Thanks a lot for all the amazing videos. I am a Kurdish man from Kurdistan, but I grew up in Iraq, and I speak Arabic fluently also I speak Farsi fluently as well. I have watched hundreds of videos of Arab, Persian and Kurdish music teachers, but without any doubt you are the best of them, you are the best music teacher in the world.
Thank you for the amazing gift that is your TH-cam channel. It's a rare and precious resource for English-speaking learners. Your concept of maqam and the ajnas has helped me a lot in picking stuff up by ear or even just when listening to the music.
Thank you very much for this!! I've wanted to learn this song after the Palestinian Artist sang it on Arab got talent 😭 YOU'RE A GENIUS ma'sha'allah. We needed videos/lessons like this, finally. I've been searching for years.
I'm new to Arabic music, but am really fascinated by it and want to learn more. I'm currently studying linguistics, and it was very interesting to read your article on how Arabic music is like a language, I would really like to explore this idea further. I would like to study the tuning of Arabic music from this linguistic perspective. Which maqam would you recommend me to pick first? Maybe one of the more common ones? Which country/area? I would need recordings of music in this particular maqam where I could mesure the precise intonation (probably solo recordings? if there are two notes at the same time, it might be difficult to mesure them). Where could I get these recordings? Are there somewhere recordings with transcription or would I need to transcribe them myself?
Thanks a lot for all the amazing videos.
I am a Kurdish man from Kurdistan, but I grew up in Iraq, and I speak Arabic fluently also I speak Farsi fluently as well.
I have watched hundreds of videos of Arab, Persian and Kurdish music teachers, but without any doubt you are the best of them, you are the best music teacher in the world.
also you've got a beautiful voice bless you. This is the best video on TH-cam for me right now. The best lesson on singing with Arab style.
Thank you for the amazing gift that is your TH-cam channel. It's a rare and precious resource for English-speaking learners. Your concept of maqam and the ajnas has helped me a lot in picking stuff up by ear or even just when listening to the music.
He has helped me tremendously and i just came across his channel.
Amazing lesson, as always :) Thank you a lot !
Thank you very much for this!! I've wanted to learn this song after the Palestinian Artist sang it on Arab got talent 😭 YOU'RE A GENIUS ma'sha'allah. We needed videos/lessons like this, finally. I've been searching for years.
omg this is amazing thank u so so much what the heck there is so much info thank u!!!!!
I'm new to Arabic music, but am really fascinated by it and want to learn more. I'm currently studying linguistics, and it was very interesting to read your article on how Arabic music is like a language, I would really like to explore this idea further. I would like to study the tuning of Arabic music from this linguistic perspective.
Which maqam would you recommend me to pick first? Maybe one of the more common ones? Which country/area?
I would need recordings of music in this particular maqam where I could mesure the precise intonation (probably solo recordings? if there are two notes at the same time, it might be difficult to mesure them). Where could I get these recordings? Are there somewhere recordings with transcription or would I need to transcribe them myself?
That was the biggest coffee mug in the world.