Music in Ancient Egypt
Music played a very important part in ancient Egyptian
life. From all periods there are scenes in temples and tombs showing musicians
playing. Music was present in Egyptian life in many ways. Workers in the fields
sang folk songs and love songs.
Music played a large part in social life. Professional
musicians were well paid and mostly were women. Professional musicians existed
on a number of social levels in ancient Egypt. Perhaps the highest status belonged
to temple musicians; the office of "musician" (shemayet) to a particular god
or goddess was a position of high status frequently held by women. Musicians
connected with the royal household were held in high esteem, as were certain
gifted singers and harp players.
Deities were praised in songs and many women
of the elite had titles such as 'chantress of Amun', demonstrating the importance
of music in the cults of the gods. There were several areas where music played
an important part: worship of gods, military and processional music, music at
the court, music and sexuality, and the 'songs of the harpist'. The latter is
a figure often shown in tomb scenes singing songs Music found its way into many
contexts in Egypt: temples, palaces, workshops, farms, battlefields and the
tomb. Music was an integral part of religious worship in ancient Egypt, so it
is not surprising that there were gods specifically associated with music, such
as Hathor and Bes.
In the Old Kingdom there is evidence of the beginnings of
music in Egypt. Percussion was basic to the orchestra, with various types of
rattles and clappers in use as well as drums of different sizes. There were
also wind and stringed instruments. The three instruments that appear most prominently
in pictures are pipes resembling the clarinet, end-blown flutes, and also the
harp. The hieroglyphics also indicate the presence of singers and dancers. Egyptology
Articles Herbs Articles . In the Middle Kingdom period we see some advancements
in music with a wider range of instruments on offer and there is evidence that
melodies are getting more complicated. In the New Kingdom improvements and additions
continue. The lute and the lyre were brought in from Asia, with foreign performers.
There was only an early form of bagpipe. One picture during this time period
indicates that there were certain rooms of the royal palace at El-Amarna that
were devoted to music. There is also a dance scene that depicts ten girls, some
who have tambourines, and others who have clappers or castenets. Trumpets are
often depicted in military scenes. After the Conquest of Alexander the Great,
the Greeks adopted some aspects of Egyptian music.
Egypt's music later was greatly
influenced by the Arab tradition. Instruments Although most of these instruments
can be seen throughout all periods in Egyptian history, many were refined and
developed as time progressed. However from the pictorial evidence available
we can associate certain instruments with particular times in Egyptian history.
Clarinet, flute, harp (usually pharaoh's head on the base) (Old Kingdom) Barrell
drums, clappers (made of bone/wood/ivory), the sistrum (percussion instrument
which led all musicians with a beat), rattles (Middle Kingdom) Trumpet, type
of oboe, pipes (single/double reed), drums, tambourines (New Kingdom) Cymbals
A percussion instrument of ancient Egyptian origin. Egyptian Cymbals consist
of a pair of slightly concave metal plates which produce a vibrant sound of
indeterminate pitch. Known in Europe since the Middle Ages. In Egypt Cymbals
are used today in Egyptian belly dances. Mizmar This is an example of winded
instruments, something like the pipe but very modest and simple. Not too long
ago, a 3,000-year-old tomb of Egypt was uncovered on an archeological dig sponsored
by the University of Cairo.
During the excavation, an ancient reed Mizmar was
discovered in the ruins. Although pictures of such musical instruments were
depicted on the walls of other previously excavated tombs, this was the first
incidence in history of actually uncovering the real object. HARP These ancient
harps had a variety of shapes and sizes, but generally were either built from
a sound-box and string-arm joined at an angle or on a bow-shaped or arched frame.
The strings, possibly made of hair or plant fiber, were attached to a diaphragm
at one end, and tied around the string arm or neck at the other. The strings
were tuned by sliding or rotating the knots that held them.