ORIGINAL RESEARCH
published: 11 June 2021
doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.640409
Taqsı̄m as a Creative Musical
Process in Arabic Music
Zaher Alkaei and Mats B. Küssner*
Department of Musicology and Media Studies, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Edited by:
Rex Eugene Jung,
University of New Mexico,
United States
Reviewed by:
Ailbhe Kenny,
Mary Immaculate College, Ireland
Pamela Burnard,
University of Cambridge,
United Kingdom
*Correspondence:
Mats B. Küssner
[email protected]
Specialty section:
This article was submitted to
Performance Science,
a section of the journal
Frontiers in Psychology
Received: 11 December 2020
Accepted: 08 April 2021
Published: 11 June 2021
Citation:
Alkaei Z and Küssner MB (2021)
Taqsı̄m as a Creative Musical Process
in Arabic Music.
Front. Psychol. 12:640409.
doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.640409
Creativity plays a major role in various musical contexts including composition,
performance and education. Although numerous studies have revealed how creativity
is involved in processes of listening, improvising and composing, relatively little is known
about the particularities of transcultural creative processes in music. In this article, we
aim to shed light on the creative musical processes underlying taqsı̄m performance
in Arabic music. To that end, qualitative interviews have been conducted with three
Berlin-based oud players from Syria. Results of a thematic content analysis show that
taqsı̄m encompasses multiple components (e.g., a flexible form and dependency on
maqam as well as tonal music) and serves various functions such as developing artistic
individuality. Moreover, taqsı̄m is affected by interactions between tradition and novelty.
We discuss the interview data within the cross-cultural experiential model of musical
creativity developed by Hill (2018), offering a fresh approach to studying taqsı̄m which
goes beyond established concepts such as the improvisation-composition continuum.
Keywords: taqsı̄m, Arabic music, musical creativity, composition, improvisation
INTRODUCTION
The relationship between music and creativity has been studied from numerous angles, including
creativity and listening (Peterson, 2006), creativity in educational settings (Crow, 2008; Odena and
Welch, 2012), and creativity and musical performance (Deliège and Wiggins, 2006). Schiavio and
Benedek (2020) have recently argued that previously posed theories of creativity in musical and
non-musical domains distinguished between the following four types of creativity: (1) individual
creativity, which focuses on comparing the creative products of individual subjects and linking
them to individual differences (Auh, 1997; Villarreal et al., 2013); (2) collective creativity (Clarke
and Doffman(eds), 2017; Bishop, 2018), which is focused on distributed activity across members of
music ensembles as well as on composer-performer creative collaboration. This approach stresses
the social aspect of music-making. Researchers like Burnard (2012a) have argued that a singular
understanding of musical creativity (like the one achieved by individual composers) resulted in a
limited definition of creativity. Alternatively, a collectivist perspective on music can be a source
of meaningful socio-historical representations of objects and actions. From such a viewpoint, the
audience (as a community) plays a crucial role in influencing and co-creating creativity. Further,
concepts of creativity can be rooted within socio-cultural contexts, where creativity practices can
be conceptualized as being situated and collective (Kenny, 2014). The social and cultural contexts
in which creativity in music occurs allow researchers to investigate a wide scope of musical genres
like improvised music (Burnard, 2012a). Psychologists and cognitive scientists are interested in
(3) domain-general perspectives on creativity (Beaty et al., 2013), arguing that domain-general
abilities influence and may predict domain-specific abilities. A contrary approach is to focus on (4)
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
1
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409
Alkaei and Küssner
Taqsı̄m as Creative Musical Process
changes in a globalized world. It also has an open and more
flexible form compared to other Arabic compositional forms
or European forms of classical music. The term taqsı̄m (plural:
taqāsı̄m) refers to a non-metric improvised solo form in Arabic
music. The word itself means “division,” implying variation
and improvisation (Nettl, 1974). Marcus (1993) points out that
taqāsı̄m are not simply free-formed products of the musician’s
fantasy. He notes that the player improvises according to a
complex set of pre-established rules and conventions. Taqsı̄m,
according to Marcus (1993), is a highly valued musical genre
in Arabic music because it gives the players the opportunity
to present their own creations instead of relying on the
compositions of others. Racy (2000) elaborates on this point by
adding that the ability to play taqsı̄m is generally considered a
characteristic of good musicianship in the Arab world. Racy also
notes that playing taqsı̄m, which may be heard in combination
with non-improvised compositions or alone, is known to require
extraordinary skill, talent, and inspiration. Watson (2012) notes
that taqsı̄m can be performed unaccompanied or accompanied.
