching bands from Turkey from the 16th century onwards Turkish influence on Western classical music Edit Main article Turkish music style Musical relations between the Turks and the rest of Europe can be traced back many centuries 10 and the first type of musical Orientalism was the Turkish Style 11 European classical composers in the 18th century were fascinated by Turkish music particularly the strong role given to the brass and percussion instruments in Janissary bands Joseph Haydn wrote his Military Symphony to include Turkish instruments as well as some of his operas Turkish instruments were included in Ludwig van Beethoven s Symphony Number 9 and he composed a Turkish March for his Incidental Music to The Ruins of Athens Op 113 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote the Ronda alla turca in his Sonata in A major and also used Turkish themes in his operas such as the Chorus of Janissaries from his Die Entfuhrung aus dem Serail 1782 This Turkish influence introduced the cymbals bass drum and bells into the symphony orchestra where they remain Jazz musician Dave Brubeck wrote his Blue Rondo a la Turk as a tribute to Mozart and Turkish music citation needed Western Influence on Turkish classical music Edit CSO Ada Ankara serves as Presidential Symphony Orchestra Concert Hall in the capital While the European military bands of the 18th century introduced the percussion instruments of the Ottoman janissary bands a reciprocal influence emerged in the 19th century in the form of the Europeanisation of the Ottoman army band In 1827 Giuseppe Donizetti the elder brother of the renowned Italian opera composer Gaetano Donizetti was invited to become Master of Music to Sultan Mahmud II 12 A successor of Donizetti was the German musician Paul Lange formerly music lecturer at the American College for Girls and at the German High School who took over the position of Master of the Sultan s Music after the Young Turk Revolution in 1908 and kept it until his death in 1920 A son of Paul Lange was the Istanbul born American conductor Hans Lange The Ottoman composer Leyla Saz 1850 1936 provides an account of musical training in the Imperial Palace in her memoirs As the daughter of the Palace surgeon she grew up in the Imperial harem where girls were also given music lessons in both Turkish and Western styles 13 After the decline of the Ottoman Empire and the creation of a Turkish republic the transfer of the former Imperial Orchestra or Mizika i Humayun from Istanbul to the new capital of the state Ankara and renaming it as the Orchestra of the Presidency of the Republic Riyaset i Cumhur Orkestrasi signaled a Westernization of Turkish music The name would later be changed to the Presidential Symphony Orchestra or Cumhurbaskanligi Senfoni Orkestrasi 1 Further inroads came with the founding of a new school for the training of Western style music instructors in 1924 renaming the Istanbul Oriental Music School as the Istanbul Conservatory in 1926 and sending talented young musicians abroad for further music education These students include well known Turkish composers such as Cemal Resit Rey Ulvi Cemal Erkin Ahmet Adnan Saygun Necil Kazim Akses and Hasan Ferit Alnar who became known as the Turkish Five 14 The founding of the Ankara State Conservatory with the aid of the German composer and music theorist Paul Hindemith in 1936 showed that Turkey in terms of music wanted to be like the West 1 However on the order of the founder of the republic Ataturk following his philosophy to take from the West but to remain Turkish in essence a wide scale classification and archiving of samples of Turkish folk music from around Anatolia was launched in 1924 and continued until 1953 to collect around 10 000 folk songs Hungarian composer Bela Bartok visited Ankara and south eastern Turkey in 1936 within the context of these works 15 By 1976 Turkish classical music had undergone a renaissance and a state musical conservatory in Istanbul was founded to give classical musicians the same support as folk musicians Modern day advocates of Western classical music in Turkey include Fazil Say Idil Biret Suna Kan and the Pekinel sisters Early Years of The Republic EditAfter the Turkish War of Independence ended in 1923 and the borders were drawn there was a social and political revolution under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk This revolution opted to Westernize the way of living in Turkey By 1929 all public and commercial communications were made in Latin alphabet completely taking written Ottoman Turkish language out of circulation A new constitution was written one that was modeled after the French This new constitution was designed to make the new Republic of Turkey into a secular modern nation state Every aspect of the revolution from major policy changes to clothing reforms was made in accordance with the Kemalist Ideology All affairs were carried out followed by a chain of military command for the purpose of reaching the level of Western civilization Both religious and Turkish classical music was impacted by this top to bottom revolution On November 1 1934 Ataturk made a speech in the Grand National Assembly of Turkey Alaturca music was banned on radios public places as well as private properties 16 Here is the excerpt from the speech concerning Turkish music Folks we all know how sensitive we the Turkish are towards the matters of our cultural legacy I am aware what kind of progress that my people want to see within fine arts delivered by the new generation of artists and musicians If you ask me what would be most efficient and quick to tackle first within the fine arts is Turkish Music The music we are made to listen to these days is far from being a point of pride for Turkish people We must all know this We must take our great nation s idioms stories experiences and compose them but only complying to the general rules of music I wish that the Ministry of Cultural Affairs take this matter seriously and work alongside the law makers of our country 17 Right after this speech on November 2 1934 The Department of Publishing and Press