Verse:Irta/Music: Difference between revisions
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== Tsarfati == | == Tsarfati == | ||
Tsarfati music is stylistically halfway between our Ashkenazi music and Irish folk music. | Tsarfati music is stylistically halfway between our Ashkenazi music (due to Irta Eastern European music being similar to our timeline's) and Irish folk music. | ||
=== Tuning === | === Tuning === | ||
Intonation often happens by ear and is not necessarily JI-based (cf. maqam music). Tuning systems used differ by the individual community. Fixed pitch instruments use subsets of 38edo. Neutral intervals are commonly used as in maqam. | Intonation often happens by ear and is not necessarily JI-based (cf. maqam music). Tuning systems used differ by the individual community. Fixed pitch instruments use subsets of 38edo. Neutral intervals are commonly used as in maqam. |
Revision as of 21:42, 7 March 2022
One theme (in non-Azalic Europe): non-common practice uses of 12edo, 5-limit JI, meantone, or diatonic edo tunings
Azalic music
Azalic music is built up on similar principles to ancient Greek music theory, but they divide string lengths into constructible ratios which aren't always rational. The most common tunings used in Azalic music divide a JI interval, most commonly 2/1, 3/2 or 12/7, into 16 equal parts, and various MOS subsets of these are used for melody, particularly Lemba, Mavila, and Magic temperaments.
Common Mavila scales used in Azalic music are the Antilocrian mode, 3 2 2 3 2 2 2, and the seventh mode of the harmonic minor, 3 2 3 2 2 3 1.
In Irtan cultures outside the Azalic Urheimat but influenced by Azalic culture, 16ed12/7, and its octave equivalent counterpart 41edo, became the most prominent tuning whereas Irta's North Africa (the Azalic Urheimat) mostly uses variations on 16 tone octave equivalent and related scales. Crannish music, which is generally polyphonic, uses harmonic series approximations to 16edo.
Irish classical music
"If Irish/Scottish folk music is the same as in our timeline what would Irish elite music be like"
Irish Renaissance music
Should be a development of sung bardic poetry, with French Renaissance influences
Counter-Remonition
Tuning: Fixed pitch instruments are tuned to 5 to 10 note subsets of 2-3 chains of Pyth fifths separated by 5/4, commas are intentionally used. At some point this is standardized to 34edo
Names for the tuning standard and notes relative to it (like how Arabs don't use all 24 notes of 24edo)
Irta Irish Romanticism
post-2nd Rem
Albionian and folk Irish music influences, Irish lieder are a tradition along with French and Azalic English ones (reaction to excesses of the Counter-Remonition period)
In literature, nature poetry makes a comeback
Remonitionist music
Remonitionist music is an alternate evolution of our Renaissance music. The style that arises from the First Remonition is a neo-medievalism derived from the music of various Italic-speaking cultures, but Second Remonitionist music is much more meditative and chanting/intoned singing-based. Christian music is the same as in our timeline up to the First Remonitionist Reformation in the 16th c.
Should be heavily influenced by Azalic culture by the end of 2nd Remonition
Irta Baroque
A neo-medievalist movement which develops in France, Spain and Italy, "what if Baroque used 17edo/17wt"
Baroque dance suites in 17edo which use Baroque dance rhythms but not our Baroque harmony; canons and fugues, but not using Fuxian counterpoint
2-part counterpart likes resolving to fifths and uses tons of Machaut cadences (Eb-G -> D-A, Ed-Gt -> D-A, E-G# -> D-A)
Prefers minor and Locrian for diatonic music; 17edo influences Tsarfati Jewish music somewhat too, explaining the use of Locrian in Cualandian Jewish nusachim
John Wellwise /wɛlɪz/ is the counterpoint guy (interpreting "Fuxian" as Mandarin 富賢)
Irta Baroque trends
Bleu temperament often shows up as an attempt to capture an "Azalic" sound in a 17edo framework
Second Remonitionist music
Early Second Remonitionist musical styles are derived from Greek Buddhist chanting and Azalic polyphonic traditions found in Irta, and follows a system of four roughly equal divisions of a perfect fifth. (Incidentally this is very similar to our timeline's Georgian music)
This was the dominant musical practice among Remonitionists who first migrated to Tricin, and the most common musical system among Remonitionists in Cualand is 41edo.
