Hi Whabbist,
I like your turn of phrase, I should quote you, but this is my first post here, and I'm not sure how to do that yet.
You're a really funny writer, you had me in stitches
#
Anyway, some of the things you wrote really struck me: you hadn't listened to music before you left Islam - seriously?! I cannot imagine that! What was your experience of listening to music like? What music do you favour? (Assuming you're not one of that small percentage of people who suffer from amusia!) And most importantly, I'm assuming that you won't have lost your ability to dance...
Spare parts, thanks and glad you find me amusing.
Yes, I had never listened to music before even though I always heard it. Because of the involuntary nature of aural reception in comparison, say, to sight, I didn't do what Noah's people, according to the Koran, did - stuck their fingers into their ears whenever faced with his dawah-ganda. Nor did I consciously seek Allah's forgiveness on what I had no control over. Yet, my espousal to keeping to al-wara (الوَرَع) -- not doing something because it might transpire to be on the sinful side (inactive erring on the side of caution, to the layperson, but even this does not escape Islam's quixotic tyranny; not only you're ordered to not transgress but also are blackmailed to stop doing anything you suspect in the final analysis to being 'transgressive', thus, the letter as well as spirit of the command, in a totalising way, are adhered to) -- meant I physically avoided places of music and had always asked people to respect my wish turning it off in my presence. And turn it off they duly did because I knew how to morally trap them if they didn't; I'd close my eyes, take a deep breath and recite in the most moving way the Koranic verses about Jahamun and about the speedy excitability of Allah's anger. (Did I not just tell you I was a bullying clerical gangster?)
But that's not the point. Though it absolutely forbids mirth (الطَرَب) in surat
Luqman (31:6), my version of Islam is, at least as a jurisprudential consensus, largely silent on any mirth come by from listening to mellifluous
Muezzins. Indeed, Bilal Ibn Rabah was specifically chosen by the Prophet Moe to call for the prayers not exactly because Moe was ahead of the curve when it comes to affirmative action or positive discrimination - Bilal being a black person. But rather, because Bilal, according to Moe's very word in authentic Hadith, had a more beautiful voice than the companion in whose dream the calling,
Azan, was 'revealed'. Now, I personally do not know why Bilal's services were not enlisted also in the recitation of the Koran on the same aesthetic grounds but in his capacity as a voice actor, Bilal's career, regrettably for him no doubt, stagnated.
Another more interesting yet rarely discussed topic in relation to mirth on the sly in this Islam, while absolutely forbidding music, is reciting the Koran on musical notes commonly known as
Maqamat (plural). You, dear reader, are very welcome to waste your time reading up on it here
1. It is what it says on the tin; prosodic, musical notes. If you doubt the assertion that the most famous reciters of the Koran recite it on codified musical notes, then I substantiate it with this
2. The only prior knowledge required from you to take active participation in this otherwise fruitless experiment is you knowing surat al-Fatiha. If so, you'll see the name and hear the different
Maqamat on whose rhythm this Imam faithfully recites.
What about beatboxing, surely that's permissible due to the absence of instruments? Well, dear reader, the former Grand Mufti of Saudi, Ibn Baz, strictly defined (as if it really needed to) what music is and beatboxing, though percussive, wasn't included in the literal prohibition. Therefore, I think it is safe to conclude Reggie Watts is halal. Even fanatical ISIS (aka die-ish) seem to not mind garnishing its gruesome video clips with so called
Nasheed singing. Much of
Nasheed singing, even when performed by famous reciters of the Koran - such as Mishary Al-Afasy - is accompanied by coraal
3 (كورال) which in English is inescapably choir singing. Again, I really don't know about you but isn't emulating the Christians strictly forbidden and a grievous sin in Islam?
I can go on with this tedious theme and exegesis, exploring the myriad ways in which Islam and Muslims engage in double dealings. I know from experience that the careerist Sunni Muslim Brotherhood does it institutionally and so too, I was taught whilst Muslim, the quick to equivocate in peace time, millenarian Shia.
Personally, I've wasted precious brain blood on studying
Arud (علم العَروض والقافية), Arabic prosody which deals with poetic metrical systems. Now that I'm thinking about it, I think I did tap my index and middle fingers on the back of my hand whilst trying to ascribe a verse or line to one of the sixteen classical Arabic metres. I wrote some poems on the
Wafir metre but found myself more at home with composing doggerel.
No. I have never danced before leaving Islam and taking residence in the UK. I think this explains my studied avoidance of nightclubs and keeping when I really have to to Beethoven (nobody dances to him). Without first seeking professional advice, I recklessly had a go at extreme twerking in the shower of all places a few months ago, and ended up hurting my back really badly. I had supposed it came naturally to me, I said to my smiling GP, for being an African with a generous waistline.
Music, I regret to say, affects me merely as an arbitrary succession of more or less irritating sounds ... The concert piano and all wind instruments bore me in smaller doses and flay me in larger ones, said Nabokov. I think he's being unreasonable here. For me, a few weeks would pass before I listen to music on my own. And that would take place when I declare total war on germs playing it whilst I do some cleaning and washing up as an escapist change from my usual piratebay downloaded audiobooks.
I love words. More precisely, I love speech sounds and the delicious allophonic surprises of connected speech. I spent 51 days of R&R at a psychiatric unit with only two books, one of which was a dictionary.
I do not know the lyrics of a single song in the three languages I speak.
-------------------------------------------
* I've broken the hyperlinks by spacing more or less in the same place as the first one:
1.
http://www.maqa mworld.com/maqamat.html
2.
https://www.you tube.com/watch?v=hKI7nnXsxN8
3.
https://www.you tube.com/watch?v=HXHXPuF2894 (here, you can easily detect incredible likeness to percussive instruments)