Egyptian Music
There are no specific words to describe the beauty of Egyptian music. Although I have lived there all my life, I only took notice of the ingenuity around two years ago; when I started playing the guitar. Egypt is located in the heart of the Middle East. It has always been the doors from Africa to Asia and vice versa, therefore, a strategic point on the map. From this, Egypt has been under constant invasion throughout her millennia life, for both her strategic point and wealth. However, it also brought in different cultures into the existing one, and blended in perfectly. So, in time Egyptian culture became a mix of different backgrounds, and that affected its music greatly.Being the latest occupants of Egypt, music from the vast Arabian Desert is probably the main style and influence in music today. If you listen to Egyptian music today, you will hear a distinctive beat that is almost in every song, sort of like the 16 beat of western music. Conversely, it does not mean that Egyptian music is based up
Some rhythmic patterns have up to forty-eight beats. It is certainly the most popular, since most Middle Easterners can pick up on the Egyptian dialect from immaculate amount of music. To implement this on an instrument, especially a stringed one, it has to be fretless. One can only describe the melody as an arabesque painting. The whole music scene is exotic to reflect her exotic nature. Just like the storyteller who always adds new twists and schemes he tells the same story. The drums are considered child's play to playing the Tabla. Rhythm is put into operation through Tabla; an hourglass shaped clay vessel with a stretched skin on top. The music of Egypt reflects Egypt itself. Both instrument are played in the Arabic scale thus giving it a human essence, since the scale are very close to the human voice. on rhythm; it is actually the melody that is most important and professionally done. The Ud is the probably the most commonly used instrument in Arabic music. Though traditional Western music uses only whole-step and half-step intervals, Arab melodies often incorporate quartertones to create such intervals as quartertones, three-quarter tones, five-quarter tones, and one-and-a-half tones.
Common topics in this essay:
Arabian Desert,
Ud Ud,
Middle Easterners,
Africa Asia,
,
Middle East,
egyptian music,
western music,
middle east,
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