In accompanied settings, taqsı̄m is often played over a singlepitch drone without rhythmic accompaniment. Alternatively,
taqsı̄m can also occur over a repeated ostinato, or within a
repeated percussion cycle.
domain-specific perspectives on creativity (Baer, 2015). In such
studies, it is argued that creativity in one domain does not
predict creativity in other unrelated domains. Schiavio and
Benedek (2020) highlight that these aspects should not be
understood as alternatives. To reduce the tension between these
poles, they draw from a range of scholarship in music and
enactive cognitive science, and suggest that creative cognition
may be best understood as a process of skillful organismenvironment adaptation that can be cultivated continually.
Moreover, other researchers explored connections and tensions
between creativity research and developmental psychology
(Sawyer et al., 2003). In addition to that, musical creativity can be
studied with the paradigm of embodied cognition (Nagy, 2016;
Van der Schyff et al., 2018).
With regard to musical activities, Hargreaves et al. (2011)
have argued that there are common mental structures underlying
the three main activities of music: invention (composing and
improvising), performance of music, and listening to it, and
that these structures reveal imagination and creativity (see
also Hargreaves, 2012). The activities of music invention (i.e.,
composing and improvising) are often presented in the literature
as endpoints of a continuum (Pressing, 1984; Sarath, 1996;
Lehmann, 2005; Goldman, 2019), although a strict separation
can be doubted from a psychological perspective (Lehmann
and Kopiez, 2010). It is also questionable whether cultural
constructs such as “composition” and “improvisation” can be
adapted to examine the wide range of transcultural creative
processes in different musics. We use the term transcultural to
denote that (musical-) cultures may have boundaries, yet these
boundaries are not absolute or even clearly defined. Thus, a
transcultural perspective indicates “a procedural act of a cultural
overstepping of boundaries or the condition which results from
this overstepping of boundaries” (Kim, 2017, p. 20). Moreover,
creative thinking in music is not restricted to one genre, style
or historical era, rather it is a general feature found in many
musical activities (Campbell, 1990). Studying musical creativity
would therefore benefit from including a wider range of musical
practices and their components.
Besides studying music practices from a transcultural point
of view, the mobility of musical genres and practices as well
as studying migrants’ music may reveal new interconnections
between creative musical processes. Baily and Collyer (2006)
point out that the cultural and spatial distance between the
cultural background of the migrants and the culture of the
settlement place affect the musical practice in the migration
situation. Sorce Keller and Barwick (2012) note that studying
musical attitudes, tastes, and practices can provide valuable
insights into the details of processes like assimilation, cohabitation and the maintenance of distinctive cultural traits.
Furthermore, Baily and Collyer (2006) state that cultural
innovation and enrichment may result from migration.
