Instrumental (dances, kondylies, kantadha) Much Cretan music includes the use of instruments (and usually singing, too).
Lyra,
violin, and
laouto (Cretan lute) predominate, but other common instruments include the
mandolin,
mandola,
oud, thiampoli (
souravli),
askomandoura,
classical guitar (especially in Eastern Crete), boulgari, and daouli (
davul). There is also an instrument known as the viololyra, a hybrid of the violin and lyra, which has enjoyed varying degrees of popularity at various times. Cretan music has been largely
heterophonic in texture or accompanied by drones and
fifth chords on Cretan lute, classical guitar, mandolin, boulgari, and so forth. Drones are also played simultaneously on melody instruments such as the lyra and violin by bowing a second string (usually open) simultaneously as one plays the melody notes on another string. Especially in earlier and more amateur settings where a second accompanying instrument was often absent, a lyra player accompanied himself by playing not only a drone string but also with a distinctively rhythmic bowing style in order to ring the
gerakokoudhouna (small "falcon bells") that were attached to his bow. It is much more common today for the lyra to be accompanied by one or more other instruments, and for lyra players to employ a violin bow. Like much Greek folk music, Cretan music is closely related to dance, and the most common musical forms correspond directly with the Cretan dances that may accompany them, such as the
Syrtos,
pentozali, siganos,
pidikhtos, and
Sousta. Certain traditional dances from other regions of Greece, most notably
kalamatianos and
ballos, are also widely performed by professional Cretan musicians, usually with Cretan-composed lyrics, in musical gatherings since at least the twentieth century. Like fiddle tunes in various other traditions, Cretan dance music often involves repeated melodies or repeated pairings of melodies, whose selection and concatenation is improvised in performance. Another musical construction common to Cretan music is the
taximi (), a rhythmically free, improvised instrumental solo (e.g., on the violin, lyra, or lute) in a particular scale or
mode preceding the dance-song proper. (Both the word
taximi and the musical form itself are cognates with the Arabic
taqsim.)
Mantinadas Much Cretan music is improvisational, especially in terms of its "lyrics." Typically, the lyrics of Cretan instrumental music take the form of
mantinadas (): fifteen-syllable rhyming (or
assonant) couplets which have their origins in medieval Cretan poetry (as rhyming couplets) as well as in earlier (non-rhyming) forms of Greek verse (in the same fifteen-syllable form). Each line of a mantinada is divided into two
hemistichs (), the first of eight syllables and the second of seven, and separated by a
caesura. For this reason, sometimes when mantinadas are transcribed, they are broken into four shorter lines in a rhyme scheme of
ABCB as opposed to the traditional form of a couplet. The
metrical rhythm of mantinadas usually falls into eight successive
iambs followed by an unstressed syllable, the form known in Greek as
political verse and akin to the English-language
fourteener and
ballad stanza. There may be slight variations in meter. For example:
Τα κρητικά τα χώματα, όπου και αν τα σκάψεις, αίμα παλικαριών θα βρείς, κόκαλα θα ξεθάψεις.Ta Kritika ta chomata, opou kai an ta skapseis Aima palikarion tha vreis, kokala tha ksethapseis. ΅Wherever you happen to dig in Cretan soil, You will find the blood of stout-hearted men, you will unbury bones. Mantinadas are written about a variety of subjects. Many focus on love, employ pastoral imagery, and use
Cretan idiomatic Greek. Numerous folklorists since the early twentieth century have published large collections of mantinadas. Since the mid-twentieth century, some prolific mantinada composers have regionally published their mantinadas, much like other books of poetry. Some mantinadas are excerpted as stand-alone rhyming couplets from longer poems, particularly the
Erotokritos, an epic poem that is a staple of Cretan Renaissance literature. Singers, professional and amateur alike, frequently improvise in the moment
which mantinadas they sing or improvise entirely new ones on the spot. Sometimes a certain pairing of a particular mantinada with a particular melody (e.g., based on a well-known professional recording) will also congeal among much of the population and therefore tend to be repeated in performance. A common musical accompaniment for the improvisation of large numbers of mantinadas is called a
kontilia (), a four-measure melody. The same
kontilia (or a traditional pairing of
kontylies) can be repeated for virtually any length of time, but musicians can also improvise changes in which
kontylia is being played, stringing together different
kontylies over the course of a performance. There is also a tradition of the
kantadha (serenade) in Crete in which mantinadas are sung and improvised. The music of a kantadha may be kondylies or structured like the music of a syrtos (the dance form) but not actually intended for dancing or even necessarily sung at a tempo appropriate for dancing.
