Welcome to World Music Central 05/20/2008 03:30PM  
  Home  |  Submissions  |  World Music Forum |  Links |  Calendar |  F.A.Q.  |  Directory of Articles  |  Contact Us  |
User Functions
:

:

Don't have an account yet? Sign up as a New User
Lost your password?

World Music News
CD Reviews
Articles
World Music sound loops and samples
General News
Interviews
Video Reviews
Book Reviews
Editorials
Tour Announcements
Concert reviews
Events »
New Releases »
Awards
Obituaries

World Music Resources
Artist biographies
Booking agents
Distributors
Travel Guides
Record labels
Mailing Lists
World Music Media
Organizations
Trade shows
Music Contests and Competitions

Live music:
Venues

Education:
Dance schools
Ethnomusicology
Museums
Music schools

Glossaries:
World dances
Musical genres
World Instruments

Shopping:
- World Music Central Store
- Gift ideas



The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music: The Middle East   
11/05/2005 10:40AM
Contributed by: WMC_News_Dept.

Book ReviewsThe Middle East (Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, Volume 6)

ISBN: 0824060423

On the sixth volume of the set, expert writers present the major traditions of North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia, together with personal accounts of performers, composers, teachers, and ceremonies. A special feature of this volume is the inclusion of dozens of brief snap-shot essays that offer "lifestories" of typical music makers and their art, as well as first-person descriptions of specific music performances and events.

The 1200 page book contains approximately 120 articles cover communities that preserve and enrich centuries-old traditions: "Music of the Jews of Djerba, Tunisia," "Following the Entranced Ones: Gnawa Performances and Trance in Rabat, Morocco," "Women's Music of the Arabian Peninsula," and "Vocal Music of Tuva." The volume explores such topics as political dissent, pop music genres, technology, poetry, gender, and the historical and scholarly roots of Middle Eastern music.

About the authors: Virginia Danielson, is Eda Kuhn Loeb Music Librarian at Harvard University and author of The Voice of Egypt: Umm Kulthum, Arabic Song, and Egyptian Society in the Twentieth Century (1997). Scott Marcus is Associate Professor of Music at the UC Santa Barbara. Dwight Reynolds is Professor of Religion at UC Santa Barbara and author of Heroic Poets, Poetic Heroes: The Ethnography of Performance in an Arabic Oral Epic Tradition (1995).

[Buy The Middle East ].

  [ Views: 3,972 ]  

What's Related

Story Options

Submissions  |  World Music Forum |  Links |  Calendar |  Directory of Articles  |  F.A.Q.  |  Contact Us
World Music Central News RSS Feed

Powered By Geeklog
Created this page in 0.31 seconds

Hosted By Ibiblio.org .