katakofka - 1-30-2009 at 03:55 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8uyy3bMJuZ0&feature=related
It seems that Nasser is showing Usta Faruk that he is able to play Sharif Muhyi eddyyn haydar (targan) pieces. I liked the reply of Master Faruk at
the end of the clip
Just for people who doesn't know el sharif: he is Turkish who established the music school in Baghdad at the beginning of the century. Influenced by
classic music he developed his own way on oud and composed many technically difficult pieces. El sharif is considered the "Paganini" of the oud. Iraqi
school of oud is highly influenced by the heritage of al sharif since many iraqi oud players were his disciple such as Jamil bashir and Nasser shamma
who is a disciple of the latter.
Historical issue necessary to understand the clip
hamed - 1-30-2009 at 10:53 AM
allah allah
that piece is so hard to play almost impossible to play it and make it sound good. " tifl al raqes" in arabic i dont know the turkish name. Very
nice. Thank you
suz_i_dil - 1-30-2009 at 03:55 PM
The name of this piece in turkish is çocuk havası.
I will send the notes for it after a few time.
suz_i_dil - 1-31-2009 at 08:50 AM
Here is the notes for this piece, again in rapidshare, I don't succeed to compress it under 1 Mo
http://rapidshare.com/files/192093311/cocuk_havasi.jpg.html
Also the file in Sibelius, if you want to transpose.
urfali_63 - 1-31-2009 at 09:16 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aOW9czaEtGY
did you mean "kosan cocuk"
Paganini fifth caprice:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJw7u-aQ0b4&feature=related
suz_i_dil - 1-31-2009 at 09:55 AM
no Urfali, I am talking of the piece which Naseer Shamma plays in the video above. Kosan Cocuk is another piece from the same composer.
I finally found a solution for this score:
maran - 1-31-2009 at 06:07 PM
munir beken plays the same piece in this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBeJspErEOg