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For other uses, see Oud (disambiguation).
The oud (Arabic: عود ʿūd, plural:أعواد, a‘wād; Assyrian:ܥܘܕ ūd, Persian: بربط barbat; Kurdish: عوود ûd; Turkish: ud or ut;[1] Greek: ούτι; Armenian: ուդ, Azeri: ud; Hebrew: עוד ud; Somali: cuud or kaban) is a pear-shaped, stringed instrument commonly used in Middle Eastern music. It is often seen as the predecessor of the western lute, distinguished primarily by its lack of frets.
[edit] NameThe words "lute" and "oud" are both suspected to be derived from the Arabic العود (al-ʿūd), consisting of the Arabic letters ʿayn-wāw-dāl, meaning a thin piece of wood similar to the shape of a straw, referring either to the wood plectrum used traditionally for playing the lute,[2] or to the thin strips of wood used for the back, or for the fact that the top was made of wood, not skin as were earlier.[citation needed] However, recent research by Eckhard Neubauer suggests that ʿūd may simply be an Arabized version of the Persian name rud, which meant string, stringed instrument, or lute.[3][4] The Arabic prefix al-, in al-ʿūd, which represents the definite article and can be translated as "the," was not retained when al-ʿūd, was borrowed into Turkish, nor was the ʿayn, as the sound (a voiced pharyngeal fricative) does not exist in Turkish. The resulting word in Turkish is simply ud (pronunciation follows that of the word good without the g ). The oud was most likely introduced to Western Europe by the Arabs who established the Umayyad Caliphate of Al-Andalus on the Iberian Peninsula beginning in the year 711 AD. Oud-like instruments such as the Ancient Greek Pandoura and the Roman Pandura likely made their way to the Iberian Peninsula much earlier than the oud. However, it was the royal houses of Al-Andalus that cultivated the environment which raised the level of oud playing to greater heights and boosted the popularity of the instrument. The most famous oud player of Al-Andalus was Zyriab. He established the first music conservatory in Spain, enhanced playing technique and added a fifth course to the instrument. The European version of this instrument came to be known as the lute - luth in French, Laute in German, liuto in Italian, luit in Dutch, (all beginning with the letter "L") and alaud in Spanish. The word "luthier" meaning stringed instrument maker is also derived from the French luth. Unlike the oud, the European lute utilized frets (usually tied gut). [edit] HistoryAccording to Farabi, the oud was invented by Lamech, the sixth grandson of Adam. The legend tells that the grieving Lamech hung the body of his dead son from a tree. The first oud was inspired by the shape of his son's bleached skeleton.[5] The oldest pictorial record of a lute dates back to the Uruk period in Southern Mesopotamia (modern Nasiriyah city), over 5000 years ago on a cylinder seal acquired by Dr. Dominique Collon and currently housed at the British Museum.[citation needed] The image depicts a female crouching with her instruments upon a boat, playing right-handed. This instrument appears many times throughout Mesopotamian history and again in ancient Egypt from the 18th dynasty onwards in long and short-neck varieties. One may see such examples at the Metropolitan Museums of New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, and the British Museum on clay tablets and papyrus paper. This instrument and its close relatives have been a part of the music of each of the ancient civilizations that have existed in the Mediterranean and the Middle East regions, including the Sumerians, Akkadians, Persians, Kurds, Babylonians, Assyrians, Armenians, Greeks, Egyptians, and Romans. The ancient Turkic peoples had a similar instrument called the kopuz. This instrument was thought to have magical powers and was brought to wars and used in military bands. This is noted in the Göktürk monument inscriptions, the military band was later used by other Turkic state's armies and later by Europeans.[6] According to musicologist Çinuçen Tanrıkorur today's oud was derived from the kopuz by Turks near Central Asia and additional strings were added by them.[7] Today's oud is totally different from the old prototypes and the Turkish oud is different from Arabic oud in playing style and shape. The Turkish is derived from modifying the Arabic oud, whose development has been attributed to Manolis Venios, a well known Greek luthier who lived Constantinople (Istanbul) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[citation needed] In Greece and Armenia musicians especially use the Turkish ouds and tunings.