banned Alaturca music knowing what Mustafa Kemal meant when he said but only complying to the general rules of music was that the only acceptable type of music available to the public will be music following the principles of western tonal music The Turkish composers who were educated abroad in the beginning of the century and came back to Turkey were assigned to teach classical Turkish musicians the western way of writing and playing music The Presidential Symphony Orchestra established back in 1924 started giving weekly free performances in schools specifying in Music Education New instruments like pianos trumpets and saxophones were bought for cultural centers in villages not just in Istanbul but in many places like Bursa Corum Gumushane and Samsun 17 Along with the radical ideology change and the sudden application of these new ideas came an obvious tear in the fabric of the society People who couldn t listen to Turkish music on Turkish Radio sought out the next best thing and started listening to the Arabic Radio There are records of Turkish people calling into Egyptian Crimean and Haifan radio stations requesting Turkish songs they were used to listening to since The Middle East already consumed and re created a lot of Turkish Music since the rise of the Ottoman Empire in the middle of the millennium 18 Turkish people started listening to other nations version of Turkish songs This cleared the way for the Arabesque music to become hugely popular in the 70s Today there are still prolific and popular Arabesque musicians in Turkey The ban in the early years of the Republic is exactly why Arabesque Music became a cultural phenomenon 19 Folk music EditMain article Turkish folk music Kemence is a popular folk music instrument on Turkey s Black Sea coast Folk music or Turku generally deals with subjects surrounding daily life in less grandiose terms than the love and emotion usually contained in its traditional counterpart Ottoman court music 6 Most songs recount stories of real life events and Turkish folklore or have developed through song contests between troubadour poets 20 Corresponding to their origins folk songs are usually played at weddings funerals and special festivals Regional folk music generally accompanies folk dances which vary significantly across regions For example at marriage ceremonies in the Aegean guests will dance the Zeybek while in other Rumeli regions the upbeat dance music Ciftetelli is usually played and in the southeastern regions of Turkey the Halay is the customary form of local wedding music and dance 1 Greeks from Thrace and Cyprus that have adopted ciftetelli music sometimes use it synonymously to mean Oriental dance which indicates a misunderstanding of its roots Ciftetelli is a folk dance differing from a solo performance dance of a hired entertainer The regional mood also affects the subject of the folk songs e g folk songs from the Black Sea are lively in general and express the customs of the region Songs about betrayal have an air of defiance about them instead of sadness whereas the further south travelled in Turkey the more the melodies resemble a lament 21 As this genre is viewed as a music of the people musicians in socialist movements began to adapt folk music with contemporary sounds and arrangements in the form of protest music In the 70s and 80s modern bards following the asik tradition such as Asik Veysel and Mahsuni Serif moved away from spiritual invocations to socio politically active lyrics Other contemporary progenitors took their lead such as Zulfu Livaneli known for his mid 80s innovation of combining poet Nazim Hikmet s radical poems with folk music and rural melodies and is well regarded by left wing supporters in politics 1 In more recent times saz orchestras accompanied with many other traditional instruments and a merger with arabesque melodies have kept modern folk songs popular in Turkey 1 Folk instruments Edit Baglama Folk instruments range from string groups as baglama bow instruments such as the kemence a type of stave fiddle and percussion and wind including the zurna ney and davul Regional variations place importance on different instruments e g the darbuka in Rumeli and the kemence around the Eastern Black Sea region The folklore of Turkey is extremely diverse Nevertheless Turkish folk music is dominantly marked by a single musical instrument called saz or baglama a type of long necked lute Traditionally saz is played solely by traveling musicians known as ozan or religious Alevi troubadours called asik 22 Due to the cultural crossbreeding prevalent during the Ottoman Empire the baglama has influenced various cultures in the Eastern Mediterranean e g the Greek baglamas In Turkish baglamak means to tie as a reference to the tied movable frets of the instrument Like many other plucked lutes it can be played with a plectrum i e pick with a fingerpicking style or strummed with the backs of fingernails The zurna and davul duo is also popular in rural areas and played at weddings and other local celebrations Folk literature Edit Further information Turkish folk literature A large body of folk songs are derived from minstrels or bard poets called ozan in Turkish They have been developing Turkish folk literature since the beginning of 11th century The musical instrument used by these bard poets is the saz or baglama They are often taught by other senior minstrels learning expert idioms procedures and methods in the performance of the art 23 These lessons often take place at minstrel meetings and the coffeehouses they frequent Those bard poets who become experts or alayli then take apprentices for themselves and continue the tradition 23 A minstrel s creative output usually takes two major forms One in musical rhyming contests with other bards where the competition ends with the defeat of the minstrel who cannot find an appropriate quatrain to the rhyme and two storytelling 20 These folk stories are extracted from real life folklore dreams and legends 23 One of the most well known followings are those bards that put the title asik in front of their names Arabesque Edit Main