Sie befinden Sich nicht im Netzwerk der Universität Paderborn. Der Zugriff auf elektronische Ressourcen ist gegebenenfalls nur via VPN oder Shibboleth (DFN-AAI) möglich. mehr Informationen...
Die Ausgabebezeichnung "New edition" ist dem Vorwort entnommen.
"This is a revised version of the original publication from 1996; it is in no sense a new book ... Throughout the book newer scholarship within both Ottoman history and musicology will be referred to ... where lack of sources during the initial writing of this book led to smaller or larger inaccuracies of interpretation, the reader will observe many small deletions, and a couple of larger ones.". - Seite IX-X
Includes bibliographical references and index
Part 1. Musicians and Performance. Professionalism and the Music of the Ottoman Court ; Professionalism and the Music of the Ottoman Court ; Dervishes and Turkish Art Music ; Instruments and Instrumentalists ; The Ottoman Cyclical Concert-Formats Fasil and Ayin -- Part 2. Makam. The General Scale of Seventeenth-Century Ottoman Music ; Makam and Terkib ; Melodic Progression ; The Taksim and Modulation -- Part 3. Peşrev and Semai ; The Peşrev/Pishrow ; The Ottoman Peşrev ; Peşrevs and Analyses ; The Seventeenth-Century Persian Peşrev ; Transmission of the Ottoman Peşrev Repertoire ; The Instrumental Semai ; Conclusion.
"Between 1600 and 1750 Ottoman Turkish music differentiated itself from an older Persianate art music and developed the genres antecedent to modern Turkish art music. Based on a translation of Demetrius Cantemir's seminal "Book of the Science of Music" from the early eighteenth century, this work is the first to bring together contemporaneous notations, musical treatises, literary sources, travellers' accounts and iconography. These present a synthetic picture of the emergence of Ottoman composed and improvised instrumental music. A detailed comparison of items in the notated Collections of Cantemir and of Bobowski-from fifty years earlier-together with relevant treatises, reveal key aspects of modality, melodic progression and rhythmic structures"--