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It is very similar to the music of the Middle East and is characterized by complicated rhythms and meters. [1] Because of the long history of music in the country and the large variety of music styles and musical instruments, Uzbekistan is often regarded as one of the most musically diverse countries in Central Asia. [2]
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Uzbekistan began to learn about the Tajik shashmaqam, and Tajikistan learnt of the Uzbek shashmaqom. This has survived to the present, but a surge of nationalism in Uzbekistan may change that: singers on the radio in Bukhara , a city perfectly bilingual in Uzbek and Tajik , are using only the Uzbek texts in their shashmaqom music broadcasts.
Turgun Alimatov (Uzbek: Turgʻun Alimatov; 20 January 1922 – 17 December 2008) was a leading Uzbek classic music and shashmaqam player and composer of 20th century folk and classic music. [1] He was a master performer of tanbur, dutar, and sato. [2] He was recognized as People's artist of Uzbekistan.
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According to Chinese sources, the group of young male and female dancers from Kesh (present day Shahrisabz in Uzbekistan) and Samarkand performed wearing vermilion dress and red leather shoes. [3] Rolling, twirling and twisting the body were unique aspects of their dances which can be seen today both in Far-Eastern and Uzbek female dances. [4] [5]
Yalla (Uzbek: Ялла, Yalla) is a folk rock band from Uzbekistan. [1] They appeared in 1970 and in the 1970s–1980s and were popular across the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact countries. The most prominent song of Yalla was " Учкуду́к, три коло́дца " ( trans. Uchkuduk, tri kalodtsa ; Russian for " Uchkuduk , three water wells ...
The music was composed by Mutal Burkhanov, and the words were written by Timur Fattah and Turab Tula. The anthem, such as those of the Tajik SSR and the Turkmen SSR, opens with a salute to the Russian people. The Uzbeks are not mentioned until the fourth line. The melody is used in the current national anthem of Uzbekistan, with