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| Owing in part to the large number of tones in the Zzean language, how Zzeans perform and view music radically differs from mainstream Western views.
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| For Zzeans, non-"tonal" elements such as rhythm, ornamentation, and scale choice are vital for distinguishing monophonic singing from normal speech. Choral vocal music that uses big block chords is wordless; polyphonic word-ful singing is used in specialized contexts.
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| The boundary between vocal and instrumental music in Zzean culture is somewhat ill-defined, as pitched instruments can "speak" by imitating the tones of speech. One can also choose to play instruments in a more "relaxed" or "conversational" manner by playing in speech-like contours rather than song-like ones, an option also available for voice.
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| == Forms and styles ==
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| Zzean singing traditions include:
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| * an intoned singing tradition
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| * hiphop/rap (speech with stylized rhythm and sometimes autotune)
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| * a religious chanting tradition with much ornamentation
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| * some weird form of musical theater?
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| * something really weird and independent from [[Cuam]] music's weirdness
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| == Instruments ==
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| * a shruti box that plays 5-note drones for guiding singing
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| * "talking" pitched instruments: drums, flutes, trombones and fretless bowed strings
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| == Scales ==
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| Zzean music is abstractly based on a pentatonic framework, onto which the five tone levels of Zzean are mapped. Seven-note scales are viewed as ways to ornament 5-note scales. However, not all Zzean pentatonic scales are octave-equivalent.
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