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  2. Dammam (drum) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dammam_(drum)

    The barrel drum doholak survived in Balochistan, while all three drum types mentioned are widespread further east in India. On the other hand, the hand-played goblet drum tombak and the frame drum duff are essential to classical music in Iran . The drums played with sticks in folk music are functionally differentiated from this.

  3. Islam and music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_and_music

    At least according to one scholar, Jacob M. Landau, not only is secular and folk music found in regions throughout the Muslim world, but Islam has its own distinctive category of music -- the "Islamic music" or the "classical Islamic music" — that began development "with the advent of Islam about 610 CE" as a "new art". [40]

  4. Islamic music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_music

    Islamic music may refer to religious music, as performed in Islamic public services or private devotions, or more generally to musical traditions of the Muslim world. The heartland of Islam is the Middle East , North Africa , the Horn of Africa , Balkans , and West Africa , Iran , Central Asia , and South Asia .

  5. Bedug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bedug

    A bedug is a large double-headed drum [2] with water buffalo or cow leather on both ends. [3] [1]Unlike the more frequently used kendang, the bedug is suspended from a frame and played with a padded mallet.

  6. Arab tone system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arab_tone_system

    The specific notes used in a piece will be part of one of more than seventy modes or maqam rows named after characteristic tones that are rarely the first tone (unlike in European-influenced music theory where the tonic is listed first). The rows are heptatonic and constructed from augmented, major, neutral, and minor seconds. Many different ...

  7. Religious music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_music

    Islamic music is monophonic, meaning it has only one melody line. Everything in performance is based on the refinement of the melodic line and the complexity of the beat. Although a simple arrangement of notes, octaves, fifths, and fourths, usually below the melody notes, may be used as ornamentation, the concept of harmony is absent. [8]

  8. Afro-Cuban drums, Muslim prayers, Buddhist mantras: Religious ...

    lite.aol.com/news/world/story/0001/20240516/1a...

    Buddhists chant mantras as they gather at the home of a jazz musician. Jews savor rice, beans and other Cuban staples for Sabbath dinner. Santeria devotees immerse the senses as they dance and slap drums in a museum filled with statues paying homage to their Afro-Cuban deities and leave offerings to the goddess of the sea.

  9. Arabic music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabic_music

    Pre-Islamic Arabia was the cradle of many intellectual achievements, including music, musical theory and the development of musical instruments. [1] In Yemen , the main center of pre-Islamic Arab sciences, literature and arts, musicians benefited from the patronage of the Kings of SabaŹ¾ who encouraged the development of music.