PaulS
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Muhayyer Kurdi
Can someone give me the lowdown on this makam? Huseyni-like but starting on E?? Thanks
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adamgood
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It's pretty straightforward and very similar to Kurdilihicazkar makam but far less complicated. The MAIN difference being Kurdilihicazkar tonic is the
pitch rast while Muhayyerkurdi tonic is the pitch dugah.
Similar to Kurdilihicazkar, Muhayyerkurdi can begin with different flavors but, maybe limited to two...most typically:
1. Feels like makam Muhayyer, starting around the pitch muhayyer. You can lose the Ussak flavor around muhayyer and play the pitch sunbule, that will
feel like kurdi flavor up around the pitch muhayyer.
2. from there it feels like makam Acem, around the pitch acem, descends to the tonic dugah making a final cadence with flavor of kurdi.
So, it doesn't have much Huseyni inside, in my opinion.
Adam
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PaulS
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Thank you Adam. I wish I understood Turkish theory better! I found the following in something Eric Ederer once sent me:
(Ottoman fr. Arabic root hār/hūr “falling down” (though cf. khār/khūr “freely chosen,
having an option”); also refers to the note written “a.”) Muhayyer is essentially the descending version of Hüseyni. It is also found in
compounds such as Muhayyer-Kürdi and Muhayyer-Buselik (which, ostensibly, are to begin in Muhayyer and end with the lower [“root”] cins of the
second makam, which see below).
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adamgood
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PaulS,
Both makams Tahir and Muhayyer are worth looking at for similarities. I'm not terribly familiar with Tahir but if I had to take a stab at it, they are
very similar in flavor but use different dominants. Muhayyer dominant is the pitch huseyni, Tahir dominant is neva (correct me if I'm wrong).
Sometimes I feel like makam Muhayyer is a combination of both Tahir and Muhayyer.
Am I crazy or is MuhayyerKurdi makam not to be found in Ismail Hakki Ozkan's book?? I wonder what's up with that or maybe I need reading glasses
looking at the table of contents.
So back to MuhayyerKurdi makam...if the 2nd half of it is kurdi, that would mean a dominant at the pivot point would be the pitch neva so, that's what
I mean by I don't find much Huseyni flavor in the makam. Does that make sense? After the Muhayyer / Tahir parts in the beginning, you'll find flavors
of Acem, tiny passing flavor of Ussak and finish off with big flavors of Kurdi.
Similarly, AcemKurdi makam wouldn't have much flavor of Huseyni.
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alim
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Btw, in Arabic, Muhayyer means "perplexing"
Ali-
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al-Halabi
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In addition to "perplexing" muhayyer can mean "astounding" or "amazing." It was perhaps that latter meaning that was intended for the maqam's name.
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