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Music in Central Asia flowered along centuries-old caravan routes linking the Middle East with China and India via what is often referred to as Turkistan, the vast region extending from the Caspian Sea to the Xinjiang region of northwestern China. Musical instruments diffused from one region to another, and many of the musical styles still display foreign influence. The variety of musical styles ranges from the systematically organized classical music of Turkistan to the notated religious chants of Tibetan Buddhism to the highly varied folk music styles of the region’s numerous ethnic groups. The main thrust of this examination of Central Asian music will be on the traditions and styles first of Afghanistan and the sedentary population of Turkistan, then of the Turkic nomads, the Mongols, and the Siberian peoples, and finally of the Himalayan peoples in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China as well as in Bhutan, Nepal, and the northeastern Indian state of Sikkim.

Afghanistan and the sedentary population of Turkistan

This region of Central Asia includes Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and the oases of eastern (Chinese) Turkistan. The region lies within the Persian cultural area, and in the arts and in language, the Persian imprint has endured over many centuries. In music the links with Persia appear most clearly in terminology and instruments. Islam predominates in this region, and because Muslim religious authorities there have largely denounced music as contrary to the teachings of Islam, musicians and musical performance have generally occupied a low social position—a situation that is rare in other regions of Central Asia.

The area includes two main streams of musical practice: folk music in a broad range of styles, often closely linked to specific ethnic groups; and the more exclusive cosmopolitan classical music, derived from the medieval court music of Bukhara, Samarkand, and other urban centres of Transoxania (a region spanning present-day Uzbekistan and parts of Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan). A third stream is popular music, which is disseminated through the mass media.

Folk music

Generally characterized by a scarcity of musicians and musical instruments, folk music of this region is predominantly a matter of solo playing and singing, small ensembles, in absence of musical notation or codified musical theory. In their general types, the musical instruments are closely related to those of Persia and the Middle East, but specific forms and playing styles are purely local. Thus, there are numerous variants of the Persian long-necked lute, with names derived from the Persian ṭanbūr or dūtār; small spike fiddles, in which the neck skewers the body, forming a spike at the base; various block or fipple flutes, with air ducts like that of the Western recorder; transverse (horizontally held) flutes; reed instruments; metal jew’s harps; and two basic drum types, a single-headed goblet-shaped drum of pottery or wood and a large single-headed frame drum, or tambourine—all instrumental types widely diffused in the Middle East.

Stylistically, the music relates to that of both the Middle East and the surrounding nomadic Turkic peoples of Central Asia. Songs are monophonic (i.e., consisting of just a single line of melody), but instrumental music often includes two-part polyphony (music with multiple parts sounding simultaneously). The polyphony may take the form of a drone (sustained note) with a melody played above it, or it may be organum style—i.e., the second part playing the same melody as the first but at a higher or lower pitch. The most common interval between the two parts is a fourth or a fifth (respectively, the distance between the first four or five notes of a major scale). In structure, much of the music is based on small forms, frequently binary (two-section) or ternary (three-section). Small musical units may be repeated many times and varied slightly at each appearance. The recurrence of melodic phrases and an emphasis on marked rhythms is common and is related to the frequent role of music as dance accompaniment. Thus, in the following example, a dance tune from Afghan Turkistan, sections A and B are similar in their overall melodic structure and also in the small units of three or four notes on which they are built. The sequence ABAB and so on is repeated throughout the dance.

a dance tune from Afghan Turkistan

Vocal music may have greater rhythmic flexibility and melodic range, but in form it is almost always subordinated to the structure of the song text. Quatrains such as the robāʿī and chārbaytī are the most prominent village verse forms, with the exception of the landai (or landay), a couplet used by the nomadic Pashtuns of Afghanistan. In the urban oases, couplet forms based on the classical Persian ghazal, a type of lyric poem, are more common.

The generally negative attitude toward music among Muslim leaders in Afghanistan has led to strictures against musical performance and to extremely low social status for musicians in that country. Music is heard mainly in male-dominated public teahouses or at private celebrations such as weddings and circumcisions. Women may have their own musical genres within their enclosures; in this context the strong tradition of women’s music in the Fergana Valley of Uzbekistan is noteworthy. Since the late 20th century, however, festivities that include both men and women have become increasingly popular in Central Asia.

Within this general picture there is enormous diversity. The Uzbeks (a Turkic people) and the Tajiks (an Iranian group), who live side by side across northern Afghanistan and southern Turkistan, tend to share many musical traits and instruments. In contrast, most groups, such as the Pashtuns, the Ḥazāras, and the Balochs of Afghanistan and Pakistan or, in the extreme, the isolated mountain peoples of Nūrestān in Afghanistan and of the Pamirs in Tajikistan and Afghanistan, have maintained distinctive musical styles and, in some cases, unique musical instruments. The Nūristāni vaj, an arched harp (having a bow-shaped body with no forepillar), is a striking case of the possible survival of an instrument type on the margins of a now disintegrated culture area. There are no other harp traditions today between the Caucasus and Myanmar, although iconographic evidence indicates that in ancient times harps were widespread in Central Asia, the Middle East, and India. The music of the Ḥazāras includes vocal effects produced by striking the throat while singing, causing a break in the sound, and Balochi music also features a broken-voice style.