On the status of music and musical instruments in Arabic culture after the advent of Islam

This article bases its arguments mainly on data found in secondary literature about the propriety of music in Arabic culture after the advent of Islam. One of the oldest sources in Arabic on the subject is Damm al-malāhī (The Condemnation of Instruments of Diversion). In it, the author, Ibn...

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Main Author: Šoštarić Ada I.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts - Institute of Musicology of Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts 2014-01-01
Series:Muzikologija
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/1450-9814/2014/1450-98141416155S.pdf
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spelling doaj-1a5768a94c564d568fec8ff962ee21ca2020-11-24T23:15:47ZengSerbian Academy of Sciences and Arts - Institute of Musicology of Serbian Academy of Sciences and ArtsMuzikologija1450-98142014-01-0120141615517210.2298/MUZ1416155S1450-98141416155SOn the status of music and musical instruments in Arabic culture after the advent of IslamŠoštarić Ada I.0Filološki fakultet, BeogradThis article bases its arguments mainly on data found in secondary literature about the propriety of music in Arabic culture after the advent of Islam. One of the oldest sources in Arabic on the subject is Damm al-malāhī (The Condemnation of Instruments of Diversion). In it, the author, Ibn Abī al-Dunyā (823-894) condemned listening to music and musical instruments. Subsequently, many books addressed the question of whether music is illicit (ar. harām). Western scholars defined this corpus of literature as a kind of polemic about the permissibility of music and musical instruments in Islamic culture. Since there is no verse (ar. Áya) in the Qur’Án which explicitly forbids or allows music, and since, at the same time, the hadīt literature abounds with contradictory statements about the practice of the prophet Muhammad regarding listening to music and musical instruments, this question continues to resurface, either in the media or on web pages specifically devoted to the issue. This topic is also quite interesting in terms of the reflexions one can encounter in the Muslim areas of the ex-Yugoslav region. At the same time, the article touches upon the special place that the Qur’ān recitation (ar. tilāwat al-Qur’ān) and Islamic call to prayer (ar. adān) have in Muslim communities. We often find both of them in chapters on religious music, and can, for instance, hear Gorans from Kosovo say (colloquially) that one sings the call to prayer. Nevertheless, although both the Recitation and the call to prayer employ the system of maqāms found in secular forms of music, in religious Islamic circles they have never been defined as music, nor are they understood as such in Islamic public opinion. It has been said innumerable times that it is not the (listening to) music per se that is forbidden, but rather the circumstances surrounding music, sometimes associated with the consumption of alcohol or similar behaviour, which leads to transgression of Islamic ethical norms. And even though music - as suggested by Henry George Farmer-was to be found in the private, public, and religious life of the Arabs from pre-Islamic times to the present (Farmer 1967: 17), and even despite it not being forbidden in Islam, the status of the professional musician was never truly regarded as respectable.http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/1450-9814/2014/1450-98141416155S.pdfnema
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Šoštarić Ada I.
spellingShingle Šoštarić Ada I.
On the status of music and musical instruments in Arabic culture after the advent of Islam
Muzikologija
nema
author_facet Šoštarić Ada I.
author_sort Šoštarić Ada I.
title On the status of music and musical instruments in Arabic culture after the advent of Islam
title_short On the status of music and musical instruments in Arabic culture after the advent of Islam
title_full On the status of music and musical instruments in Arabic culture after the advent of Islam
title_fullStr On the status of music and musical instruments in Arabic culture after the advent of Islam
title_full_unstemmed On the status of music and musical instruments in Arabic culture after the advent of Islam
title_sort on the status of music and musical instruments in arabic culture after the advent of islam
publisher Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts - Institute of Musicology of Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts
series Muzikologija
issn 1450-9814
publishDate 2014-01-01
description This article bases its arguments mainly on data found in secondary literature about the propriety of music in Arabic culture after the advent of Islam. One of the oldest sources in Arabic on the subject is Damm al-malāhī (The Condemnation of Instruments of Diversion). In it, the author, Ibn Abī al-Dunyā (823-894) condemned listening to music and musical instruments. Subsequently, many books addressed the question of whether music is illicit (ar. harām). Western scholars defined this corpus of literature as a kind of polemic about the permissibility of music and musical instruments in Islamic culture. Since there is no verse (ar. Áya) in the Qur’Án which explicitly forbids or allows music, and since, at the same time, the hadīt literature abounds with contradictory statements about the practice of the prophet Muhammad regarding listening to music and musical instruments, this question continues to resurface, either in the media or on web pages specifically devoted to the issue. This topic is also quite interesting in terms of the reflexions one can encounter in the Muslim areas of the ex-Yugoslav region. At the same time, the article touches upon the special place that the Qur’ān recitation (ar. tilāwat al-Qur’ān) and Islamic call to prayer (ar. adān) have in Muslim communities. We often find both of them in chapters on religious music, and can, for instance, hear Gorans from Kosovo say (colloquially) that one sings the call to prayer. Nevertheless, although both the Recitation and the call to prayer employ the system of maqāms found in secular forms of music, in religious Islamic circles they have never been defined as music, nor are they understood as such in Islamic public opinion. It has been said innumerable times that it is not the (listening to) music per se that is forbidden, but rather the circumstances surrounding music, sometimes associated with the consumption of alcohol or similar behaviour, which leads to transgression of Islamic ethical norms. And even though music - as suggested by Henry George Farmer-was to be found in the private, public, and religious life of the Arabs from pre-Islamic times to the present (Farmer 1967: 17), and even despite it not being forbidden in Islam, the status of the professional musician was never truly regarded as respectable.
topic nema
url http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/1450-9814/2014/1450-98141416155S.pdf
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