THE SOCIO-HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE CLASSIFICATIONS ON POPULAR MUSIC IN TURKEY AND THE WEST: A COMPARISON BETWEEN THE HIERARCHIES OF TASTE Cover Image

THE SOCIO-HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE CLASSIFICATIONS ON POPULAR MUSIC IN TURKEY AND THE WEST: A COMPARISON BETWEEN THE HIERARCHIES OF TASTE
THE SOCIO-HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE CLASSIFICATIONS ON POPULAR MUSIC IN TURKEY AND THE WEST: A COMPARISON BETWEEN THE HIERARCHIES OF TASTE

Author(s): Onur Güneş Ayas
Subject(s): Cultural history, Customs / Folklore, Music, The Ottoman Empire, Sociology of Art
Published by: Rasim Özgür DÖNMEZ
Keywords: Sociology of Music; Popular Music; Arabesk; Ottoman-Turkish Music; Hierarchies of Taste;

Summary/Abstract: The theoretical framework built in the West to classify popular music reflects the socio-historical characteristics of the Western societies. This paper argues that this framework is not suitable to understand the music debates in Turkey. Art/popular music (or high/low music) distinction in Western music discourses have reflected a class-based hierarchy of taste. Ottoman-Turkish example differs from this model in many respects. Due to lack of a Western-type aristocracy, land owner ruling class and clergy, Ottoman classical music has developed as a kind of urban music open to all classes of society, exceeding the limits of class-based musical genres and styles. With the start of the Westernization era, however, the East-West distinction reflected in the famous alaturka-alafranga debate has become the yardstick to determine the place of a certain piece of music in the hierarchy of taste built by the Westernizing elites.

  • Issue Year: 10/2018
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 91-110
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: English