![]() |
[email protected] |
![]() |
3275638434 |
![]() |
![]() |
Paper Publishing WeChat |
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
János Sipos
Full-Text PDF
XML 1038 Views
DOI:10.17265/2159-5836/2016.11.008
Institute for Musicology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary
The long-term goal of my research has been to systematize and compare by musical criteria the folk songs of Turkic groups and ethnicities living around them. Here I rarely touch on instrumental folk music, the repertoire of professional or semi-professional performers, the most recent strata, seldom or just occasionally discuss art music and the cultural, social and anthropological implications of music are only sporadically considered, too. There are close connections between the languages of Turkic groups but their musical stocks are fundamentally different. Actually, that is not surprising, because these people are, at least in part, Turkified, and through their substrata (that is people absorbed by them) they are in genetic and cultural relations with several non-Turkic peoples. My research therefore has repercussions; apart from the Turkic-speaking peoples tied by culture, language and history, upon their neighbors and partly absorbed other peoples, creating the foundation for an even broader future comparative ethnomusicological research of Eurasian groups. This paper is aimed to provide a very short summary about the findings of my field researches into the folk music of different Turkic-speaking people between 1987 and 2015. I introduce the sources, the collecting work and the methods of processing and analyzing the songs. I also give an analytical introduction to the folksong of Anatolian Turks, Azeris, Turkmens, Uzbeks (and Tajiks), Karachay-Balkars, Kazakhs, Kyrgyzs, a Sufi Turkish community in Thrace and the area of the Volga-Kama-Belaya region. Finally comes a conclusion, a musical map and a list of tasks waiting for us.
ethnomusicology, comparative folk music research, Anatolia, Turkic people, Hungarians
Bartók, B. (1937). Collecting Folksongs in Anatolia. Hungarian Quarterly, III(2), 337-346.
Beljaev, V. M. (1975). The Music Culture of Turkmenia. In M. Slobin (Ed.), Central Asian Music: Essays in the History of the Music of the Peoples of the U.S.S.R. Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press.
Dobszay, L. (1983). A siratóstílus dallamköre zenetörténetünkben és népzenénkben (The Melody Circle of the Lament Style in our Music History and Folk Music). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó.
Dobszay, L. (1984). Magyar zenetörténet (Hungarian Music History). Budapest: Gondolat Könyvkiadó.
Dobszay, L. (2010). Az összehasonlító népzenetudomány tündöklése és lehanyatlása (The Rise and Fall of Comparative Ethnomusicology). Magyar Zene, 48(1), 7-19.
Dobszay, L., & Szendrei, J. (1992). The Catalogue of the Hungarian Folksong Types Arranged According to Styles I. Budapest: MTA Zenetudományi Intézet.
Járdányi, P., & Kerényi, G. (Eds). (1961). Magyar népdaltípusok I–III (Hungarian Folksong Types). Budapest: Akadémia Publishing House.
Kodály, Z. (1937-1976). A Magyar Népzene (Hungarian Folkmusic). Budapest: Editio Musica, 1937 (1st ed.), referenses made by the 7th ed.
Paksa, K. (1982). Kis hangterjedelmű öt- és négyfokú dalaink keleti rokonsága (The Eastern Connecetion of our Small Compass Melodies Moving on Four or Five Tones). Ethnographia, 527-553.
Sipos, J. (1994). Török Népzene I (Turkish Folkmusic I). Műhelytanulmányok a magyar zenetörténethez 14. Budapest: Institute for Musicology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
Sipos, J. (1995). Török Népzene II (Turkish Folkmusic II). Műhelytanulmányok a magyar zenetörténethez 15). Budapest: Institute for Musicology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
Sipos, J. (1997). Bartók Béla törökországi gyűjtése egy nagyobb anyag fényében (Ph.D. dissertation in the library of the Bartók Archives of the Institute for Musicology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences).
Sipos, J. (2000). In the Wake of Bartók in Anatolia. (Bibliotheca Traditionis Europeae 2). Budapest: European Folklore Institute. [2. kiadása DVD-n: Budapest: Európai Folklór Intézet, 2005.]
Sipos, J. (2001). Kazakh Folksongs from the Two Ends of the Steppe [with CD attachement]. Budapest: Akadémia Publishing House.
Sipos, J. (2004). Azeri Folksongs—At the Fountain-Head of Music [with CD attachement]. Budapest: Akadémia Publishing House.
Sipos, J. (2005)[2006]. Azerbaycan El Havaları—Musiqinin İlkin Qaynaqlarında (Azeri Folksongs). Bakı: Ebilov, Zeynalov ve ogulları.
Sipos, J. (2009), Azerbajdzsáni népzene—a zene forrásainál (Azeri Folksongs—At the Fountain-Head of Music [with CD attachement]. Budapest: European Folklore Institute.
Sipos, J. (2014). Kyrgyz Folksongs. Budapest: L’Harmattan.
Szabolcsi, B. (1935). Eastern Relations of Early Hungarian Folk Music. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Brotain and Ireland, 3, 483-498.
Szabolcsi, B. (1947). A magyar zenetörténet kézikönyve (Handbook of te Hungarian Music History). Budapest: Magyar Kórus.
Vargyas, L. (2005). Folk Music of the Hungarians. Budapest: Akadémia Publishing House.
Vikár, L. (1993). A Volga‒kámai finnugorok és törökök dallamai (The melodies of Finno-Ugrian and Turkic groups in the Volga-Kama region). Budapest: Institute for Musicology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
Vikár, L., & Bereczki, G. (1971). Cheremiss Folksongs. Budapest: Akadémia Publishing House.
Vikár, L., & Bereczki, G. (1979). Chuvash Folksongs. Budapest: Akadémia Publishing House.
Vikár, L., & Bereczki, G. (1989). Votyak Folksongs. Budapest: Akadémia Publishing House.
Vikár, L., & Bereczki, G. (1999). Tatar Folksongs. Budapest: Akadémia Publishing House.