Anglia Ruskin Research Online (ARRO)
Browse
1/1
3 files

A mechanical source of Turkish music from 18th-century London

journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-30, 14:54 authored by Jon Banks, Marieke Lefeber
A late eighteenth-century mechanical organ, built into a clock made by Henry Borrell of London, plays melodies that sound completely unlike those normally found on English domestic musical clocks. This article draws on the disciplines of historical musicology, ethnomusicology and horology to argue that these tunes derive directly from the repertory of the eighteenth-century Ottoman court. The melodies are analysed firstly in the context of the Ottoman repertory and then alongside contemporary European transcriptions of ‘exotic’ music, notably Edward Jones’s Lyric Airs. The distortion of ‘Turkish’ melodies in European representations is set within the wider context of orientalism and musical transculturation; this evidence is then brought to bear on interpreting music that may also be subject to mechanical distortion. The article ends with a consideration of how these earliest known sounding examples of Ottoman music may have arrived in London and its reception there.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

46

Issue number

2

Page range

299-317

Publication title

Early Music

ISSN

1741-7260

Publisher

Oxford University Press

File version

  • Accepted version

Language

  • eng

Legacy posted date

2017-10-09

Legacy creation date

2017-09-22

Legacy Faculty/School/Department

ARCHIVED Faculty of Arts, Law & Social Sciences (until September 2018)

Usage metrics

    ARU Outputs

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC