Gazino
See also: [Les Caberets]
[Galleries]
[Contemporary Galleries]
Gazino
Actually (like much of DaDa and other movements/types/things) the
boundary between musical form, art form, philosophy, or even
bistro tend to disappear...
Wiki sez: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kemani_Tatyos_Ekserciyan
which thanks to the nimnils there, can't be edit searched for
"gazino" :(
Tatyos Ekserciyan (1858-March 13, 1913) or Tatyos Efendi was
a famous composer of classical Turkish music, and his works
continue to be among the best-remembered and often played
pieces of the genre.
An Armenian from Istanbul, Tatyos Efendi was born in 1858
in the Ortaköy district of Istanbul as the son of Monakyan
(Manuti), a musician at the Ortaköy Armenian Church. Tatyos
Efendi's family had a minor trading business and when he
finished the Ortaköy Armenian Elementary School, he started
an apprenticeship at a locksmith and later became an
apprentice at a savat workshop (a traditional form
of silver work). Due to his deep interest in music, Tatyos
Efendi left his apprenticeship and bought a second hand
kanun to receive his first music lessons from his uncle
Movzes Papazyan. He played the kanun with amateur groups
and musical meetings in a family setting. Later, he took
violin lessons from Kemani Kör Sebuh and lessons in singing
and theory from Andon and Civan brothers and singer Asdik Aga.
He conducted many fasil concerts in various places including
the Pirincci Gazino with artists like Karakas, Ovakim and
Semsi. He composed many popular songs and instrumental works
for fasil.
Links
Criticical Review
http://www.muspe.unibo.it/period/ma/index/number8/gazino/bek_00.htm
(extract follows)
Münir Nurettin Beken
Aesthetics and Artistic Criticism at the Turkish Gazino (1)
Of all the modern phenomena, the most monstrous and ominous,
the most manifestly rotting with disease, the most grimly
prophetic of destruction, the most clearly and unmistakenly
inspired by evil spirits, the most instantly and awfully
overshadowed by the wrath of heaven, the most near to
madness and moral chaos, the most vivid with devilry and
despair, is the practice of having to listen to music
while eating a meal in a restaurant (G. K. Chesterton from
Avowals & Denials, 1935)
While certain purist aficionados of Turkish Classical and
Western Music might find the above statement appropriate
and just, the majority of gazino audiences in Istanbul
would probably disagree with Chestertons distressing
yet colorful expression. Gazino is a kind of nightclub
primarily found in Istanbul, Turkey, and mostly it is
a twentieth century phenomenon. There are different
types of gazino and usually the physical space and the
show determine their designation, e.g., pavyon, taverna,
or saz. Gazino reflects a large portion of music-making
in Istanbul, which, as the old Ottoman capital and the
current undisputed center of recording industry,
television, and cinema, still retains its role as the
disseminator of commercial music aesthetic for all of Turkey.
The Turkish musical scene reveals three main cultural
avenues: Alaturka, Alafranga, and Arabesk.
While Alaturka and Alafranga refer, respectively, to
Turkish and Western socio-cultural practices, Arabesk
is a more recent term used to express the culture of
the peripheral urban migrant society. Both historically
and culturally, the gazino has been an important component
of these domains. While certain specializations occurred
in the recent decades of transformation, gazino always
reflected the taste of the paying customers. Therefore,
the impact of changing demographics and aesthetics of
society have always been reflected on the gazino show
and its physical space.
Full text: http://www.muspe.unibo.it/period/ma/index/number8/gazino/bek_00.htm here
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Chronology
Important Works
young girl's head, etc -- link to primitivism