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Gharnati (
Arabic Arabic (, ' ; , ' or ) is a Semitic language spoken primarily across the Arab world.Semitic languages: an international handbook / edited by Stefan Weninger; in collaboration with Geoffrey Khan, Michael P. Streck, Janet C. E.Watson; Walter ...
: الغرناطي) refers to an
Algeria ) , image_map = Algeria (centered orthographic projection).svg , map_caption = , image_map2 = , capital = Algiers , coordinates = , largest_city = capital , relig ...
n variety of
Andalusian classical music Andalusi classical music ( ar, طرب أندلسي, ṭarab ʾandalusī; es, música andalusí), also called Andalusi music or Arab-Andalusian music, is a genre of music originally developed in al-Andalus by the Muslim population of the region a ...
originating in
Tlemcen Tlemcen (; ar, تلمسان, translit=Tilimsān) is the second-largest city in northwestern Algeria after Oran, and capital of the Tlemcen Province. The city has developed leather, carpet, and textile industries, which it exports through the p ...
. Its name is derived from the Arabic name of the city of Granada. Gharnati has also become an established tradition in other cities in western Algeria, such as Oran and Sidi-Bel-Abbès. In the 20th century it also spread to
Morocco Morocco (),, ) officially the Kingdom of Morocco, is the westernmost country in the Maghreb region of North Africa. It overlooks the Mediterranean Sea to the north and the Atlantic Ocean to the west, and has land borders with Algeria t ...
after being brought over by Algerian families who moved there fleeing French colonial rule in Algeria, and eventually founding conservatories in cities like Oujda and Rabat.


Features


Modes

The modes ''(
arabic Arabic (, ' ; , ' or ) is a Semitic language spoken primarily across the Arab world.Semitic languages: an international handbook / edited by Stefan Weninger; in collaboration with Geoffrey Khan, Michael P. Streck, Janet C. E.Watson; Walter ...
: طبوع : tūbūb')'' that are known in the school of Tlemcen are the following: * Mawwāl ''(الموال)'' ** Mawwāl ''(الموال)'' ** Dīl ''(الذيل)'' ** Raṣd ə-Dīl ''(رصد الذيل)'' ** Māya ''(الماية)'' * Zīdān ''(الزيدان)'' ** Zīdān ''(الزيدان)'' ** Raml əl-ʿAšiyya ''(رمل العشية)'' ** Mǧənba ''(المجنبة)'' * Raml əl-Māya ''(رمل الماية)'' ** Raml əl-Māya ''(رمل الماية)'' ** Raṣd ''(الرصد)'' * 'Iraq Maṭlūq ''(العراق المطلوق)'' ** 'Iraq Maṭlūq ''(العراق المطلوق)'' ** Ḥsīn ''(الحسين)'' ** Ġrībat əl-Ḥsīn ''(غريبة الحسين)'' * Məzmūm ''(المزموم)'' ** Məzmūm ''(المزموم)'' * Sīkā ''(السيكاه)'' ** Sīkā ''(السيكاه)'' * Ǧārkā ''(الجاركاه)'' ** Ǧārkā ''(الجاركاه)'' * ‘Irāq Maḥṣūr ''(العراق المحصور)'' ** ‘Irāq Maḥṣūr ''(العراق المحصور)'' ** Ġrīb ''(الغريب)''


The nuba

In Tlemcen, a nuba is a musical composition consisting of an ordered suite of vocal and instrumental pieces built around five movements whose rhythm progresses from very slow to very light and which are divided into two theoretical parts, the first comprising the first three movements ''(mṣeddar, bṭāyḥī and derǧ)'' and the second, the last two ''(inṣirāf and meẖles)''. The structure of a typical nubaGhoul, Yahia (1993) ''Étude des rythmes du patrimoine musical andalou de l'école de Tlemcen tudy of the rhythms of the Andalusian musical heritage of the school of Tlemcen', the fifteenth national festival of the andalusian music, Tlemcen, Algeria.: # Mšālyā : an unmeasured instrumental prelude that introduces and develops the main mode and neighboring modes used in its development. It also introduces the audience into its mood and plays the role of a rhythmic introduction to the tūšiyya. # Tūšiyya : instrumental ouverture composed of several patterns (each repeated once) in which follow a series of rhythmic signatures recalling the five movements that form the nuba. #* Rhythmic cycle (mîzān) : ( = 110) #** Mîzān əl-bašraf ǧwāb "instrumental" () #** Mîzān əl-inqilāb () #** Mîzān əl-qṣîd ǧwāb "instrumental" () #** Mîzān əl-inṣirāf / əl-meẖles () # Mšālyā : ''(see above)'' # Kūrsi al-mṣeddar : a melodic and rhythmic pattern that introduces the first movement. #* Rhythmic cycle (mîzān) : #** Mîzān əl-qṣîd ǧwāb "instrumental" () # Kūrsi al-mṣedrayn : a melodic and rhythmic pattern that separates two mṣeddar-s. # Mṣeddar (first movement) : vocal and instrumental piece (one or more). #* Rhythmic cycle (mîzān) : #** Singing : mîzān əl-qṣîd qūl () #** Instrumental answer : mîzān əl-qṣîd ǧwāb () # Kūrsi al-bṭāyḥī : a melodic and rhythmic pattern that introduces the second movement. #* Rhythmic cycle (mîzān) : #** Mîzān əl-bašraf ǧwāb "instrumental" () # Bṭāyḥī (second movement) : vocal and instrumental piece (one or more). #* Rhythmic cycle (mîzān) : #** Singing : mîzān əl-bašraf qūl () #** Instrumental answer : mîzān əl-bašraf ǧwāb () # Kūrsi əl -derǧ : a melodic and rhythmic pattern that introduces the third movement. #* Rhythmic cycle (mîzān) : #** Mîzān əl-derǧ () # Derǧ (third movement) : vocal and instrumental piece (one or more). #* Rhythmic cycle (mîzān) : #** Mîzān əl-derǧ () # Istiḥbār : Unmeasured vocal improvisation where the musician displays his inspiration and his virtuosity. # Tūšiyyet əl-inṣirāfāt : instrumental interlude introducing the fourth movement (inṣirāf). In its absence, the kūrsi əl-inṣirāf takes its place. #* Rhythmic cycle (mîzān) : #** Mîzān əl-inṣirāf () # Inṣirāf (fourth movement) : vocal and instrumental piece (one or more). #* Rhythmic cycle (mîzān) : #** Mîzān əl-inṣirāf () # Meẖles (fifth movement) : vocal and instrumental piece (one or more). #* Rhythmic cycle (mîzān) : #** Mîzān əl-meẖles () # Tūšiyyet əl -kamāl : Instrumental piece ending the nuba. It may also serve to introduce another nuba.