Here, we propose that shedding light on taqsı̄m—a musical
practice in Arabic, Turkish and Persian cultures—can enrich
our perspective on creative processes in music and inform the
wider musicological and cognitive science discourse. Taqsı̄m is
a musical practice dependent on oral transmission, which may
allow space for novelty but may make it vulnerable to significant
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
Composition and Improvisation
Taqsı̄m is often seen as an improvisatory genre (Touma,
1971; Nettl and Riddle, 1973; Racy, 2000; Shannon, 2003;
Watson, 2012). Yet, a strict separation between composition
and improvisation can be doubted. Nettl (1974) highlights that
improvisation has been considered as a type of composition
that characterizes musical cultures without notation. This type
of composition depends on releasing sudden impulses to music
through direct production of sound. According to Nettl, it has
been argued that improvisation ends where notation begins,
while others contend that certain non-western cultures, which
do not use notation, distinguish between the two processes by
internally classifying their musics. Taqsı̄m is rarely notated—
maybe only for theoretical analysis by musicologists—yet,
as Nettl notes, the absence of notation is not enough to
describe some musical genres as improvisation. Improvisation
and composition can be seen as creative music-making
processes (Lehmann and Kopiez, 2002). Moreover, Nettl (1974)
proposed a continuum-based definition where composition and
improvisation are thought of as being at the “opposite ends of
a continuum.” However, it is not clear whether it is sensible
to locate taqsı̄m on such a linear binary continuum, because
we would still need to define improvisation and composition to
establish such a continuum. Despite Nettl’s suggestion to consider
composition and improvisation as being at the opposite ends of
a continuum, the wider observation of many musical traditions
around the world led him to conclude that “perhaps we must
abandon the idea of improvisation as a process separate from
composition and adopt the view that all performers improvise
to some extent” (Nettl, 1974, p. 19). He later expresses further
doubt, stating that “we probably should never have started
calling it improvisation” (Solis and Nettl, 2009, ix). Similarly,
Nooshin (2017) suggests that the continuum model did not go far
2
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409
Alkaei and Küssner
Taqsı̄m as Creative Musical Process
Rose et al. (2012) also challenged the differentiation
of improvisation and composition by conceptualizing
improvisation as an instant composition. They add that
“[r]eal-time composition becomes realized by means of the body
and embodied knowledge and the body can be thought of as the
site of improvisation.” (2012, p. 210).
As the literature discussed so far suggests, it is not adequate to
assume that taqsı̄m is simply an improvisatory genre. Instead, it
could be more revealing to examine taqsı̄m as a broader creative
music-making process. Glãveanu (2019) proposes three different
types of logic that can be used to study creativity culturally:
(1) the logic of comparison, which focuses on comparability
of creativity-related phenomena and is used in most crosscultural research; (2) the logic of exploration, which highlights
differences in creativity between individuals and groups, mostly
used in cultural or sociocultural research; and (3) the logic of
understanding, which is used in the research depending on local
and bottom-up definitions and categories.
Burnard (2012a) provides a rich framework to study musical
creativity. She argues that musical creativities can take many
forms, may have many functions, and are contained in personal
and sociocultural contexts. She distinguishes between forms
of authorship, mediating modalities and practice principles
of different musical practices. Moreover, according to her,
these elements mediate between individual, social and cultural
systems. Yet, she distinguishes between composed music and
improvised music – a distinction which can be doubted,
as argued above.
enough. Nooshin argues that a better understanding of creative
processes would ultimately require a complete dissolution of the
composition/improvisation dichotomy. Moreover, Lehmann and
Kopiez (2002) point out that composition and improvisation
are much more akin than commonly assumed. By analyzing
optimization processes and constraints on the creative performer
and process, Lehmann and Kopiez show that both processes
tap into the same mental mechanisms and require similar
prerequisites. They conclude that such a view opens up new ways
of investigating generative creativity in music.
However, some researchers may argue that there are important
differences between composition and improvisation. Sloboda
(1986) argues that what distinguishes improvisation from
composition is the pre-existence of a large set of formal
constraints which comprise a “blueprint” or “skeleton” for the
improvisation. Sloboda notes that the improviser, who depends
on a “blueprint,” can manage without much of the composer’s
usual decision-making process especially in aspects like structure
and direction. Sloboda argues that while the composer may
keep rejecting possible solutions during composing until finding
a more suitable one, the improviser has to do with the first
solution that comes to mind. Moreover, temporality is another
aspect which may distinguish composition and improvisation.
Sarath (1996) argues that while the improviser experiences
time in an “inner-directed” manner, where the present is so
central in comparison to the past and future, the composer has
an “expanding” temporality, which means that the “temporal
projections may be conceived from any moment in a work to past
and future time coordinates” (Sarath, 1996, p. 1).
Moreover, Mazzola et al. (2011) give a detailed
characterization of the creativity processes in composition
and improvisation. The creativity process in composition can
be characterized as: (1) reliance on symbolic musical objects as
elements of a semiotic context which unfolds in a logical time
(the rules that govern the shape and arrangement of material
in the parameter space of the symbolic events); (2) reliance
on basic semiotic architecture which manipulates symbols in a
referential network that operates in independence of material
time; and (3) a separation of material components from the
transformation rules. The creativity process in improvisation
can be characterized as: (1) reliance on a system of gesture
that does not allow for abstract symbols; (2) reliance on
managing of gestures through the connectivity of gestures within
hypergestures; and (3) no separation of components from the
transformation rules.
However, Mazzola et al. (2011) add that both composition
and improvisation can be seen from their generative aspect,
thus one can say that “improvisation is instant composition
while composition is slow-motion improvisation” (2011, p. 245).
In this sense “[t]he generative forces of the compositional
logic are not necessarily logical, but they may very well be
nourished by gestures of memory, dreams, and yearnings.”
(2011, p. 246). Moreover, “[t]he imaginary space-time of
improvisation is in itself a kernel structure for a compositional
approach to improvisation since it creates a space for musical
construction as if we were working out a compositional
preconception.” (2011, p. 247).
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
Hill’s Experiential1 Model of Musical
Creativity
Another framework in which the underlying processes of
taqsı̄m may be discussed more fruitfully is provided by
Hill (2018). According to Hill, creativity can be seen as
a fundamental human desire and activity that is culturally
embedded and socially regulated. She conducted in-depth
qualitative research with more than one hundred musicians
from different communities. Her research dealing with examples
from classical, jazz, and traditional musicians in three cities—
Cape Town, Helsinki, and Los Angeles—explored musicians’
thoughts on, and experiences of, the development and practice
of musical creativity.
While Hill values the view of the diversity of creative activities
and of musical cultures in which they occur as articulated by
Burnard’s (2012b), Hill aims to “identify the most common
components of creative experience” (Hill, 2018, p. 3). Based
on her comparative research in these diverse cultural contexts,
she proposes a model of creativity that contains components
of generativity, agency, interaction, non-conformity, recycling,
and flow. She notes that all these six components were
reported across all the musical idioms and cultures in her study
(Hill, 2018).
1
Hill uses the term experiential to emphasize the musicians’ experience which
distinguishes her research from the common creativity literature, which focuses on
external evaluation of creative products, J. Hill (personal communication, March
15, 2021).
3
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409
Alkaei and Küssner
Taqsı̄m as Creative Musical Process
preliminary codes that were assigned to the data to describe the
content. The literature review helped us to code the participant
answers by providing us with keywords and central concepts to
look for. Examples of such keywords and concepts were: musical
environment, maqam music, taqsı̄m in concerts, interaction with
the audience and other musicians, musical material, building
blocks, development of taqsı̄m. Data reduction and inferences
about the codes’ meaning were made, and we examined how
the themes support the overarching theoretical perspective. Each
interview was analyzed separately, later the themes and codes
across the three interviews were compared. This enabled us to
find similarities and differences in our participants’ answers.
Afterward, themes were reviewed and precisely named. A final
list of codes and three main themes was produced. These final
codes were mapped to the components of Hill’s model. We
further discuss the extent to which Hill’s components of creative
experience can be found in taqsı̄m.
Hill (2018) notes that some cultures may place greater value
on some of these components than on others. She notes that
the restriction of any one of these components may result in an
inhibition of creativity. On the other hand, she argues, supporting
all six components can enhance creative potential. Hill (2018)
notes that more research is needed to test whether her model is
applicable across a broader range of musical cultures.
By exploring three musicians’ reflections on their experience
of taqsı̄m, this study aims to examine whether taqsı̄m and the
musical processes underpinning taqsı̄m performance in Arabic
music may be described within Hill’s model of cross-cultural
musical creativity.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Participants
Participants were three male oud players from Syria: Ala’a,
Wassim and Nabil – aged 28, 34, and 37, respectively – who have
lived in Berlin since 2015/16. The participants had had private
music lessons since childhood and preadolescence. Wassim and
Nabil started taking oud lessons when they were 10 years old,
while Ala’a began at the age of 13 years. All three are familiar
with solfège and musical notation. They used to give public
concerts in Syria and expanded their musical activities in Berlin
through workshops, solo performances, and participation in
ensembles of various sizes. Each participant signed a consent
form, and the study was carried out in accordance with the
Declaration of Helsinki.