[citation needed] The oud has a particularly long tradition in Iraq,[8] where a saying goes that in its music lies the country’s soul.[8] A ninth-century Baghdad jurist praised the healing powers of the instrument, and the 19th century writer Muhammad Shihab al-Din related that it "places the temperament in equilibrium" and "calms and revives hearts."[8] Following the invasion of Iraq and the overthrow of the secular Hussein regime in 2003, however, the increasing fervor of Islamic militants who consider secular music to be haraam (forbidden) forced many Oud players or teachers into hiding or exile.[8] [edit] Defining features
[edit] ConstructionConstruction of the oud is similar to that of the lute.[9] The back of the instrument is made of thin wood staves glued together on edge. Alternating staves of light and dark wood are often used. The instrument usually has an odd number of staves. This means the back will have a center stave rather than a center seam. Contrasting trim pieces are often used between staves. Patterns and wood species used generally vary from maker to maker. The top of the oud is generally made of two matching pieces of thin spruce glued together on edge. Transverse braces, also of spruce, are glued to the underside of the top. The neck is generally made of a single piece of wood and is usually veneered in a striped pattern similar to that of the back. The pegbox meets the neck at a severe angle. The pegbox is usually made from separate side, end and back pieces glued together. [edit] Regional typesThe following are the general regional characteristics of oud types in which both the shape and the tuning most commonly differ: Turkish ud, an ancient musical instrument inlaid with ivory and mother-of-pearl.
Although the Greek instruments Laouto and Lavta appear to look much like an oud, they are very different in playing style and origin, deriving from Byzantine lutes. The laouto is mainly a chordal instrument, with occasional melodic use in Cretan music. Both always feature movable frets (unlike the oud). [edit] Plectrum (pick) How the risha (Arab term for the pick or plectrum) of the oud is held in the palm of the hand. The plectrum (pick) for the oud is usually a little more than the length of an index-finger. The Arabs traditionally used thin piece of wood as a plectrum, later replaced by the eagle's feather by Zyriab in Spain (between 822 to 857), other sources state that he is the first one to use the wooden plectrum. To date the Arabic players use the historic name reeshe or risha (Arabic ريشة), which literally means "feather" while Turkish players refer to it as a mızrap.. Currently the plastic pick is most commonly used for playing the oud being effective, affordable and convenient to get. Like similar strummed stringed instruments, professional Oud players take the quality of their plectrums very seriously, often making their own out of other plastic objects, and taking great care to sand down any sharp edges in order to achieve the best sound possible. [edit] Oud tuningsThere are many different tuning options for the oud. All tunings are presented from the lowest course/single string to the highest course. [edit] Arabic oud tunings
[edit] Turkish oud and Cümbüş tunings
Note - Turkish classical music is written transposed, so that the written tuning for the above tuning is "F#BEADG"; also the Turks will transpose to other keys, too.
[edit] Notable oud players[edit] Algeria[edit] Australia[edit] Bahrain[edit] Egypt[edit] Greece[edit] Iran[edit] Iraq[edit] Israel[edit] Jordan[edit] Kuwait[edit] Lebanon[edit] Morocco[edit] Somalia[edit] Sudan[edit] Syria[edit] Tunisia[edit] Turkey[edit] United States[edit] See also[edit] References
Categories: Arabic musical instruments | Necked bowl lutes | Oud players | Iraqi musical instruments | Lebanese musical instruments | Turkish musical instruments | Turkmen musical instruments | Azerbaijani musical instruments | Armenian musical instruments | Early musical instruments | Macedonian musical instruments | Iranian musical instruments | Albanian musical instruments | Uzbekistani musical instruments | Emirati musical instruments | Somali musical instruments | String instruments | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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