News and events
Search
Journal articles
Book reviews
About the Society
Society officers
Annual reports
Lecture summaries
Obituaries
Annual appeal
Membership
Contact us
|
|
|
Traditional
music in the Yemen
by A. D.
Bakewell
The recent visit to Britain of the
lutenist and singer Hamud bin Junayd afforded the occasion to hear live Yemeni music in
this country, a rare opportunity, despite the long-established Yemeni community here. His
success in the competition at the International Eisteddfod in Llangollen demonstrated the
level of appreciation of his art and many expressed an interest in learning more of Yemeni
music generally and its place in the wider context of the Arab world.
Given the countrys geographical position, poised 'twixt the Red Sea
and Indian Ocean, and its great cultural continuum, it is not perhaps surprising that the
Yemens music traditions are immensely rich and varied. For millenia they have been
the dominant influence in the music of the Arabian peninsula, and have been transmitted
over a vast area from Indonesia to Africa. They are also, as most things Yemeni,
distinctive, having only a peripheral relation to the main streams of music in the eastern
(mashraq) and western (maghrab) Arab world. (Perhaps this singular
situation is deserving of a new category - majnub?)
The pre-eminence of poetry in Yemeni culture cannot be overstated,
and its importance to music is illustrated by the story of an accomplished lute player
from Baghdad, who visited the Yemen some years ago. He was invited to attend a gathering
at the house of a well-known amateur poet and musician in Sanaa where he performed,
as was his custom, a highly technical and brilliantly executed lute solo lasting nearly an
hour. When the music stopped, there was a pregnant pause in the room. The guests, who had
sat patiently chewing qat throughout, waited expectantly. The Iraqi, it seemed, had
finished! To a Yemeni, such an instrumental piece, however interesting, was merely a
prelude to sung poetry, without which the performance was simply incomplete.
It may be too much to say that poetry gave rise to music in the
Yemen, but many poetic genres are intimately linked with the musical forms, and they have
contributed much to the structure of Yemeni music. Certainly the metres often dictate the
rhythmic patterns of the songs, and it is the special rhythmic quality of Yemeni music,
above all else, which sets it apart and makes it so difficult for non-Yemeni musicians to
master.
Poetry aligned with specific melodies and rhythm makes up the
corpus of Yemeni vocal music. The interpreter of the most formal of the sung
poetry and, in a sense the guardian of the musical heritage, is the nashad. He
sings, not in the melismatic vocal style which one associates with the Middle East, but in
a sustained and high-pitched voice, often in a responsorial manner, with chorus (or
several choruses) answering in alternating and changing refrains. This antiphonic form,
though highly structured, complex and undoubtedly very old, is by no means restrictive. It
accommodates melodic variation and improvisation and allows, even encourages, group
participation. The effect on the listener, I can attest, is mesmerising.
Different poetic/musical genres require different settings, and
one would hear the zamil at large tribal meetings, the razfah and balah
at wedding celebrations, the dan at more intimate social gatherings and the qasidah
in any number of situations. The madih and the mawlid (hymns of praise
to honour the Prophet) are heard on appropriate religious occasions, but are perhaps more
correctly described as recitations.
Vocal music has therefore predominated, particularly in the
northern highlands where musical instruments have been largely discouraged and, in some
periods of the Yemens history, even proscribed. In the early part of this century,
the Imam Yahya prohibited their use (except in the military band) and forbad the ownership
of gramophones. Nevertheless, both vocal and instrumental music continued to be enjoyed,
often in clandestine conditions, and came bursting forth, often revitalised, when the
prohibition was lifted.
Instruments, though rare, are certainly not unknown in the north.
The tasah and marfa, single and paired kettledrums, are
indispensible to the bara and other important tribal dances throughout the
highlands, and the tar frame drum provides the rhythmic accompaniment to religious singing
in many parts of the Yemen. The celebratory tones of the mizmar or double
clarinet, are commonly heard with the tabla drums and the baurayzan, a
rare trumpet probably left over from the 19th century military bands, is occasionally
carted out for ceremonial occasions.
It is in the coastal areas, however, that the greatest variety of
instruments are found; large standing drums (madiff), frame drums (sahfah),
double headed drums (hajir or tabla), and kettledrums (marfa)
make up ensembles of up to six members. (In the recent past, these same drummers would
board dhows approaching harbour after long sea voyages and hire out their services to
drum the boat ashore with great flourish and fanfare).
Lyres, known in the Yemen in ancient times, are still to be heard
in the coastal areas today As in Ethiopia, they are associated with magic and the large
bowl lyre (tamburah) is used exclusively in healing ceremonies. The smaller box
lyre (simsimiyah) is played by fishermen to accompany ghazal love songs.
Its five strings are perfectly suited to the predominantly pentatonic music of the coast.
Flutes, called shubbabah or qassabah are made either of metal or reed
and are played either singly or in flute ensembles. Being of the simplest construction,
they are perhaps the most widespread of instruments, though the Zaraniq tribe of the
Tihamah are particularly renowned for their flute music.
An instrument of special significance to Yemeni music was the
turbi, also called the qambus. A skin covered lute which, along with the copper
plate (sahn nuhasi) and mirwas drum, accompanied the sung poetry of the
urban art music, it was a particular target of suppression. Often referred to
surreptitiously as kitab, or book, to avoid suspicion, some were even built with
a hinged neck to allow the instrument to be bent double and hidden in the folds of the
musicians clothing while walking in the streets. From the 1930s the qambus
gradually gave way to the 'ud, the pear-shaped lute common to much of the Arab
world and few if any players (mutrib) of this venerable instrument survive.
The music consisting of sung colloquial poetry to the
accompaniment of the 'ud is nearest to what could be termed a popular
classical tradition. It is by no means a static one, however, and present day
melodists, poets and musicians, though adhering to traditional forms, are constantly
enlarging the repertoire with new songs. While it is in Sanaa where it has probably
reached its highest expression, the tradition has absorbed characteristic melodies and
rhythms from all over the Yemen: Lahej, Aden, Hadramawt, Udayn, Tihamah and so on, drawing
upon regional styles and incorporating them into formalised and highly structured music
for a specialised audience. In Republican Yemen, this audience has undergone something of
a transformation. Once confined to intimate circles in the mafraj salons of the
cities and towns of the Yemen, the music is now available to nearly everyone in the
country through cassette, radio and television.
There are certain social groups that specialise in music making,
but in every case the distinction is made between the amateur, who would never accept
payment, and the professional, for whom the performance of music is a vocation. Amongst
the professionals are the muzayyin or khaddam who are called upon to
perform for special occasions such as weddings and circumcisions, the akhdam,
professional entertainers, and groups such as the maan gypsies of eastern
Yemen who function as peripatetic minstrels.
Though there are some notable female singers who accompany
themselves on the 'ud, women generally restrict themselves to drums (the dakm
or the tar) or more commonly handclapping, when accompanying group singing or the
labah dance. Work songs make up the traditional daily life of both women and
men and, in this category, we can still hear smithy songs, winnowing and grinding songs,
songs for drawing water from the well, camel songs and sea shanties. One cannot, however,
realistically sing a work song while operating a diesel pump and inevitably they are
diminishing with increased mechanisation.
November 1995
|