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Category: Archive of World Music (Page 8 of 8)

Voices of Indigenous Siberia – The Musical Culture of Yakutia

A new finding aid from the Archive of World Music provides the opportunity to explore and listen to the music of the Yakut people. It features freely available online audio content with the download of RealPlayer.

Bruce Gordon and Eduard Alekseyev at work in the Audio Preservation Studio, 2009

Bruce Gordon and Eduard Alekseyev at work in the Audio Preservation studio, 2009

The Eduard Alekseyev Fieldwork Collection of the Musical Culture of Yakutia, 1969 – 1990 contains audio and video that documents traditional religious and ritual cultural expressions. Sakha (Yakutia) is the largest sub-national entity in the world. It is a circumpolar region, half of which lies above the Arctic Circle. From the 1960s through the 1980s, publication of materials about the rituals of indigenous cultures was suppressed, due to the Soviet policy of the times. The Yakut language is part of the northern Turkic linguistic family, and is considered a “vulnerable” language, according to the UNESCO Interactive Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger.

Eduard Yefimovich Alekseyev (b. 1937, Yakutia) resides in Boston and is a well-known ethnomusicologist and researcher of traditional Yakut music. He is the author of more than 100 publications in Russian, including such books as A Study of the Origins of Modality with Regard to Yakut Folk Songs (1976) and The Pitch Nature of Primitive Singing (1986).  Alekseyev worked very closely with Ghilyana Dorjieva (another scholar of indigenous musical culture in Russia, in particular, of the Kalmyk people) to identify and describe the materials in the collection.

Khomus by Nathan Hamm, on Flickr
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic License
Khomus by
Nathan Hamm

The collection includes original field recordings made by Alekseyev between 1969 and 1990; most were created in a fieldwork setting, but some were made during concerts, or at festival events of Ukrainian people in Kiev and Crimean Tatars in Simferopol. The main genres found in the collection are the olonkho (epic song and recitative), ohuokai (round dance), shamanic ritual and mystery performances. Frequently heard musical instruments are the khomus (jaw or jew’s harp), the diungiur (shaman’s drum), and the bayan (button accordion).

In this video, Eduard Alekseyev speaks about the olonkho genre and its transformative purpose as well as its change as a genre over time.

Audio Preservation Studio engineer Bruce Gordon has worked closely with Alekseyev to digitally preserve the polyester and acetate audio reel tapes in the collection — the end result of their work is the streaming content available in the finding aid, such as this recording of Vasiliy Osipovich Karataev performing the “Song of the Horse” from the olonkho “Erbekhtei Bergen.”

– Donna Guerra

Sema Vakf: The Art of Engaged Listening

The Sema Vakf Collection of Turkish Classical Music is one of the most extensive collections of its kind in the United States. This vakf, or trust, is named for the art of engaged listening (sema), and is dedicated to the preservation of classical Turkish music, particularly repertories of court music composed before 1850. Turkish businessman and connoisseur Mr. Altan Ender Güzey (1932-2009) began to send his enormous collection to the Archive of World Music (AWM) in the 1990s, and the cataloging of over one thousand 10-inch audio tape reels, an endeavor started 15 years ago and just recently completed, was a dedicated effort of Rhona Freeman, Cataloging Assistant in the AWM.

Cover image, HOLLIS 001423638
Türk mûzikı̂si nazariyatı ve usûlleri: kudüm velveleleri, by İsmail Hakkı Özkan. One of the music theory books from the collection. Loeb Music: Seeger Room ML345.T8 O94 1984

The collection includes the archive of Ismâil Baha Sürelsan, a Turkish composer and ethnomusicologist, recordings of lessons taught by the singer Allâeddin Yavaşça, musical transcriptions, and performances by numerous accomplished artists. A recent Harvard College Library news story tells more about the history and contents of the Collection.

I wished for the first post highlighting the Archive of World Music to be about the Sema Vakf Collection, so that it could be a place to commemorate the passing of Mr. Altan Ender Güzey this past year, and to express enormous gratitude for his gift of the collection as well as for his discriminating collecting.

Ottoman-Turkish court music=Osmanlı-Türk enderûn mûsıkîsi / Merâl Uğurlu Ensemble
Ottoman-Turkish court music=Osmanlı-Türk enderûn mûsıkîsi / Merâl Uğurlu Ensemble, one of the CDs from the collection. Loeb Music: AWM CD 9160.

Recordings by the group Lalezar constitute part of the Sema Vakf Collection. This video features B. Rehâ Sağbâş and Selmâ Sağbaş of Lalezar playing and improvising Ottoman and Turkish classical music in a concert presented on October 17, 2002 by the Center for the Study of World Religions, the Music Study Group, and the Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Also featured is the Director of the Eda Kuhn Loeb Music Library, Dr. Virginia Danielson, who provides engaging description of the aesthetic aspects of Turkish classical music.

The collection is available in the Music Library; find more items by browsing the HOLLIS Catalog.

– Donna Guerra

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