Documentary - Traditional Music of Turkey with Wooden Instruments

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  • Опубліковано 19 тра 2016
  • Documentary Videos / Belgeselin Tüm Videoları:
    Tanbur: goo.gl/f4yz7x
    Microtonal Guitar: goo.gl/wFHrWa
    Kanun: goo.gl/8V9ack
    Ney: goo.gl/tMbI11
    Tar: goo.gl/5CO2OE
    Kemençe: goo.gl/CboMwS
    Kemane: goo.gl/igZgpF
    Ud: goo.gl/lS6l0l
    Erbane: goo.gl/r8naKu
    Bağlama (1): goo.gl/JRr7Ru
    Bağlama (2): goo.gl/fAaLs3
    Kaval - 6 String Bağlama: goo.gl/T9s6ck
    Darbuka - Bendir - Clarinet: goo.gl/AWp6V7
    Dede Efendi: goo.gl/Lr0yRn
    Mey - Duduk - Balaban: goo.gl/dwKVjU
    Fretless & Microtonal Guitar: goo.gl/ERWAwg
    Tulum - Karadeniz Kemençesi - Panduri: goo.gl/34WTXo
    International Wood Culture Society's Documentary: Traditional Music of Turkey with Wooden Instruments
    Documentary Supervisor: Tolgahan Çoğulu
    World Wood Day 2015
    / woodculture
    www.worldwoodday.org/2015/post...
    Tolgahan Çoğulu
    www.microtonalguitar.org/
    www.tolgahancogulu.com/en/
    #turkishmusic #türkmüziği #belgesel

КОМЕНТАРІ • 72

  • @wannabevegan565
    @wannabevegan565 6 років тому +23

    In love with the documentary......Thank you! Teşekkür Ederim!

    • @microtonalguitar
      @microtonalguitar  6 років тому +1

      You're welcome! Check this one: ua-cam.com/video/e7RnjKJyYFw/v-deo.html

  • @101TheWierdo
    @101TheWierdo 8 років тому +20

    Wow amazing documentary! Love turkish music so much!

  • @c.sinansagroglu6296
    @c.sinansagroglu6296 6 років тому +12

    aranan bi belgeseli hayata geçirmişsiniz.var olun.

  • @celinacelerysalt
    @celinacelerysalt 8 років тому +33

    This is such a well put together and thought out documentary. Thank you so much! It helps foreigners like me who have always been drawn to exotic sounds but wish there was a palatable way to be introduced to something as grandiose and profound as a whole culture's sonic background! Absolutely beautiful, been watching your videos since about 2012 Tolgahan and i gotta say that they are very precious treasures to someone like me who doesn't know where to begin with eastern european/western asian music.
    And i also was wondering if you ever come to festivals or conventions near Houston, Texas? I know we have a lot of different cultural festivals, etc, so i have been curious to see you and/or your friends play. I would also be interested in simply attending a cultural music festival to pay my respects to these beautiful cultures if there are some you recommend near here. Thank you!

    • @microtonalguitar
      @microtonalguitar  8 років тому +1

      +celinacelerysalt Thank you for your comment. On 8-13 June, I'll be in New York for a conference at the New School. Other than that, I rarely have concerts in the US (once a year in average). I'll let you know if I come to Houston.

    • @celinacelerysalt
      @celinacelerysalt 8 років тому

      Cool thanks for the info. Ill be sure to catch the videos from it if you make some thank you for the reply.

  • @therealzilch
    @therealzilch 8 років тому +12

    Very nicely done, Tolgahan. A fascinating glimpse at many different traditions. Thanks.

  • @ethamajin
    @ethamajin 7 років тому +4

    This is fantastic, thank you so much for sharing.

  • @selahattinkaptan
    @selahattinkaptan 3 роки тому +1

    Emeği geçenlere teşekkürler

  • @ylst8874
    @ylst8874 5 років тому +8

    I'm in love my country's music. Turkish, kurdish ,armenian ,black sea region laz music , georgian , iranian , middle asia oriented antic music , ottoman palace music , makam music , sufi music , gypsy music , greek music , I really can't count enough I guess. I love western music so much too. I love The Doors best 😉

  • @ishakcakr584
    @ishakcakr584 7 років тому +2

    Muazzam bi çalışma olmuş . Tüylerim diken diken izledim ...