FINDINGS
After conducting the thematic content analysis, the following
final codes emerged, which we grouped into the following themes:
Interaction – Creation – Freedom/limitation.
Summary of the final codes:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Materials and Procedure
Half-open questions were used to interview all three musicians.
The aim was to explore the musicians’ reflections on their
experience of taqsı̄m. We asked the musicians about the
definition, form, function, learning of taqsı̄m, and also about
playing taqsı̄m in different situations (solo vs. ensemble, with
vs. without an audience), as well as about the development
of their own taqsı̄m in the last few years. To what extent is
taqsı̄m free or limited, and how does it compare to composition
or improvisation in general? The interviews were conducted
in Arabic – the mother tongue of the three participants and
the first author – in January and February 2019. The interview
with Ala’a took place at the interviewer’s home, Nabil’s at his
home, and Wassim’s in the Department of Musicology and
Media Studies at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Each interview
lasted roughly 35 min. The interview was recorded with a Zoom
H5 Audio Recorder and later transcribed into Arabic and then
translated into English.
A flexible form as the main feature of taqsı̄m was evident
in taqsı̄m definitions given by all three participants. For Ala’a,
besides being “a genre or musical form in oriental music in
general and in Arabic music in particular” taqsı̄m is “a free form
that is based on the character of the musician, his repertoire, his
cultural heritage of musical phrases, or learned techniques.” Ala’a
noted that taqsı̄m consists of four parts: an introduction, the body
of the taqsı̄m, a kind of development, and a conclusion. Wassim
gave a general description of his taqsı̄m form and stated:
Data Analysis
“I build melodies on rhythmic patterns and follow the rules of
tetrachords and their order so that I can build musical phrases and
develop them and then move on to new musical phrases. Later
I set a conclusion, which is a kind of summary of the previous
phrases.”
A thematic content analysis with the deductive (or top-down)
approach was used to analyze the interviews (Hayes, 1997;
Boyatzis, 1998; Braun and Clarke, 2006). Reading the original
transcription and the translation of the interviews multiple times
was the first step in the analysis to get familiar with the data.
The translations were checked back with the original recordings
to assure accuracy. The literature review on taqsı̄m gave rise to
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
Instant composition
Flexible form
Highlighting the technical skills of the player
As an introduction for a piece
A space for interaction
Learning by imitation
Creating one’s own taqsı̄m
Recycled musical material
Audience effect on taqsı̄m
Playing with an ensemble affects taqsı̄m
A meditative state
Integrating elements from different styles
Microtonal intervals and other instruments
Leaving Syria/being in Berlin
Nabil stated that he would not use a form to structure his
taqsı̄m and added: “taqsı̄m should be as free as possible.” The
4
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409
Alkaei and Küssner
Taqsı̄m as Creative Musical Process
answers of the participants highlight that maqam is central to
taqsı̄m. For Ala’a, taqsı̄m aims to present the maqam of the
taqsı̄m. For Wassim, the taqsı̄m follows the logic of the maqam.
Nabil noted that “the taqsı̄m introduces the maqam [which will
be] sung by the singer.”
There were mixed answers concerning the freedom of taqsı̄m.
The participants pointed out that taqsı̄m is free but may be
limited by other factors such as the setting (many musicians
playing together makes it hard to coordinate who will play
next and for how long) and time factors (many musicians
playing taqsı̄m may result in a very long performance). However,
Wassim noted that taqsı̄m may be stylistically restricted: “taqsı̄m
follows the tonal rules.” Ala’a and Nabil noted that playing
with other bands (especially orchestras or bands that play music
with harmonic progression) may limit their taqsı̄m freedom.
These answers support the idea that taqsı̄m has rules and is not
completely free.