article Arabesque music Arabic music had been banned in Turkey in 1948 but starting in the 1970s immigration from predominantly southeastern rural areas to big cities and particularly to Istanbul gave rise to a new cultural synthesis This changed the musical makeup of Istanbul The old tavernas and music halls of fasil music were to shut down in place of a new type of music 1 These new urban residents brought their own taste of music which due to their locality was largely middle eastern Musicologists derogatively termed this genre as arabesque due to the high pitched wailing that is synonymous with Arabic singing Its mainstream popularity rose so much in the 1980s that it even threatened the existence of Turkish pop with rising stars such as Muslum Gurses and Ibrahim Tatlises 1 The genre has underbeat forms that include Ottoman forms of belly dancing music known as fantazi from singers like Gulben Ergen and with performers like Serdar Ortac who added Anglo American rock and roll to arabesque music It is not really accurate to group Arabesk with folk music It owes little to folk music and would be more accurately described as form of popular music based on the makam scales found in Ottoman and Turkish classical music Though Arabesk was accused of having been derived from Arabic music the scales makam used identify it as music that though influenced by both Arabic and Western music is much more Turkish in origin Religious music Edit Islamic Recitation Edit Islamic Recitation a term associated with mainstream religion in Turkey includes the azan call to prayer Kur an i Kerim Koran recitation Mevlit Ascension Poem and ilahi hymns usually sung in a group often outside a mosque On musical grounds mosque music in large urban areas often resembles classical Turkish music in its learned use of makam and poetry e g a Mevlit sung at Sultan Ahmet mosque in Istanbul Dervish Sufi music is rarely associated with a mosque Kani Karaca was a leading performer of mosque music in recent times 24 Alevi influences The Asik Ashik traditions Edit It is suggested that about a fifth of the Turkish population are Alevis whose folk music is performed by a type of travelling bard or ozan called asik who travels with the saz or baglama an iconic image of Turkish folk music 22 These songs which hail from the central northeastern area are about mystical revelations invocations to Alevi saints and Muhammad s son in law Ali whom they hold in high esteem In Turkish asik literally means in love Whoever follows this tradition has the Asik assignation put before their names because it is suggested that music becomes an essential facet of their being for example as in Asik Veysel Middle Anatolia is home to the bozlak a type of declamatory partially improvised music by the bards Neset Ertas has so far been the most prominent contemporary voice of Middle Anatolian music singing songs of a large spectrum including works of premodern Turkoman asiks like Karacaoglan and Dadaloglu and the modern asiks like his father the late Muharrem Ertas Around the city of Sivas asik music has a more spiritual bent afeaturing ritualized song contests although modern bards have brought it into the political arena 20 Sufi influences The Mevlevi traditions Edit Followers of the Mevlevi Order or whirling dervishes are a religious sufi sect unique to Turkey but well known outside of its boundaries Dervishes of the Mevlevi sect simply dance a sema by turning continuously to music that consists of long complex compositions called ayin These pieces are both preceded and followed by songs using lyrics by the founder and poet Mevlana Jelaleddin Rumi 25 With the musical instrument known as the ney at the forefront of this music internationally well known musicians include Necdet Yasar Niyazi Sayin Kudsi Erguner and Omer Faruk Tekbilek Regional folk styles Edit Minorities and indigenous peoples have added and enhanced Turkish folk styles while they have adopted Turkish folk traditions and instruments Folk songs are identifiable and distinguished by regions Aegean and Rumeli regions Edit Rumelia or Trakya refers to the region of Turkey which is part of Southeast Europe the provinces of Edirne Kirklareli Tekirdag the northern part of Canakkale Province and the western part of Istanbul Province Folk songs from this region share similarities with Balkan Albanian and Greek folk musics especially from the ethnic minorities and natives of Thrace Cypriot folk music also shares folk tunes with this region e g the Ciftetelli dance These types of folk songs also share close similarities with Ottoman court music suggesting that the distinction between court and folk music was not always so clear 2 6 However folk songs from Istanbul may have been closely influenced by its locality which would include Ottoman rakkas and court music Cities like Izmir share similar motifs such as the zeybek dance Black Sea and Caspian Sea regions Edit Central Asian Turkic peoples from the Caspian Sea and areas have had a huge influence in the purest forms of Turkish folk music most notably from the Azeris and Turkmen Pontic Greeks on the eastern shore of the Black Sea or Karadeniz regions have their own distinct Greek style of folk music motifs from which were used with great success by Helena Paparizou 26 The diaspora of Greek speaking Pontic people from that region introduced Pontic music to Greece after 1924 population exchange between Turkey and Greece The region s dance style uses unique techniques like odd shoulder tremors and knee bends Folk dances include the gerasari trygona kots omal serra kotsari and tik 26 Southeastern regions Edit Southeastern regions carry influences from Turkmen music Zaza motifs and Armenian music These usually include epic laments Kanto Cantare music EditMain article Kanto music Italian theater and opera have had a profound effect on Turkish culture in the past century Like the terminology of seamanship the terminology of music and theater is derived from Italian In the argot of the improvisational theater of Istanbul the stage was called sahano the backstage was referred to as koyuntu backdrops