Falak
Falak (n’asekyerɛ ara nye "sor," "nkrabea," "wiadze") yɛ ndwom kwan a efi Pamir Mbepɔw a ɔwɔ Asia finimfin fam, tsitsir Badakhshan mantɔw a ɔwɔ Afghanistan etsifi fam epuei, Tajikistan anafo fam epuei, na Pakistan etsifi fam.[1] Falak ndwom botum ayɛ nyamesom-ahintasɛm mu nsɛmti a ɔfa ɔsor dɔ, ntsetsew na nkabom (a wɔtaa nya fi Persia Sufi awensɛm mu), anaadɛ wiadze na awerɛhow nsɛm a ɔfa nyimpa dɔ na amandzehu.[2]
Ndwom nkyerɛkyerɛ
[sesa mu | sesa ekyirsɛm]Mpɛn pii no, Falak ndwom no yɛ dza ɔkɔ fam, na mpɛn pii no, dza anohyeto wom no yɛ hexachord (nnyigyei esia) nkutsen.[3]
Edwindadze a wɔdze dzi dwuma
[sesa mu | sesa ekyirsɛm]Wobotum ato Falak acappella, a wɔdze edwindadze ka ho, anaadɛ wɔdze edwindadze abɔ ho. Falak edwindadze bi nye ghijak (spike fiddle), nay (Persiafo sanku), na dombura (sanku a nye kɔn tsentsen), nye edwindadze a wɔdze bɔ ndwom.
Mboaedze
[sesa mu | sesa ekyirsɛm]- ↑ Asian Music: Journal of the Society for Asian Music. The Society. 2006. p. 65. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
- ↑ Benjamin D. Koen Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology Florida State University (26 November 2008). Beyond the Roof of the World : Music, Prayer, and Healing in the Pamir Mountains: Music, Prayer, and Healing in the Pamir Mountains. Oxford University Press. pp. 117–. ISBN 978-0-19-971002-7. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
- ↑ Alison Arnold (2000). South Asia: The Indian Subcontinent. Garland Pub. pp. 828–. ISBN 978-0-8240-4946-1. Retrieved 15 September 2013.