【トルコ音楽 / Turkish Music】Karcığar Sirto (Beste: Turan Yalçın)

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  • Опубліковано 22 гру 2024
  • ブルガリアの古都ヴェリコ・タルノヴォに滞在中に撮影しました。
    ヤントラ川のビーチでカルジュアール・シルトという曲を演奏しました。
    Taken during my stay in the ancient Bulgarian city of Veliko Tarnovo.
    The song is called Karcığar Sirto performed at Yantra Beach.
    ちなみに去年の5月に同じ場所で撮影した動画もあります。
    今年のヴェリコ・タルノヴォは雨が少なかったそうで、9月初旬のヤントラ川の水位は大幅に低下していました。
    下記動画と併せて見比べてみてください。
    By the way, there is also a video taken at the same location last May.
    I heard that there was not much rain in Veliko Tarnovo this year, and the water level of the Yantra River was much lower in early September.
    Please compare it with the video below.
    • 【トルコ音楽 / Turkish Music...
    Karcığar Sirto
    Beste: Turan Yalçın
    Makam: Karcığar
    Usul: Nim Sofyan
    --------------------------
    Shingo Masuda is a professional qanun (oriental zither) player and composer, born in Japan and currently based in Berlin, Germany. In the beginning, he played piano while studying Western classical music. From 2009 until now he concentrated on the qanun and studied the instrument in Egypt, Tunisia, Turkey, and Greece. He has learned various techniques and also uses elements of modal music for his own compositions. He plays a wide range of genres, from jazz and classical to experimental music, as well as Middle Eastern and Mediterranean music. In solo concerts or with his trio "Japal" he plays his own compositions internationally.
    www.shingomasu...
    / nekakiya_shingo
    ‪@ShingoMasuda_Kanun‬
    #カーヌーン #トルコ音楽 #民族楽器

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2

  • @イチ太郎-c3d
    @イチ太郎-c3d 2 місяці тому

    曲の特徴が違うと思ったら…為になるコメントがあった😮ギリシャ伝統のリズムなのですか

  • @gamiwv
    @gamiwv 2 місяці тому +1

    Karcığar Sirto
    OR in Greek "antikristo syrto" . Traditional Greek rhythm and dance. In Small Asia (or Micra Assia in Greek language) used to leave a big population of Greeks until 1922 when "chetes" of Kemal Atatourk massacred and carried out genocides like those that the Turks know EXCELLENT to carry out. (Armenians, Pontiac population, Kurdish population, etc.) However, Greek rhythms and dances remain Greek despite the attempts to usurp them from the neo-Ottoman Turks