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The Folk Music of Skyros
| Article
# : |
16401 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
5 / 1989 |
4,496 Words |
| Author
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Sotirios (Sam) Chianis Sotirios (Sam) Chianis is associate professor of
ethnomusicology and chairman of the Department of Music at the
State University of New York at Binghamton. He has made
numerous field recording expeditions to Greece, has performed
Greek folk music for more than forty years, and will soon
publish a definitive two-volume work entitled The Folk Musical
Traditions of Skyros, Greece. |
The fundamental concepts of contemporary Greek folk music are a highly complex synthesis of melody, verse (poetry), and dance. Greek folk songs are not only a reflection of basic philosophies of village life, regional traditions and beliefs, and social complexities, but they also symbolically describe the many beauties of nature, of life, love, happiness, profound sorrow, and even death. Brides and grooms are escorted to church with the sounds of processional music provided by local musicians, and praised with songs of long life and prosperity. Mothers sing lullabies to their newly born; the dead are mourned with laments. Among village people, songs and dances truly serve as a means of self-expression and constitute an indispensable part of daily life.
Greek folk music has a long tradition, and is related to both classical Greek music and Byzantine ecclesiastic music. Some folk dances and their musical meters, poetic forms, and modes (scales) undoubtedly stem from ancient ones, while melodic styles are largely derived from the musical traditions inherent in Byzantine chant. Over the centuries, the neighboring cultures of Italy, Albania, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Turkey, and other nations bordering the eastern Mediterranean have exerted their musical influences on Greek folk music. In recent years, Western music and musical instruments have managed to penetrate even the most remote villages and islands of Greece.
Because different kinds of music developed in the various mainland regions and islands, it would be erroneous to speak of a specific type or style of folk music that can be considered common to the whole of Greece. Greece folk music can, however, be categorized into two main classifications: the music of the mainland
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