- Palestinian music
Palestinian music ( _ar. موسيقى فلسطينية) is one of many regional sub-genres of
Arabic music . While it shares much in common with Arabic music, both structurally and instrumentally, there are musical forms and subject matter that are distinctively Palestinian. [cite web|title=The Palestinian National Song:A Personal Testimony|author=Rima Tarazi|publisher=This Week in Palestine|month=April | year=2007|url=http://www.thisweekinpalestine.com/details.php?id=2099&ed=139&edid=139]Historical Development
Pre-1948
In the areas now controlled by
Israel andPalestinian National Authority , multipleethnic group s, races andreligion s have long held on to a diverse culture.Palestinian s (includingDruze andBedouin ) constituted the largest group, followed byJew s (includingSephardi m andAshkenazi m),Egypt ians, Cypriots,Samaritan s,Armenia ns,Dom , and others.Early in the 20th century, most Palestinians lived in rural areas, either as farmers or as nomads. The farmers ("
fellaheen ") sang a variety ofwork song s, used for tasks likefishing ,shepherd ing,harvest ing and makingolive oil . Traveling storytellers and musicians called "zajaleen" were also common, known for their epic tales.Wedding s were also home to distinctive music, especially thedabke , a complex dance performed by linked groups of dancers. Popular songs made use of widely-varying forms, particularly themeyjana anddalauna .Post-1948
"See also:Palestinian music in Israel"
After the creation of Israel in 1948, most Arab Palestinians fled to, or were forced into,
refugee camp s in theWest Bank andGaza Strip . The most popular recorded musicians at the time were the superstars ofArab classical music , especiallyUmm Kulthum andSayed Darwish . The centers for Palestinian music were in the Israeli towns ofNazareth andHaifa , where performers composed in the classical styles ofCairo andDamascus . A shared Palestinian identity was reflected in a new wave of performers who emerged with distinctively Palestinian themes, relating to the dreams of statehood and the burgeoning nationalist sentiment.The Israeli government exerted considerable control over Palestinian music recordingsFact|date=April 2007, and many of the most popular cassettes were distributed through the
black market . Late in the 1970s, a new wave of popular Palestinian stars emerged, includingSabreen andAl Ashiqeen . After the 1987Intifada , a more hard-edged group of performers and songwriters emerged, led byEl Funoun ,songwriter Suhail Khoury ,Thaer Barghouti 's "Doleh " and Sabreen's "Mawt a'nabi ".In the 1990s, the
Palestinian National Authority was formed, and Palestinian cultural expression began to stabilize.Wedding bands, having long since disappeared during the fighting, reappeared to perform popularEgypt ian and Lebanese songs. Other performers to emerge later in the 90s includedYuad ,Washem ,Adel Salameh ,Issa Boulos andSamir Joubran .Reem Kelani currently performs Palestinian folk songs.Music and identity
Palestinian music is a reflection of the Palestinian experience. [Regev Motti (1993), "Oud and Guitar: The Musical Culture of the Arabs in Israel" (Institute for Israeli Arab Studies, Beit Berl), ISBN 965-454-002-9, p. 4.] . As might be expected, much Palestinian music deals with the struggle with Israel, the longing for peace, and the love of the land of Palestine. A typical example of such a song is "Baladi, Baladi" (My Country, My Country), which has become the unofficial Palestinian national anthem:
Palestine, Land of the fathers,
To you, I do not doubt, I will return.
Struggle, revolution, do not die,
For the storm is on the land.cite book|title="Musical View on the Conflict in the Middle East"|editors=Babnik and Golani|year=2006|publisher=Jerusalem: Minerva Instruction and Consultation Group|isbn=978-965-7397-03-9Lyrics by Ali Ismayel.]Another example is the song "AlKuds (Jerusalem) our Land", with words by Sharif Sabri. The song, sung by Amar Diab from Port Said, Egypt, won first prize in 2003 in a contest in Egypt for video clips produced in the West Bank and Gaza.
Palestinian hip hop
Beginning in the late 1990s, Palestinian youth forged a new Palestinian musical sub-genre - Palestinian rap or
hip hop - which blends Arabic melodies and Western beats, with lyrics in Arabic, English and even Hebrew.Borrowing from traditional rap music that first emerged in the ghettos of Los Angeles and New York in the 1970s, "young Palestinian musicians have tailored the style to express their own grievances with the social and political climate in which they live and work" [cite web|title= Israeli-Arab r
author=Amelia Thomas|publisher=Christian Science Monitor|url=http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0721/p11s01-wome.html?s=widep]DAM were pioneers in forging this blend. As
Arab citizens of Israel , they rap in Arabic, Hebrew, and English often challenging stereotypes about Palestinians and Arabs head-on in songs like "Meen Erhabe?" ("Who's a terrorist?")Musicians and instruments from Jerusalem, anno 1860
References
Books
*Morgan, Andy and Mu'tasem Adileh. "The Sounds of Struggle". 2000. In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.), World Music, Vol. 1: Africa, Europe and the Middle East, pp 385-390. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books. ISBN 1-85828-636-0
Further reading
*cite book|title=Palestinian Arab Music : A Maqam Tradition in Practice|author=Cohen, Dalia and Ruth Katz|year=2005|publisher=University of Chicago Press|id=ISBN 0-226-11298-5
*cite book|author=Mashmalon, Micah|title=Palestinian Folk Songs (Morris Moore Series in Musicology, 4)|publisher=Shazco|year=1988|id=ISBN 9998300916ee also
*
External links
* [http://www.jerusalemquarterly.org/details.php?cat=4&id=33 Smithsonian Jerusalem Project: Palestinian Music] Winter 1999, Issue 3,
Jerusalem Quarterly
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