depicting countryside were bosko the applause was furi and the songs sung between the acts and plays were called kanto The improvised pieces were stage adaptations of the Karagoz shadow puppet and Ortaoyunu traditional form of Turkish theatre performed in the open traditions although in a much more simplified form The themes explored in these traditional theater arts as well as their stock characterizations and stereotypes were used as the framework for the new extemporaneous performances of the tuluat improvised theater As with their Italian counterparts the Turkish troupes employed songs and music before the show and between the acts to pique people s interest and draw in customers Kanto songs sung between the acts as solos or duets based on traditional eastern makam modes but performed on western instruments Kanto first the introduction then the lyrics shake your shoulders to a violin solo cock your head and shimmy in oriental dance style leap around like a partridge then slowly disappear behind the curtain Kanto the irreplaceable unifying feature of ali Turkish tuluat theater We can divide kanto into two periods The division particularly in terms of musical structure is very clear between the early kanto and the kanto of the Post Republic period It is further possible to identify two styles within the early period Galata and Direklerarasi both neighbourhoods of Old Istanbul Kanto first took root in the musical theaters of Galata a part of town frequented by sailors rowdies and roustabouts Ahmed Rasim Bey paints a vivid picture of the Galata theaters in his 1922 memoir entitled Fuhs i Atik Prostitution in the Old Days Everyone thought Peruz was the most flirtatious most skillful and the most provocative The seats closest to the stage were always crammed full They said of Peruz she is a trollop who has ensnared the heart of many a young man and has made herself the enemy of many Her songs would hardly be finished when chairs flowers bouquets and beribboned letters Come flying from the boxseats It seemed the building would be shaken to the ground Direklerarasi was a little off the beaten track and in comparison to Galata was a more refined center of entertainment Direklerarasi was said to be quite lively at night during the month of Ramadan Ramazan in Turkish and certainly once its attraction was its family atmosphere It was here that the troupes of Kel Hasan and Abdi Efendi and later that of Neshid enjoyed a great popularity It was under the influence of these masters that kanto experienced its golden years The troupes orchestra would be made up of such instruments as the trumpet trombone violin trap drum and cymbals The orchestra would start to play popular songs of the day and marches in front of the theatre about an hour before the show to drum up interest This intermission or Antrak music ended up with the well known Izmir March a sign that the show time was approaching The play began as the musicians went in and took their places at the side of the stage The kanto singers of the period were also composers Set to extraordinarily simple melodies which were the fashion of the day the lyrics relied heavily of tensions between men and women as well as reflecting topical events The compositions were in such fundamental makams as Rast Huzzam Hicaz Huseyni and Nihavent Kanto songs are remembered both by the names of their interpreters and by their creators artists such as Peruz Shamran Kamelya Eleni Kucuk and Buyuk Amelya Mari Ferha and Virjin That kanto brought an erotic element to the stage performance was an important aspect and one that should not be overlooked or separated out Art and cultural life gained new dimensions with the changes brought about by the 1923 formation of the Turkish Republic It was a period of rapid transformation and its effects were widespread Turkish women had finally won the freedom to appear on the stage breaking the monopoly previously held by Rum Istanbul Greek and Armenian women who performed in musical and non musical theatre Institutions like Darulbedayi Istanbul City Theatre and Darulelhan Istanbul Conservatory of Music had long been turning out trained artists Western lifestyles and Western style art put pressure on the traditional Turkish formats and these were swept off to the side The operetta the tango then later the Charleston and the foxtrot overshadowed kanto Kanto s popularity began to fade the city s centers of entertainment shifted and the theaters of Galata and Direklerarasi were closed down Turkish female artists were unreceptive to kanto s inherent ribairy and chose to keep their distance from it Around 1935 there was a revival of interest in the kanto form Although rather far from its fundamental principles a new type of kanto was once again popular It is important to point out that kanto had now moved from the stage to the recording studio While the subjects dealt with in the lyrics were still the same old quarrels between men and women mixed in with satirical takes on fashion and current events the songs were being written with the 78 rpm phonograph in mind So much so that every record label hired their own kanto composers and rather famous ones at that With Columbia at the fore record labels commissioned kanto from Kaptanzade Ali Riza Bey Refik Fersan Dramali Hasan Sadettin Kaynak Cumbus Mehmet and Mildan Niyazi Bey The makams were the same but the instrumentation had changed Kanto were now accompanied by cumbus a fretlees banjo like instrument the ud a fretless lute and calpara castenets Foxtrot Charleston and rumba rhythms dominated The tunes were being written and sung more tor listening than tor dancing Female soloists include Makbule Enver Mahmure and Neriman Besiktasli Kemal Senman was the most sought after male singer for duets Among the topics explored by the new kantocu singer or composer of kanto perhaps the most frequent subject of satire was the new role of women brought about by the formation of the Republic Songs like Sarhos Kizlar Drunken Girls or Sofor Kadinlar Women Drivers were sung seemingly in revenge for all the suffering they had endured at the hands of men in