A Cappella singing (Rizitika) There is also a strong
a cappella tradition of mountain songs known as rizitika. The rizitika are conventionally divided into rizitika "of the road" (
tis stratas) and rizitika "of the table" (
tis tavlas). Since the twentieth century, an island-wide canon of rizitika songs has taken shape, especially in the wake of a commercially influential recording of them arranged by
Yannis Markopoulos and sung by
Nikos Xylouris in the early 1970s. Folklorists and other scholars have also published large collections of rizitika song texts. (For example,
Rizitika: Dimotika Tragoudia tis Kritis by Stamatis Apostolakis.)
Erotokritos There is also a vigorous tradition of singing excerpts of the
Erotokritos to a specific set of tunes as a "song" genre in its own right (with or without instrumental accompaniment).The entire set of tunes will repeat as many times as required for the length of the excerpt that is being sung. Sometimes, rhyming couplets are excerpted from the Erotokritos and sung as mantinadas. The First Lines of the Erotokritos: Του Κύκλου τα γυρίσματα, που ανεβοκατεβαίνουν, και του Τροχού, που ώρες ψηλά κι ώρες στα βάθη πηαίνουν Tou Kiklou ta girismata, pou anevokatevainoun, kai tou Trochou, pou ores psila ki ores sta bathi piainoun Of the great revolving cycle on which they travel, and of the wheel, on which hours run high and low
Tabachaniotika The "tabachaniotika" (; sing.: tabachaniotiko – ) songs are a
Cretan urban musical repertory of instrumental and vocal music which belongs to a broader family of urban genres. Major features of the tabachaniotika songs are
Dromoi (sing:in
Greek dromos –
δρόμος) (i.e.,
modes) and musical instruments such as the
laouto and boulgarí (μπουλγκαρί, the
Cretan orelse). Once again, the Cretan
Mantinada often figures prominently in the words to such songs. One explanation of the origin of the word
tambahaniotika is that they come from the eponymous district area of Greek city of
Patras Ταμπαχανιώτικα. Also, various conjectures are advanced to explain the meaning and origin of the term
tabachaniotika.
Kostas Papadakis believes that it comes from
tabakaniotikes (ταμπακανιώτικες), which may mean places where hashish ( 'tobacco') was smoked while music was performed, as was the case with the tekédes (τεκέδες; pl. of tekés) of other major urban centres. This kind of genre was found in
Crete and
Smyrna and was played with lyra and
laouto. Unlike
rebetiko, the
tabachaniotika was not considered underground music and was only sung, not danced, according to
Nikolaos Sarimanolis, the last living performer of this repertory in
Chania. Only a few musicians played the
tabachaniotika, the most famous being the
boulgarí (a mandolin-like instrument) player
Stelios Foustalieris (1911–1992) from
Réthymnon. Foustalieris bought his first boulgarí in 1924. In 1979, he said that in Réthymnon, the boulgarí had been widespread during the 1920s. An early twentieth-century variation of rebetiko around the Lakkos brothel district in Irakleio is indicative of a "hybrid music scene associated with cross-cultural interaction between different social and ethnic groups and musical traditions." Notwithstanding the dearth of performers,
tabachaniotika songs were widespread and could also be performed at domestic gatherings. Notable artists of this genre who were originally refugees from
Asia Minor include the
bouzouki player Nikolaos "Nikolis" Sarimanolis (Νικολής Σαριμανώλης; born in
Nea Ephesos in 1919) as a member of a folk-group founded by Kostas Papadakis in Chaniá in 1945,
Antonis Katinaris (also based in Chaniá), and the Rethymnon-based Mihalis Arabatzoglou and Nikos Gialidis. ==History==