Recording Studio: Turkish Music

Recording Studio: With famous artists such as Zeki Müren, Müzeyyen Senar, and Orhan Gencebay, Turkish classical music may have had its peak in the 1970s, but its history goes all the way back to the Ottoman Empire. Culture Trip explores the origins of Turkish classical music and folk music plus their place in the 21st century.

Recording Studio: Ottoman Empire

It’s no secret that the Ottoman Empire was one of Turkey’s most active periods for the arts. From a musical standpoint, the 13th century brought on a systemization of music, meaning that Turks took on the makam (varied system of modes or scales) of Asia and Anatolia and soared creatively. During the late 14th and 15th centuries, research into Ottoman music and its systems began to emerge, which later resulted in the teaching of music, especially in the palace conservatory. It was here that music was disseminated to the Ottoman elite, as ancient Anatolian cultural heritage was preserved and explored further. Traditionally, Ottoman classical music included the use of a tanbur (a long-necked lute), ney (a type of flute), kemençe (a type of fiddle), oud (short-necked lute), kanun (a plucked zither), and violin.

Recording Studio: Turkish Music Culture

Up until the 20th century, Turkish music spread throughout the Mediterranean basin with unique styles also emerging from various areas of village and city life. Apart from the Classical Ottoman-Turkish music, this folk music tradition, also with roots in Asia, spread throughout Anatolia. Developed and advanced at the hands of local artists and minstrels, the rich repertoire reflected every aspect of the natural and social events of that time. In the first quarter of the 20th century, a new development took hold as an entirely new political sphere changed Turkish musical culture. It was during this period that Western influence was most prevalent, as Turks experienced Western culture firsthand, especially western music.