the past Other topical songs include Daktilo The Typewriter which brought to mind the newly formed Secretaires 7 Society Songs such as Bereli Kiz The Girl with the Beret and Kadin Asker Olursa If Women Were Soldiers were full of mockery and ridicule The early period kanto were largely nourished by Istanbul culture It was much the same in the Post Republican period The city s large and diverse population provided both the characters and the events that were the mainstay of kanto Kanto was heavily influenced by musical theatre Roman gypsy music and culture which was itself the subject of satire left its mark on kanto form Another major influence was Rum music The importance of the Istanbul Rum who were so fond of entertainment and of singing and playing must not be underestimated It is a natural and inevitable result of cultural exchange As it was almost all the kanto singers were either Rum or Armenian artists like Pepron Karakas Haim Samran and Peruz who performed during the period following 1903 Eventually kanto became more of a definition a generalized genre than a musical term Any tune that was outside of the day s musical conventions anything light that appealed to current trends and tastes was labeled kanto Any music played with different instruments that was free rhythmic or somehow novel was labeled kanto it was the product of the middie class urban culture of Istanbul Kanto has been viewed as a forerunner of today s pop culture Popular music EditPopular music is distinguished from the traditional genres as those styles that entered the Turkish musicality after the fall of the Ottoman Empire either due to attempts of national modernization from 1924 onwards the opening of the republic to Western musical influences or modern fusions and innovations from artists themselves 1 Mainstream pop Edit Main article Turkish pop music Tarkan in Vienna with fans from Hungary Turkish pop music had its humble beginnings in the late 1950s with Turkish cover versions of a wide range of imported popular styles including rock and roll tango and jazz As more styles emerged they were also adopted such as hip hop heavy metal and reggae The self named superstar of the arrangement aranjman era of the 70s was Ajda Pekkan who also debuted along with Enrico Macias at Olympia Paris while MFO Mazhar Fuat Ozkan was the celebrated group of the pop scene with an outstanding dexterity in their use of Turkish prosody and their success of amalgamating Western and Turkish cultural ingredients and perspectives Also one of the most renowned Turkish pop stars of the last decades is probably Sezen Aksu She contributed considerably to the unique Turkish pop sound of this period allowing it gain ground from its humble beginnings in the early 50s and 60s to the popular genre it is today She was also one of the strongest advocates for Turkey to enter the Eurovision Song Contest Her one time vocalist and later protege Sertab Erener won the contest in 2003 The biggest male pop stars in Turkey are arguably Tarkan Mustafa Sandal and Kenan Dogulu Tarkan achieved chart success in Europe and Latin America with his single Simarik also composed by Sezen Aksu which has been covered by numerous artists 27 Mustafa Sandal has also enjoyed chart success in Europe with his 2005 single Isyankar which peaked at number 4 and went gold Turkish hip hop Edit Main article Turkish hip hop Turkish hip hop or oriental hip hop is a creation of the Turkish migrant worker community in Germany which some suggest was a suitable outlet for a young generation disillusioned with Germany s treatment of its migrant class 28 In 1995 the Turkish German community produced a major hip hop crew named Cartel which caused controversy in Turkey and Germany for its revolutionary lyrics Hip hop now enjoys wide popularity among the younger generation in Turkey Ceza Dr Fuchs formerly Nefret and Sagopa Kajmer Sansar Salvo Pit10 Sehinsah Hayki Saian Allame are popular figures of contemporary rap music in Turkey Anatolian rock Edit Main article Anatolian rock The Turkish rock scene began in the mid to late 1960s when popular United States and United Kingdom bands became well known Soon a distinctively Turkish fusion of rock and folk emerged this was called Anatolian rock a term which nowadays may be generically ascribed to most of Turkish rock 1 Baris Manco Cem Karaca and Erkin Koray are the best known performers Mogollar and Kurtalan Ekspres are the best known groups of older classical Anatolian rock music Islamic anasheed Edit Islamic anasheed are also very popular among some of the Turkish people The most popular artist in Turkey is the British Azeri Sami Yusuf a concert in Istanbul drew an audience of over 200 000 his biggest concert so far around the world 29 He is one of the most notable singers of anasheed and can speak in many different languages which includes Turkish citation needed To date he has performed at sell out concerts in over 30 countries across the world from Istanbul to Casablanca United States to Germany Some albums selling more than a million copies in comparison to western music In Jan 2009 Sami travelled to Turkey where he was invited by Emine Erdogan wife of the Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to attend a rally in support of peace in Gaza 30 Another popular Turkish singer is Feridun Ozdemir who mainly sings of God and true faith His records are most successful in the anasheed genre 31 Heavy metal and industrial Edit Heavy metal and industrial groups from Turkey include Pentagram known as Mezarkabul outside Turkey and Almora 32 Individual musicians in these genres include Ogun Sanlisoy and Hayko Cepkin Underground black metal and death metal Edit Underground black metal and death metal bands known from Turkey are Witchtrap Ehrimen Satanized Godslaying Hellblast Burial Invocation Deggial Decaying Purity Turkish Trance Edit Main article Trance Music Trance is a rare musical genre in Turkey but it also has specific listeners This genre gained when the first Turkish trance music composed by Murtaza Khojami and the song named for Yalnizlik Dusunceler 33 with mixed criticism