Travel Of Music
Like religion,
music readily spreads beyond its land of origin because people bring
their music with them when they travel, just as they bring with them
their own faith and rituals. Familiar chants, songs, and instruments
sustained pilgrims and traders who, at the same time, absorbed musical
influences they encountered in their travels.
Religion has been one of the most important cultural forces to promote
the dissemination of music along the Silk Road. Members of Islamic Su.
orders, who have traditionally welcomed the use of music, chant, and
sacred dance as elements of prayer, were instrumental in spreading spiritual
songs among their adherents. Wandering dervishes, holy men, and religious
storytellers used song and chant as a means of proselytizing the moral
values of Islam to audiences that gathered to hear them in bazaars,
caravansarais, and tea houses. Buddhist monks also brought forms of
sacred chant from part of Asia to another. And to perform in the court
of the Muslim emir, thus serving as a bridge between Jewish and Muslim
musical traditions.
The appreciation of new music follows from the deeply human characteristics
of curiosity and attraction to novelty, the same qualities that promote
the spread from one culture to another of art, ideas and technology.
Enjoying one kind of music does not generally involve giving up another.
Moreover, some musical instruments are readily adaptable to a variety
of musical styles and genres, for example, the violin, which is
commonly used in music as disparate as South India raga, Celtic dance
tunes, and jazz. Other instruments, for example, the plucked zither?
horizontal soundboard or enclosed box with multiple strings running
over a set of bridges?ay take on variant but related forms in contiguous
culture regions. For example, plucked zithers are played in Japan (koto),
China (qin), Korea (kayagum), Mongolia (yatkha), and South Siberia (chatkhan
or chatagan).
Highly flexible, instruments that traveled the Silk Road lent themselves
to many kinds of music besides that of the culture of their origin.
This flexibility can readily be seen, for example, in the worldwide
spread of string or wind instruments like the hammer dulcimer, violin,
and flute. Other instruments also illustrate the spread of musical culture
along the Silk Road. The sheng, or Chinese reed-pipe mouth organ is
thought to have originated in southern China, perhaps even among non-Chinese
tribal peoples of the far southwest. It was incorporated into Chinese
orchestral music by the 5th century BCE (examples of actual instruments
have been excavated from tombs in south-central China). The sheng came
to be associated with Buddhist liturgical music in China, and spread
to Buddhist congregations as far east as Korea and Japan, and as far
west as the Buddhist oasis temples of Central Asia. The Buddhist cave-temple
murals at Dunhuang show many scenes of angelic beings hovering over
Buddhist sacred sites, playing musical instruments, often including
the sheng.
Musical traditions are portable, but they are also durable, and stubbornly
take root in the lands where they were born. One of the most powerfully
surviving features of the old Silk Road today is the variety of music
performed, on instruments old and new, indigenous and imported, everywhere
from the shores of the Mediterranean to the shores of the Pacific. This
living musical heritage allows us to feel a link to thousands of years
of trade and exchange among the peoples of the Silk Road.