  • @yunusylmaz63
    @yunusylmaz63 7 років тому +1

    Helal olsun gözlerimi kırpmadan izledim gerçekten mükkemel bir çalışma olmuş

  • @belaliaimgoz5369
    @belaliaimgoz5369 3 роки тому +1

    Bu güzel video için teşekkürler

  • @MuhammedAyanoglu
    @MuhammedAyanoglu 6 років тому +3

    Hocam vallahi elinize saglik; mukemmel olmus bu belgesel.

  • @AhmetYlmaz-hj8ry
    @AhmetYlmaz-hj8ry 4 роки тому +1

    So good

  • @natadetoto00
    @natadetoto00 7 років тому +1

    Thank you to bring me to this link.

  • @emrahercancakir
    @emrahercancakir 8 років тому +1

    Elinize saglik ustadim. Cok guzel bir belgesel bu.

  • @ConstantThrowing
    @ConstantThrowing 7 років тому

    I love the rectangular boards with strings. My friend told me the name but I always forget.
    One day I hope to own and play one of these amazing instruments.

    • @microtonalguitar
      @microtonalguitar  7 років тому +2

      Kanun: ua-cam.com/video/lxWPKmcdZ3I/v-deo.html

    • @ConstantThrowing
      @ConstantThrowing 7 років тому

      Tolgahan Çoğulu
      That's the one!
      They look expensive lol

  • @Lamadesbois
    @Lamadesbois 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for sharing this. So many soulful instruments and music to discover.
    Also, I noticed a lot of similarities between these traditions of dance and music and the ones of French Brittany (Bretagne). The dancing with finger holding is similar in a way (you can check Plinn). Also, the bombarde looks/sounds like a zurna and the binioù is close to your bagpipe as well. Very interesting!

    • @microtonalguitar
      @microtonalguitar  3 роки тому +1

      You are right! I've been to Brest for the modal music conference organised by Erik Marcand. I fell in love with the Kreiz Breiz projects. So similar :)

    • @Lamadesbois
      @Lamadesbois 3 роки тому +1

      @@microtonalguitar Nice! I have seen a couple of conferences too, but online or not in Brest. They are inspiring.
      I do not want to be asking for to much, but I would like to discover more of the music you showed in the documentary. Would you mind recommending a couple of albums that you like in this regard?

    • @microtonalguitar
      @microtonalguitar  3 роки тому

      @@Lamadesbois Of course. Check out these composers and musicians: Tanburi Cemil Bey, Neşet Ertaş, Aşık Veysel, Kardeş Türküler, Erdal Erzincan, Erkan Oğur, Dede Efendi, Mutlu Torun, Birol Yayla, among many others..

  • @tigarasab784512
    @tigarasab784512 3 роки тому

    Tulum güzel bir sey

  • @straussv0.243
    @straussv0.243 5 років тому +2

    We have a lot of instruments. :)

  • @leylaerdogan3799
    @leylaerdogan3799 6 років тому +2

    İngilizce bilmeyenler bu videolardan mahrum kalmamalı.Türkçe altyazı rica ediyorum.Teşekkürler.

    • @microtonalguitar
      @microtonalguitar  6 років тому

      Genelde konuşmalar zaten Türkçe. Ayrıca altyazı sonradan eklenemiyor ne yazık ki.

    • @ramazansen
      @ramazansen 6 років тому

      UA-cam'nin altyazı özelliği kullanılabilir.

  • @melan2508
    @melan2508 7 років тому +1

    it's a wonderful documentary. But i have a question ? WHERE IS THE PSHINAWA ?