Pop rock and rock Edit As a singular phenomenon amidst popular currents since the mid 1970s Bulent Ortacgil appeared as an urban songwriter musician with a distinct musical quality and became a role model for aspiring young musicians citation needed He was the only Turkish musician for whom a tribute album was compiled that included several prominent performers from a wide gamut of different genres Other recent rock bands with a more Western sound who have enjoyed mainstream success include maNga Duman and Mor ve Otesi Sebnem Ferah Ozlem Tekin and Teoman are examples of individual rock artists with substantial fan bases Turkey also boasts numerous large scale rock festivals and events Annual rock festivals in Turkey include Barisarock H2000 Music Festival Rock n Coke and RockIstanbul Underground and club music Edit There are many clubs across Turkey especially across its Aegean region The alternative music scene however is derived mostly from Istanbul s thriving underground club scene that sees DJs merging the past with the present using traditional motifs with new age sounds and electronic music Mercan Dede is one of Turkey s most successful DJs mixing trance with historical and mystic Sufi songs Another worldwide recognized name from the underground music scene of Turkey is Mert Yucel Yucel was responsible for the first house music album to be released in Turkey He also had worldwide acclaimed and respected releases on US and UK dance labels 34 He is one of the key names defining the underground house sound emerging from Istanbul 35 36 Musical influence of Syrian refugees and other immigrants Edit The influx of immigrants and refugees from Afghanistan Syria Iraq Pakistan Central Asian and African countries has affected the Turkish musical landscape particularly in Istanbul 37 38 Bands such as Country for Syria and Saktat explicitly blend the music of different refugee communities in Istanbul to create a mix of Turkish Arab Greek Persian and Western influences 39 Busking has played an important role in the development of this style 40 Music industry EditFurther information Music industry The Turkish music industry includes a number of fields ranging from record companies to radio stations and community and state orchestras Most of the major record companies are based in Istanbul s region of Unkapani and they are represented by the Turkish Phonographic Industry Society MU YAP 41 The major record companies produce material by artists that have signed to one of their record labels a brand name often associated with a particular genre or record producer Record companies may also promote and market their artists through advertising public performances and concerts and television appearances In recent years the music industry has been embroiled in turmoil over the rise of the Internet downloading of copyrighted music and general piracy many musicians and MU YAP have sought to punish fans who illegally download copyrighted music 41 On 13 June 2006 it was reported that MU YAP and The Orchard the world s leading distributor and marketer of independent music had reached an agreement on digital global distribution representing approximately 80 of the Turkish music market 42 There is not a substantial singles market in Turkey 1 It is album orientated although popular singers such as Yonca Evcimik and Tarkan have released singles with success 43 Most music charts not related to album sales measure popularity by music video feedback and radio airplay 44 Turkish radio stations often broadcast popular music Each music station has a format or a category of songs to be played these are generally similar to but not the same as ordinary generic classification With the introduction of commercial radio and television in the early 1990s ending the monopoly of the Turkish Radio and Television Corporation TRT a multitude of radio and TV stations were opened by newspaper media moguls 1 These media chains sponsor award ceremonies such as the Kral TV awards for music but most accredited music awards are based on sales given out by industry societies such as MU YAP and the Magazine Journalists Society MJS 45 46 Though major record companies dominate the Turkish industry an independent music industry indie music does exist Indie music is mostly based around local record labels with limited if any retail distribution outside a small region Artists sometimes record for an indie label and gain enough acclaim to be signed to a major label others choose to remain at an indie label for their entire careers Indie music may be in styles generally similar to mainstream music but is often inaccessible unusual or otherwise unappealing to many people Indie musicians often release some or all of their songs over the Internet for fans and others to download and listen to 3 Perhaps the most successful Turkish name associated with indie music outside of Turkey is Ahmet Ertegun of Atlantic Records His promotion of some of the most famous R amp B and soul artists in North America and his contribution to the American music industry has earned a place in Rock and Roll Hall of Fame together with his brother Nesuhi Music education EditFurther information Music education Music has a place in education in Turkey and is a part of most or all school systems in the country High schools generally offer classes in singing mostly choral and instrumentation in the form of a large school band or social clubs and communities for Turkish classical or folk music known as cemiyets 1 Music may also be a part of theatrical productions put on by a school s drama department Many public and private schools have sponsored music clubs and groups most commonly including the marching band that performs Mehter marches at school festivals However class time given to music in schools is restricted and a large proportion of Turkish children and adults seem to have limited musical ability e g they are unable to join a melody singing at the same pitch Higher education in the field of music in Turkey is mostly based around large universities connected to state music academies and conservatories A conservatory