According to my farmemory, this is a credible rendition of the court/temple style, you know, classical stuff. The popular music was, um ... earthier. Louder, faster, ooga-chaka stuff.
Ancient Babylonian Music
According to my farmemory, this is a credible rendition of the court/temple style, you know, classical stuff. The popular music was, um ... earthier. Louder, faster, ooga-chaka stuff.
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A Little Slice of Terramagne: YardMap
Sadly the main program is dormant, but the YardMap concept is awesome, and many of its informative articles remain. YardMap was a citizen science…
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Winterfest in July Bingo Card 7-1-21
Here is my card for the Winterfest in July Bingo fest. It runs from July 1-30. Celebrate all the holidays and traditions of winter! ( See all my…
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Bingo
I have made bingo down the B, G, and O columns of my 6-1-21 card for the Cottoncandy Bingo fest. I also have one extra fill. B1 (caretaking) --…
Yes
December 16 2014, 19:33:39 UTC 6 years ago
It makes sense that it would be concert music. Music for formal purposes such as ritual or Court would be what has a formalized written theory. Folk music grows without such constraints. The music theorists, if they don't dismiss it as rude, crude and socially unacceptable, try to find structure in it after the fact. So I'm not surprised that what this performer can reconstruct is the formal form - there's a good chance that either no one bothered to write it down, or that (since what we have preserved probably came from the royal archives) it wasn't in a place where it would be preserved.