  • @Inkulabi
    @Inkulabi 2 роки тому +1

    🌹🙏🏾❤️

  • @alexgabriel5423
    @alexgabriel5423 4 роки тому +1

    There is a bad practice in Turkey sometimes because some musicians take Ottoman repertoire and play it on the saz, not playing the correct intervals of Ottoman music. At other times folk tunes from the saz are played on the tambur. Halk/Turkish music of Turkic origin(not that of Thrace!)is sometimes played on a tambur. Mr Ozer Ozel has done that for unknown reasons, and he may not be the only one. Although the basis of Ottoman music(Sanat)is based on the Pythagorean comma for which concert La is 432 Hz, there were musicians who want to adopt 440Hz for La, that is not Pythagorean. Pythagorean frequencies will not work in chords! The equal temperament with 440Hz for La is for producing chords.

    • @ayhankaracaoglu6845
      @ayhankaracaoglu6845 23 дні тому

      We call what you wrote " speaking from abdomen". They are all categories of Turkish music, both in Anatolian and Rumelian side. Only we have lost our homeland but ot the culture and people and the music. What you call Ottoman is also Turkish Classical music.

    • @alexgabriel5423
      @alexgabriel5423 22 дні тому

      @@ayhankaracaoglu6845 I m speaking after reading Dr. A. Saygun s work, the Symphonic Music Composer.

    • @alexgabriel5423
      @alexgabriel5423 22 дні тому

      @ayhankaracaoglu6845 First: The saz has 17 sounds for the first Octave. The Ottoman Tanbur has 34 sounds in the first Octave. These are two different tonal systems as Dr Adnan Saygun wrote long ago. Second: Rauf Yekta Bey wrote in his article printed in Dictionaire du Conservatoir(1922)that the markings on the neck of the tanbur allow playing of the Byzantine Repertoir. The saz has the Turkic system and the Ottoman tanbur inherits the Byzantine system, which in its turn inherits the Anatolian system. The Herzian frequencies of saz tonalities can be compared to those of the tanbur. They have different frequencies and differ in number as well. Dr Adnan Saygun wrote clearly that in Turkey there are two tonal systems.

  • @marselmusic
    @marselmusic 7 років тому

    im surprised with the sound of bgpipes, they actually sound trendy like edm

  • @SandyHookFalseFlagOP
    @SandyHookFalseFlagOP 8 років тому +3

    Is this music of peace? I hope it is and I also hope one day the world can get along with all the differences in religion. So far I see music creates more peace than Religion does any day

    • @microtonalguitar
      @microtonalguitar  8 років тому

      Of course it is the music of peace.

    • @SandyHookFalseFlagOP
      @SandyHookFalseFlagOP 8 років тому +1

      Tolgahan Çoğulu
      maybe it we put together all the music we have learned throughout time, we can all come together and produce world peace from music.Now wouldn't that be nice?

    • @Vicerium
      @Vicerium 7 років тому +1

      Peace would be nice for real my friend. With or without music, as a target for real, peace, would be so good for this terrible world.
      We just need "open hearts" who are ok to listen first before judge.
      None of a religion cant be bad actually, but users of them, maybe bad. Jew,Christianity,Islam all from same source. The only "bads" are people, not the message. Bads are who "play" or "change" with that holy messages. Anyways.
      Only who has open hearts/lightly hearts are ready for music or peace anyways. I dont know other comments but my favorite comment is sure yours cause of that "peace wish" truely.
      Thanks to you from Turkey.

    • @abdulkadirkocaoglu
      @abdulkadirkocaoglu 5 років тому

      @@Vicerium yes excellent comment. I am agree all religions from the same source. 👍

  • @kolige5436
    @kolige5436 4 роки тому +4

    4:31 bu türkünün adı ne?

    • @kolige5436
      @kolige5436 4 роки тому +8

      Azmettim araştırdım, sözlerinden yola çıkarak buldum. Bolu Kıbrısçık türküsü. Adı " men men". Benim gibi beğenenler varsa Necla Erol'dan dinleyebilir. En otantik o söylemiş

  • @alexgabriel5423
    @alexgabriel5423 3 роки тому

    Half Tones is the correct term...not half notes. Please edit. ( Mr Cogulu s comentary). Tesekurler.

  • @petretepner8027
    @petretepner8027 6 років тому +3

    My partner is Algerian, and believes (or affects to believe, to wind me up) that the Turks (and the Greeks) just "stole" Arabic music, then distorted it. Grounds for divorce?
    Great video. I never stop learning when I watch your channel.

