User:Aza24/Sandbox5

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

History of Music
drafting space

Ancient

Egypt

China

consider using this

Shang and Zhou

Moved to mainspace

Qin, Han and Jin

Moved to mainspace

  • Jing Fang theory system
  • Di introduced in Han, see Grove

Xiongnu

[2]

India

Other Arab and African cultures

"Shiloah" Music in the Pre-Islamic Period as Reflected in Arabic Writings of the First Islamic Centuries???

[8]

Mayan and Mexican

Ancient mexican; Ancient Mayan

Persia???

  • [9]
  • [10]
  • Civilizations of Ancient Near East volume 4 Jack M. Sasson

Post-Classical

Find a way to include Joseph Huzaya?

Tang

  • "In subsequent dynasties, the development of Chinese music was influenced by the musical traditions of Central Asia which also introduced elements of Indian music.[1][2] Instruments of Central Asian origin such as pipa were adopted in China, the Indian Heptatonic scale was introduced in the 6th century by a musician from Kucha named Sujiva, although the heptatonic scale was later abandoned.[3][4][1]"

Persia

Africa

  • [13]
  • Lyres, Aksum
  • Elsner, Jürgen. "The Forms of Classical Algerian Instrumental Music." Studies in Ethnomusicology 1 (1991): 20–31. (history of Algerian classical music)
  • Davis, Ruth Frances. "Trends in Tunisian Musical Scholarship: A Critical Survey." In Music, Folklore and Culture: Essays in Honour of Jerko Bezić. Edited by Naila Ceribašić and Grozdana Marošević, 133–144. Zagreb: Institute of Ethnology and Folklore Research Croatian Musicological Society, 1999. (history of Tunisia since 814)
  • Britannica article history section
  • Bells
  • Sudan
  • Ethiopia in the Middle Ages#Music
  • Essays on Music and History in Africa

Japan

V. Court music

Arab

[14]

[15]

CM

  • the invention of 'folk music' and 'art music'

Mongol

[17]

Pre-modern

Ming

Inca

Imposing Harmony: Music in Colonial Cuzco (2008), 16th- and 17th-century on Inca

Notes

Refs

  1. ^
  2. ^ Journal of Music in China, Volume 4, p.4
  3. ^ History of Civilizations of Central Asia edited by Unesco

Sources