Nubat əl-inqilābāt

It is a suite composed of vocal and instrumental pieces (
Muwashshah ''Muwashshah'' ( ar, موشح '  literally means " girdled" in Classical Arabic; plural ' or ' ) is the name for both an Arabic poetic form and a secular musical genre. The poetic form consists of a multi-lined strophic verse poem writt ...
and
zajal Zajal () is a traditional form of oral strophic poetry declaimed in a colloquial dialect. While there is little evidence of the exact origins of the zajal, the earliest recorded zajal poet was the poet Ibn Quzman of al-Andalus who lived from 1078 ...
) in which different modes and rhythmic cycles follow one another (mîzān əl-qṣîd ǧwāb (8/4), mīzān ə-sofyān (7/4), mîzān əl-bašrāf ǧwāb (4/4) and bašrāf qūl (8/4), mîzān əl-Gūbbāḥī (4/4) and mîzān əl-inṣirāf (6/8)).


Slisla

Slisla refers to a kind of nubat əl-inqilābāt in which pieces (inqilābāt) evolve in the same rhythmic cycle (mīzān), such as ''slislet mîzān əl-qṣîd'', ''slislet mīzān ə-ṣofyān'', ''slislet mīzān əl-bašraf'' or ''slislet mīzān əl-inṣirāf''. Each slisla begins with a mšālyā and a tūšiyya, and ends with a meẖles.


Qadriyya

It is a small vocal piece composed in a ''mîzān əl-inṣirāf'' () often used to close a classical nuba. Qadriyya-s are found in seven modes including mawwāl, zīdān, ğārkā, raml əl-Māya, ‘Irāq and sīkā.


Representative artists


Algeria


Composers

* Mohamed ibn al-Khamis (1252-1369) * Abou Hammou Moussa II (1324-1388), the eighth sultan of the
zayyanid dynasty The Zayyanid dynasty ( ar, زيانيون, ''Ziyānyūn'') or Abd al-Wadids ( ar, بنو عبد الواد, ''Bānu ʿabd āl-Wād'') was a Berber Zenata dynasty that ruled the Kingdom of Tlemcen, mainly in modern Algeria centered on the town of ...
. * Ibn al-Banna a-Tilimsani 14th century * Abi Djamaa Talalisi (1330-?), the doctor-poet of the
zayyanid dynasty The Zayyanid dynasty ( ar, زيانيون, ''Ziyānyūn'') or Abd al-Wadids ( ar, بنو عبد الواد, ''Bānu ʿabd āl-Wād'') was a Berber Zenata dynasty that ruled the Kingdom of Tlemcen, mainly in modern Algeria centered on the town of ...
court. * Abou Othmane Said El Mendassi (1583-1677) * Ahmed al-Bekri (17th century) * Ibn Nachit (17th century) * Ahmed Ben Triki (1650-1750) * Abou Abdillah Mohamed Ben Ahmed Ben Msayeb (1688-1768) * Moulay Ahmed Ben Antar (18th century) * Mohamed Bendebbah a-Tilimsani (18th century) * Mohamed Touati (18th century) * M’barek Bouletbaq (18th century-1768) * Boumediene Bensahla (18th century-1797)


Great masters and famous performers


Current celebrities

* Amina Karadja * Anis Amanallah Kalfat * Badr Eddine Khaldoun * Brahim Hadj Kacem * Dalila Mekadder * Karim Boughazi * Khalil Baba Ahmed * Nisrine Ghenim * Nouri Kouffi * Rym Hakiki * Larbi Louazani * Leila Benmrah * Lila Borsali


Morocco


Famous performers

* Bouchnak Benyounes dit Afendi * Cheikh Mohammed Salah Chaabane * Chaabane Sidi Mohammed * Chaabane Nasreddine * Kerzazi Cheikh Brahim * Amina Alaoui


France

*
Françoise Atlan Françoise Atlan ( in Hebrew, in Arabic) is a French singer and ethnomusicologist, born in a Sephardic Jewish family in Narbonne, France on 27 July 1964. Her father was a lawyer and native of Béjaïa, Algeria, and her mother was a pianist and a ...


Notes and references

{{DEFAULTSORT:Gharnati Music Algerian music