    • @microtonalguitar
      @microtonalguitar  6 років тому +1

      petre Tepner Interesting approach 😀

    • @petretepner8027
      @petretepner8027 6 років тому +2

      It would certainly be a novel approach for the divorce court, but my partner is endlessly inventive: he manages, somehow, to make me feel personally responsible for all the wickednesses of the Ottoman Empire.

    • @godofchaoskhorne5043
      @godofchaoskhorne5043 Рік тому +3

      @@petretepner8027 Are you Turkish? Why would you marry an Arab in the first place. Generally Arabs obsessed with the Ottoman empire and "how bad it was" have some ideological issue with it. Usually stemming from religion. Either being Shia or Wahabi.

  • @merustveli
    @merustveli 6 років тому +6

    From 10:00 where man playing on tulum (Georgian name is Chiboni), there is authentic Georgian (Adjarian) melodie!
    For sure this man is Lazian (LAZICA is Old Georgian province, now its Turkish territory).

    • @microtonalguitar
      @microtonalguitar  6 років тому +2

      I think so.

    • @gputkaradze9873
      @gputkaradze9873 7 місяців тому

      So Please delete video as it not describing reality and there is evidence of stealing other nations culture and showing it as own culture. Tulum is not turkish instrument, because 1) no other turks have this instrument in east 2) Laz and Georgians has most of melodies and dances on this instrument. @@microtonalguitar

  • @trebutuoy
    @trebutuoy 5 років тому

    Üstadım güzel bir belgesel olmuş fakat bağlama hep şelpe tekniğiyle çalınırken gösterilmiş. Sizce de haksızlık değil mi bu? Bir "belgesel"de, bağlamanın açık ara ile çok daha yaygın çalınış şekli olan ve bu enstrümanın esas virtüözlerinin çaldığı şekilde mızrapla çalınışına dair en azından bir örnek olmalı değil midir?

    • @microtonalguitar
      @microtonalguitar  5 років тому

      Doğru, aslında çekilmişti ama son editlerde çıkartılmış ne yazık ki.

  • @OmerFaruk-dc4xo
    @OmerFaruk-dc4xo 19 днів тому

    Şaka gibi. Resmen koca belgesele uzun saplı bağlamayı koymamışsınız? Sadece küçük tekneli kısa saplı curaları koymyşsunuz. Koysaydınız ya bir divan bağlama, neşet ertaşdan, orhan gencebaydan birkaç örnek? Yapılan çalışma elbette güzel ama bence çok eksik

  • @theghost1109
    @theghost1109 4 роки тому +1

    since Turkiye is the origin of Sufism, there is no doubt that they have so many instruments.

    • @ahmettasdemir.9327
      @ahmettasdemir.9327 3 роки тому +1

      You may have a point. However, ney and def are only used in Sufism. But it doesn't change the fact that instruments have souls

  • @alexgabriel5423
    @alexgabriel5423 4 роки тому +1

    Wooden Instruments of Traditional Ottoman Music ...it s a better title.

    • @oguztokur3673
      @oguztokur3673 4 роки тому +1

      alex gabriel turkish folk music cant be described as ottoman tough.turkish classical music can be decribed as ottoman classical music but folk music on the other hand can be described as anatolian folk music.

    • @alexgabriel5423
      @alexgabriel5423 4 роки тому

      Anatolian music these days, but not in Ancient Anatolia(Lydia. Lycia, Phrygia, Caria)seems to be Turkic in the Ayak system. Music in Thrace seems to be in the makam system. Of course the rhythms are also specific. The marks on the saz neck give Turkic pitches, the marks on the tambur neck give the pitches of makams and Byzantine music as written by Rauf Yekta Bey. The same conclusion was reached by A.Saygun. I am not giving here my own opinions but show the opinion of Turkish musicologists.

    • @metinmars
      @metinmars Рік тому

      @@alexgabriel5423 yalandan kim ölmüş yunan'mı komik

  • @nalihawlere1766
    @nalihawlere1766 Рік тому

    Kurdish saz