Al-Fatiha ~ The Opening

When I mentioned A Love Supreme, Yusef Lateef gave me the same self-effacing response he offered in his memoir, The Gentle Giant: that the inspiration for the composition came from Coltrane's late Muslim wife, Naima. Coltrane heard her recite the fatiha five times a day. "I can only say that John and I, we were dear friends, we were trying to advance our music together. I don't know if I encouraged him to read the Holy Quaran. My guess is his wife, Naima, encouraged him to read the Holy Quaran, Khalil Gibran and Krishnamurti. The prayer that John wrote in A Love Supreme repeats the phrase 'All praise belongs to God no matter what' several times. This phrase has the semantics of the second sentence of the fatiha. The Arabic transliteration is 'Al Humdulillah,' and that means 'All praise is due to God.'"
That illuminating perspective on the genesis of a contemporary music masterpiece comes from Rebel Music, an important literary celebration of the global impact of Muslim music subcultures by Columbia University lecturer Hisham D. Aidi. Staying on the same path, a recent contribution by me to The Institute of Composing Journal suggested that classical music can learn from John Coltrane. Other illuminating perspectives on the unexpected Islamic origins of Western masterpieces from elsewhere on An Overgrown Path are the theories that Ravel's Bolero was inspired by the composer attending a Sufi dhikr in Tunisia, and that the Rite Of Spring's primeval energy had its origins in the sema (worship ceremonies) of the Turkish Cerrahîlik Sufi brotherhood. Even more outlandish, but still with some circumstantial support, is Abdalqadir as-Sufi's supposition that the Grail in Parsifal is nothing other than the Black Stone of the Ka'aba in Mecca.

Header graphic from The Threshold Society. No review samples used in this post. Any copyrighted material is included as "fair use" for critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Also on Facebook and Twitter.

Comments

Anonymous said…
but Ravel was not in Tunisia, but in Morocco, and was there after Bolero
Pliable said…
See cited reference -

'I have heard that Ravel had contact with a Sufi group in Tunisia, and that his bolero was composed as a dhikr - that is, as a means of evocation of the divine. As well as a verbal dhikr is a formula that is repeated again and again with the intention of remembering God more and more deeply, we can also use the bolero to deepen and intensify a concentration on the divine, and for those who try it there will be no doubt that the final musical outburst express an ecstasy.

http://www.claudionaranjo.net/pdf_files/music/map_ravel_spanish.pdf
billoo said…
Hamza Yusuf has a nice line on surah Fatiah...why does the surah start with descriptions of the qualities of God and only then talk about engagement with the divine? Because, he says, "it takes time for the heart to catch up"..

Hope all is well, pli?

b.

Recent popular posts

Why new audiences are deaf to classical music

For young classical audiences the sound is the message

The Berlin Philharmonic's darkest hour

Who am I?

Audiences need permission to like unfamiliar music

Classical music's biggest problem is that no one cares

Nada Brahma - Sound is God

Classical music's $11 billion market opportunity

Jerry Springer rebel grabs Gramophone accolade

Why cats hate Mahler symphonies