Music of Georgia: Difference between revisions

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m BudjarnLambeth moved page Georgian to Music of Georgia: To avoid confusion with the Georgian temperament
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Discussion on the Yahoo tuning list, June 2011
{{Wikipedia| Music of Georgia (country) }}
Georgian folk music is well known for its traditional vocal polyphony. There is no clear consensus on the structure of the underlying scale or tuning system, except that it is [[equiheptatonic|heptatonic and close to equalized]]. It is sometimes claimed that their scales are based on equal divisions of the fifth, but this is hard to verify.


[https://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_100326.html https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/tuning/conversations/messages/100326]
From a corpus analysis of field recordings by Scherbaum et al.<ref>Scherbaum, F., Mzhavanadze, N., Rosenzweig, S., & Müller, M. (2022). Tuning Systems of Traditional Georgian Singing Determined From a New Corpus of  Field Recordings. Musicologist 2022. 6 (2): 142-168. DOI: 10.33906/musicologist.1068947</ref>, the following conclusions can be made:
* Fourths and fifths are close to [[just]].  
* Thirds tend to be [[neutral third|neutral]] (around 350{{c}}), as are sixths.
* Harmonic seconds are close to [[9/8]], while the melodic seconds are smaller (between 150{{c}} and 180{{c}}).


Dicussion on Facebook, October 2016 - XA II
The field recordings are [https://www.audiolabs-erlangen.de/resources/MIR/2017-GeorgianMusic-Scherbaum available online] with videos and recordings of individual singers in each group.


https://www.facebook.com/groups/xenharmonic2/permalink/1239427779410855/  
== Videos ==
The music of Georgia (7edo vs. tetracot)
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFncneafovI&pp=ygULVEZuY25lYWZvdkk%3D The empirical research of a Georgian sound scale" by Z. Tsereteli and L. Veshapidze] (Video of a presentation from the IAML/IMS congress Music Research in the Digital Age, New York, 21-26 June 2015) (tuning essentially [[7edo]], but with occasional intentional pitch bending, called "shinfardi")
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FVxD6NB8-CI Georgian chant tuning (Malkhaz Erkvanidze demonstrates)] (2020)
* [https://youtu.be/NWLbdwFeYrk Video on Georgian music theory] by [[Stephen Weigel]] (suggests the use of [[34edo]] notation) (2026)
** ''[https://archive.org/details/stephen-weigel-georgian-music-video-2026-transcript transcript (Archive.org)]''


{{todo|clarify|discuss title|inline=1|comment=The following paragraph is unclear. Please see ''[[{{TALKPAGENAME}}#Kartvelian scales]]''<br>Georgian is also a temperament name}}
== Further reading ==
The [[Kartvelian scales]], named by analogy with the [[wikipedia:Kartvelian_languages|Kartvelian languages]], of which the [[wikipedia:Georgian_language|Georgian language]] is the main representative, generalize this approach to a tuning of arbitrary size.
* [https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/georgian-polyphonic-singing-00008 Georgian polyphonic singing &#45; intangible heritage &#45; Culture Sector &#45; UNESCO]
* [https://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_100326.html https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/tuning/conversations/messages/100326 Discussion on the Yahoo tuning list, June 2011]
* [https://www.facebook.com/groups/xenharmonic2/permalink/1239427779410855/ Dicussion on Facebook, October 2016 - XA II - The music of Georgia (7edo vs. tetracot)]
* [https://www.reddit.com/r/GlobalMusicTheory/wiki/georgianmusictheory/ r/GlobalMusicTheory's list] of Georgian theory resources; many are academic/scholarly


== See also ==
{{Todo|cultural expertise}}


* [[Wikipedia: Music of Georgia (country)]]
[[Category:Georgian music| ]] <!-- main article -->
* [https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/georgian-polyphonic-singing-00008 Georgian polyphonic singing &#45; intangible heritage &#45; Culture Sector &#45; UNESCO]
 
== References ==

Latest revision as of 17:05, 22 June 2026

English Wikipedia has an article on:

Georgian folk music is well known for its traditional vocal polyphony. There is no clear consensus on the structure of the underlying scale or tuning system, except that it is heptatonic and close to equalized. It is sometimes claimed that their scales are based on equal divisions of the fifth, but this is hard to verify.

From a corpus analysis of field recordings by Scherbaum et al.[1], the following conclusions can be made:

  • Fourths and fifths are close to just.
  • Thirds tend to be neutral (around 350 ¢), as are sixths.
  • Harmonic seconds are close to 9/8, while the melodic seconds are smaller (between 150 ¢ and 180 ¢).

The field recordings are available online with videos and recordings of individual singers in each group.

Videos

Further reading

References

  1. Scherbaum, F., Mzhavanadze, N., Rosenzweig, S., & Müller, M. (2022). Tuning Systems of Traditional Georgian Singing Determined From a New Corpus of Field Recordings. Musicologist 2022. 6 (2): 142-168. DOI: 10.33906/musicologist.1068947