Arabic Musical Maqamaat
Arabic maqām (plural: maqāmāt) is the fundamental system of melodic organization in traditional Arabic music. It is not just a “scale” in the Western sense — it’s a complex concept that defines pitch, intervals, melodic development, and emotional character.
Let’s break it down clearly
1. Definition
A maqām is a set of notes with characteristic intervals, arranged in ascending order and used as the basis for melody. But beyond the notes, each maqām has:
- A tonal center (starting and ending note, like the “home” of the melody)
- A specific atmosphere or mood
- Melodic phrases that are typical to it (called sayr – the path)
- Rules for modulation (how to move to another maqām smoothly)
2. Structure: The Jins (plural: Ajnās)
Maqāmāt are built from smaller building blocks called jins (Arabic: جِنس), which are groups of 3 to 5 notes.
- A maqām is usually formed by combining two or more ajnās.
- The first jins is on the tonic (the main note of the maqām), and the next jins starts higher.
- The combination gives the maqām its unique sound.
Example:
- Maqām Rāst = Jins Rāst (on C) + Jins Rāst (on G)
- Maqām Ḥijāz = Jins Ḥijāz (on D) + Jins Nahāwand (on G)
3. Quarter Tones and Microtones
One of the distinctive features of Arabic maqāmāt is the use of microtones, particularly quarter tones, which are intervals smaller than a semitone.
This gives Arabic music its unique flavor and emotional expressiveness.
🎭 4. Emotional Character
Each maqām is often associated with a mood or emotional color, though this can vary culturally:
- Maqām Bayātī – warmth, tenderness, spirituality
- Maqām Ḥijāz – longing, mystery, deep emotion
- Maqām Nahāwand – sadness or nostalgia
- Maqām Rāst – pride, strength, stability
5. Modulation
A performer can modulate (shift) from one maqām to another during a piece — similar to key modulation in Western music, but often more flexible and expressive.
This is done by moving to a new jins that naturally transitions into another maqām.
6. Improvisation (Taqsīm)
A central performance practice in Arabic music is taqsīm (solo improvisation).
The musician explores a maqām without rhythm, moving freely between its notes, ajnās, and related maqāmāt, expressing emotion and artistry.
7. Common Maqāmāt (Examples)
|
Maqām Name |
Key Notes (approximate) |
Emotional Tone |
|
**Rāst** |
C–D–E(half-flat)–F–G–A–B(half-flat)–C |
Majestic, balanced |
|
**Bayātī** |
D–E(half-flat)–F–G–A–B♭–C–D |
Warm, introspective |
|
**Hijāz** |
D–E♭–F♯–G–A–B♭–C–D |
Exotic, yearning |
|
**Nahāwand** |
C–D–E♭–F–G–A♭–B♭–C |
Sad, romantic |
|
**Sīkāh** |
E(half-flat)–F–G–A(half-flat)–B♭–C–D–E(half-flat) |
Melancholic, intimate |
Summary
In essence:
- A maqām = scale + flavor + rules + emotion.
- It’s a mode of musical thought, not just a collection of notes.
- Understanding maqām develops listening sensitivity — to microtones, phrasing, and the spiritual depth of Arabic music.
The following Maqamaat have packages the contain thourough description of each Maqam with hundresds of eaxamples and a hundred or more sheet music on each Maqam.
Please click on each for many details