is usually a department of a university not a separate institution While many students join conservatories at the usual university entrance age some conservatories also include a Lise Lycee in effect a specialist music school for children aged 14 to 18 years Conservatories often have a musicology department and do research on many styles of music especially the Turkish traditional genres while also keeping a database of sounds in their sound libraries 1 Holidays and festivals Edit Children s folklore ensemble from Turkey during a festival Further information Festivals in Republic of Turkey and Holidays in Turkey Music is an important part of several Turkish holidays and festivals especially playing a major part in the springtime celebration of Newroz and religious festivities such as Ramadan 1 New year is a traditional time for the belly dancer and weddings are celebrated with upbeat tunes while funerals are mourned with musical laments Patriotic songs like the national anthem The Independence March are a major part of public holiday celebrations such as National Independence amp International Children s Day celebrations on 23 April and 30 August Victory Day celebrations a holiday that marks Turkish independence 1 Music also plays a role at many regional festivals that aren t celebrated nationwide for example a music and dance parade and festival in Zonguldak Istanbul Ankara and Izmir are also home to numerous music festivals which showcase styles ranging from the blues and jazz to indie rock and heavy metal Some music festivals are strictly local in scope including few or no performers with a national reputation and are generally operated by local promoters Recently large soft drink companies have operated their own music festivals such as Rock n Coke and Fanta parties which draw huge crowds See also EditList of Turkish composers Turkey in the Eurovision Song Contest Turkvizyon Song Contest 2013 List of music festivals in Turkey List of Turkish musicians List of Turks in world culture Erkan Ogur Cem Tuncer Mercan Dede Baba Zula Wojciech Bobowski Arif Mardin Ahmet Ertegun Nesuhi Ertegun Emre Araci Oruc Guvenc Gulcin Yahya KacarNotes and references Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Stokes Martin 2000 Sounds of Anatolia Penguin Books ISBN 1 85828 636 0 pp 396 410 a b History of music in Turkey Les Arts Turcs May 1 1999 a b Istanbul Music Scene Yildirim Ali Tarkan DeLuxe Retrieved May 16 2005 Karabasoglu Cemal 2015 02 12 Tradition of Notation in the History of Turkish Music Procedia Social and Behavioral Sciences International Conference on New Horizons in Education INTE 2014 25 27 June 2014 Paris France 174 3832 3837 doi 10 1016 j sbspro 2015 01 1121 Les Arts Turcs Instruments Workshop in istanbul Turkish Music Enstrument Lesson in Istanbul Turkish Music Lesson in Istanbul Istanbul istambul Turkish Music Workshop Music Lesson Lessons Lesson Workshops Ney Lessons amp Classical Turkish Musical Instruments Workshop Turkish Music Workshops in Istanbul Turkish Musical Instrument Workshops in Istanbul Les Arts Turc Team Traditional Turkish Music Turkish Instruments Ney Ud Kanun Saz Tanbur Buzuki Darbuka Bendir Kemence Zil Tef Tar Rebab Turkish Classical Music Istanbul Uskudar Musiki Cemiyeti saz semaisi taksim Turkish Sufi Music whirling dervishes Mevlana Jelaleddin Rumi TURKISH MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Traditional Turkish music zither tambur lute tef tambourine darbuka and ney reed flute piano violin viola and clarinet Istanbul Turkey Estambul Istambul lesartsturcs com Retrieved 2017 09 11 a b c The Ottoman Music Tanrikorur Cinucen Abridged and translated by Savas S Barkcin Archived from the original on December 15 2006 Tanrikorur argues that the perceived differences between the traditional music genres stemmed from the cultural clash between the East and the West that emerged during the Tanzimat Era 1839 1908 The Fasil Ottoman Souvenir Retrieved April 15 2004 a b c Male belly dance in Turkey Jahal Jasmin Retrieved February 2 2002 Ottoman Military Music MilitaryMusic com Archived from the original on February 22 2003 Retrieved February 11 2003 A Levantine life Giuseppe Donizetti at the Ottoman court Araci Emre The Musical Times Archived from the original on December 20 2005 Retrieved October 3 2002 Famous opera composer Gaetano Donizetti s brother Giuseppe Donizetti was invited to become Master of Music to Sultan Mahmud II in 1827 Bellman Jonathan 1993 The Style Hongrois in the Music of Western Europe Northeastern University Press ISBN 1 55553 169 5 pp 13 14 see also pp 31 2 According to Jonathan Bellman it was evolved from a sort of battle music played by Turkish military bands outside the walls of Vienna during the siege of that city in 1683 BETWEEN EMPIRES Orientalism Before 1600 Araci Emre Trinity College Chapel Cambridge Archived from the original on July 20 2001 Retrieved July 15 2001 Woodard Kathryn Music in the Imperial Harem and the Life of Ottoman Composer Leyla Saz Sonic Crossroads Woodard Kathryn 2007 Music Mediating Politics in Turkey The Case of Ahmed Adnan Saygun Comparative Studies of South Asia Africa and the Middle East 27 3 552 562 doi 10 1215 1089201x 2007 032 Bartok Bela amp Suchoff Benjamin 1976 Turkish Folk Music from Asia Minor The New York Bartok Archive Studies in Musicology No 7 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 09120 X p 50 USTA Nazli The Transformation Of Music In Early Republican Period In Turkey Researchgate net July 2010 a b TUNCAY Caglar Musical Implementations of Ataturk s Term 9 Eylul Universitesi Ataturk Ilkeleri Ve Inkilap 2009 pp 54 95 ADIGUZEL Adnan WESTERNIZATION OF TURKISH CLASSIC MUSIC FROM OTTOMAN EMPIRE TO TURKISH REPUBLIC AND PROHIBITED YEARS OF TURKISH MUSIC Eskisehir Osmangazi Universitesi Eskisehir Osmangazi Universitesi Ilahiyat Fakultesi Islam Tarihi Ve Sanatlari Bolumu 0AD pp 4 10 Karsici Gulay MUZIK TURLERINE IDEOLOJIK YAKLASIM 1970 1990 YILLARI ARASINDAKI TRT SANSURU CIU Jan 2010 pp 170 177 a b c Erderner Yildiray 1995 The Song Contests of Turkish Minstrels Improvised Poetry Sung to Traditional Music Milman Parry Studies in Oral Tradition Garland Science ISBN 0 8153 1239 3 p 36 Folk Music Story of a Nation Turkishculture org Archived from the original on August 10 2003 Retrieved November 10 2003 a b Introduction to Sufi Music and Ritual in Turkey Middle East Studies Association of North America December 18 1995 Archived from the original on April 8 2007 The tradition of regional variations in the character of folk music prevails all around Anatolia and Thrace even today The troubadour or minstrel singer poets known as asik contributed anonymously to this genre for ages a b c Minstrel Literature Turkish Ministry of Culture Archived from the original on September 14 2002 Retrieved March 28 2005 See the audio selection from Mevlit at External links below The Sema Mevlana Net Owned by Mevlana s family Archived from the original on January 24 2005 Retrieved January 11 2005 The sema dance is very ritualistic and full of symbolism a b Pontic Music Page Cline Leigh Retrieved February 2 2006 Such as Holly Valance with the Kiss Kiss song Migrant Workers in Germany The Lowest of the Low Qantara de Retrieved October 10 2005 Awakening Music YouTube Retrieved 9 June 2022 via YouTube Sami in Turkey Samiyusufofficial com Retrieved 2009 03 16 Qantara de Islamic Pop Music in Turkey Combining Rock Music with an Islamic Message Archived from the original on 2008 04 03 Retrieved 2008 09 25 tr Almora Gunun albumu Trance muzige Yalnizlik Dusunceler Soundcloud com Yurtdisinda 16 album Hurriyet com tr Aksam Gazetesi Cumartesi Herkes kendine DJ demesin Archived from the original on 2007 11 12 Retrieved 2008 04 25 Mert Yucel Discogs Refugee musicians play in Turkey s camps MUSIC Hurriyet Daily News LEADING NEWS SOURCE FOR TURKEY AND THE REGION Retrieved 2017 02 09 This Syrian Composer Is Now a Refugee Writing Music on the Street VICE Vice Retrieved 2017 02 09 Country for Syria band uses music to highlight refugee woes English alarabiya net 21 November 2016 Retrieved 9 June 2022 Meet the migrant musicians bringing new sounds to Istanbul BBC News 2016 05 21 retrieved 2017 02 09 a b Turkish Phonographic Industry Society MU YAP Retrieved April 10 2005 They are part of the IFPI National group The first long term punishment for piracy distribution had been handed out in 2006 The Orchard Signs Global Distribution and Marketing Agreement With MU YAP PR Newswire Retrieved June 13 2006 See information on his domestic singles Kuzu Kuzu and Hup Powerturk Charts Powerturk TV Retrieved December 8 2001 Kral TV Music Channel Kral Retrieved June 11 2001 Magazine Journalists Society MJS Archived from the original on June 6 2004 Retrieved December 18 2005 Further reading EditBartok Bela amp Suchoff Benjamin 1976 Turkish Folk Music from Asia Minor The New York Bartok Archive Studies in Musicology No 7 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 09120 X Bates Eliot 2011 Music in Turkey Experiencing Music Expressing Culture Global Music Series Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 195 39414 6 Head Matthew 2000 Orientalism Masquerade and Mozart s Turkish Music Royal Musical Association Monographs S Ashgate ISBN 0 306 76248 X Jager Ralf Martin 1996 Turkische Kunstmusik und ihre handschriftlichen Quellen aus dem 19 Jahrhundert Schriften zur Musikwissenschaft aus Munster 7 Wagner Eisenach ISBN 3 88979 072 0 Karakayali Nedim 2010 Two Assemblages of Cultural Transmission Musicians Political Actors and Educational Techniques in the Ottoman Empire and Western Europe Journal of Historical Sociology 23 3 343 371 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Popescu Judetz Eugenia 1999 Prince Dimitrie Cantemir Theorist and Composer of Turkish music Pan Books ISBN 975 7652 82 2 Signell Karl 1977 Makam Modal practice in Turkish Art Music Asian Music Publications ISBN 0 306 76248 X Stokes Martin 2010 The Republic of Love Cultural Intimacy in Turkish Popular Music University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 77505 0 Tietze Andreas amp Yahalom Joseph 1995 Ottoman Melodies Hebrew Hymns A 16th Century Cross Cultural Adventure Akademiai Kiado Bibliotheca Orientalis Hungarica ISBN 963 05 6864 0 Whose Song is it Tarkan Deluxe Retrieved November 9 2004 Yunus Emre Sufi and Mystic Tarkan Deluxe Retrieved December 18 2004 Turkish Music Turkish Embassy Archived from the original on February 14 2007 Retrieved April 16 2006 External links EditThis article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Music of Turkey at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Turkish music performed by Hungarian musicians Budapest Turkish music publications by Karl Signell Turkish music performed by Hungarian musicians Budapest Turkish Music Quarterly print journal contents BBC Radio 3 Audio 60 minutes Selim Sesler troubadour songs and an Alevi ceremony Accessed November 25 2010 BBC Radio 3 Audio 60 minutes Aynur Erkan Ogur Kirike and Rembetiko Accessed November 25 2010 in French Audio clips Traditional music of Turkey Musee d ethnographie de Geneve Accessed November 25 2010 Turkish Music Portal All about Turkish Music Music of Turkey Crossing The Bridge Sounds from Istanbul Turkish Music and Voice Library Music at the Uysal Walker Archive of Turkish Oral Narrative Ney Making House Web Site Turkish Clarinet Music Golden Horn Records Turkish Musical Instruments Shop Insomnia Radio Turkiye Turkish Indie Music Available in English amp Turkish Turkey Music Listings Lifting the Boundaries Muzaffer Efendi and the Transmission of Sufism to the West by Gregory Blann Field music of the Ottoman Court and Europe Mevlit Merhaba bahri excerpt sung by Kani Karaca Kanto Feza Neverd Interesting instrumental music composed by Mehmet Gencler Comprehensive Turkish Music Video Archive Anthology of Turkish Piano Music Vol I on SheetMusicPlus com Anthology of Turkish Piano Music Vol II on SheetMusicPlus com Anthology of Turkish Piano Music Vol III on SheetMusicPlus com Rock Music Turkey Turkish Top 20 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Music of Turkey amp oldid 1129818732, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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