Corsican
Sean-nós style in Arabic maqams, this style is called ānə (cognate to Maltese għana) in Corsican Arabic
New maqams
Some maqams named after Irish or Celtic places or scales in Irta Irish classical music
More maqams with Arabic names like "Rahat Al Arwah"
Irta Irish borrows maqām names (via Corsican Arabic, e.g. Rāhatı alı-Arvēh) and the term megāmı itself, and translates other maqam terms
Tsarfati
Tsarfati music is stylistically halfway between our Ashkenazi music (due to Irta Eastern European music being similar to our timeline's) and Irish folk music.
Tuning
Intonation often happens by ear and is not necessarily JI-based (cf. maqam music). Tuning systems used differ by the individual community. Fixed pitch instruments use subsets of 38edo. Neutral intervals are commonly used as in maqam.
Liturgy uses diatonic or maqam modes:
- Torah readings use Mixolydian or Jiharkah
- Haftarot use Aeolian or Nairuz
- Non-Eicha Megillot use Dorian or Rast
- Esther uses this melody (except parts where the Eicha melody is used): https://www.virtualcantor.com/Esther1.mp3
- Eicha uses Phrygian or Bayati
- Most blessings use the same scales as our Ashkenazim do
- Some blessings and prayers use a tuning of Lydian with a supermajor 3rd
Todo: Cantillation tropes
Folk music
Tsarfati Jewish folk songs are known as טאָנתּאן dontăn in Ăn Yidiș (singular טאָן don; cognate to Irish dán 'poem (among other meanings)'). They may be in Ăn Yidiș or in a macaronic mixture of Ăn Yidiș, Hebrew, and other languages. They have some traditional Hivantish, our timeline's Eastern European, and our timeline's Irish elements but are unique. Like in our timeline, Hasidic Judaism is also an influence with its emphasis on dancing, devotion, and wordless melodies.
Instruments from Gaelic music:
- pib-ilăn - uilleann pipes
- fehăł (from in-universe OIr **fethal, from Early Romance *vitola) - fiddle
- cłorșăch - a version of the Welsh triple harp adapted to common Tsarfati scales (If you say "Jew's harp" in Irta they'd likely think you mean this.)
Instruments from Hivantish music:
- șeyņăł - kantele
Other instruments, often used in larger ensembles:
- harpsichord -- a staple of Irta klezmer
- organ
- tromba marina and horns for harmonic series scales
Modern cłorșăchăn are usually electro-acoustic.
Talma
Hebrew cantillation
Based on oneirotonic, uses modes such as LLLSLSLS, LLSLLSLS, LLSLLSLS, LSLLSLLS, LSLSLSAS, LSLSLLLS, SLSLLSLL, with varying tunings which can change when singing; marimbas are common in synagogues
Cualand
Hebrew cantillation
Cantillation tropes in Cualand are diatonic, LCJI-based, or overtone scale-based. Some melodies use Locrian. Doctrinally Judaism is no more weird than the full range of Rabbinic Judaism in our timeline.
Carnatic music
Carnatic music in Irta is almost the same as in our timeline, with some differences:
- Songs with Buddhist lyrics?
- Unlike in our timeline, the esraj (held vertically) is used instead of the violin.
- Some ragas are sung differently, for example Madhyamāvati uses the natural 7th instead of the flat 7th as in our timeline, Bhairavi is consistently sung with the flat 6th, and Ābhogi is sung with a flat 6th instead of a natural 6th.
- There are some ragas not found in our timeline's Carnatic music like Sabhā (an adaptation of maqam Saba) and Desikasrī (adapted from the Hindustani raga Shree).
- Certain ragas like Kharaharapriyā are not as common as in our timeline but others like Dēvāmṛtavarṣiṇi are more common
- Some ragas go by different names like the 21st melakarta is known as Parambodhi instead of Kīravāṇi, and the 32nd melakarta is known as Khagavāhini instead of Rāgavardhini.