When asked about how they learned taqsı̄m, the participants
highlighted multiple learning processes: Ala’a learned taqsı̄m
through listening and being more experienced with Arabic
musical tradition. Nabil stated that he always tended to vary the
music he learned to play; later, he started to imitate oud masters’
taqsı̄m. While Ala’a’s and Nabil’s learning processes of taqsı̄m
can be described as autodidactic, Wassim stated that taqsı̄m
was organized by his teachers, with the goal of playing musical
elements on the oud.
The three participants accumulate experiences and use their
repertoire on the spot of performance. Nabil stated that after
playing in many concerts, he has developed many musical ideas
he can use in his taqsı̄m. Besides these experiences in concerts,
he develops taqsı̄m when he is at home practicing. Wassim
pointed out two sources for his experience with taqsı̄m: (1)
the interaction with his teachers and (2) experimenting with
his instruments. Ala’a depends on his repertoire, which has
been built up and collected over several years. The participants
highlighted that the musical material played during taqsı̄m comes
from songs, the traditional musical repertoire and the individual
experimentation with the instrument and the maqams. These
processes indicate that the players internalized stylistic rules that
characterize taqsı̄m by making themselves more familiar with the
material through listening and imitating. Yet these rules were
not absolute: All players reported influences on their taqsı̄m
music from other musical cultures: For Ala’a, Turkish music,
blues and jazz. For Nabil, electronic music and European classical
music. For Wassim, music from Azerbaijan and European
classical music.
Concerning the role of the audience, the participants’ answers
revealed that the interaction with the audience and concert
settings have a great influence on taqsı̄m. Wassim noted that
taqsı̄m functions as an interaction space with the audience, the
music itself, and with other players. Yet having an audience may
put the player under pressure according to Nabil. Ala’a noted that
when he plays in front of an audience there is more enthusiasm.
He added that there is a competition between the players to
impress the audience.
Moving to Berlin from Syria was seen by our participants as an
opportunity to develop their own taqsı̄m. Ala’a stated:
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
“The audience I had in Syria was very different from the audience
I have in Germany and in Europe in general. I can say that I didn’t
really have an audience in Syria because I was giving concerts in
small places and people in general were not fans of this style and I
always used to cut something from the taqsı̄m.”
Nabil stated:
“I don’t play taqsı̄m in Germany the way I play it in Syria.
The difference is very big, because here I started to hear jazz
improvisations, rock music and live electronic music in a very
different way than I heard them in Syria. In Syria, I heard them
as recordings and these recordings are pieces of music for me
because they are recorded. When I went to hear them again, the
music was the same. But when I heard and met the musicians
who improvise this music, I started to hear this music differently.
Even when the same player improvises again, he repeats the
improvisation differently. I started to see them as improvisations
and adopting many ideas from them. I have the impression that
the ear of the audience [in Europe] is different, so my music
changes according to the expectations of the listener. My music
has been influenced in this way a lot, not only my improvisation,
[but] my compositions also. They got influenced by the music I
hear here and by the audience I play for.”
Wassim stated:
“I can say that almost five years after leaving Syria, I have the
possibility to really check what I have. Besides the freedom
of dealing with a completely new audience, whether a Turkish
audience or a European audience. These gave me some freedom.
That is, I don’t have to do anything. Everything I do, I want to do
and not because I have to do it.”
The answers of our participants indicate that room for
individual artistic expression is a primary function of taqsı̄m. This
was evident in the taqsı̄m definition given by Ala’a: “a free form
that is based on the character of the musician, his repertoire, his
cultural heritage of musical phrases, or learned techniques.” For
Nabil, taqsı̄m functions as a space in which the player presents his
instrument, technique, and musical abilities. For Wassim, taqsı̄m
functions as a space to show the technical skills of the player.
DISCUSSION
The participants’ answers show that taqsı̄m has several special
characteristics: a musical genre with a flexible form; the
importance of maqam to taqsı̄m; performing taqsı̄m is governed
by rules and not completely free, although such rules are not
always explicit and clear to the players themselves; the existence
of such rules does not prevent the players from being open to
new musical materials; interaction with the audience plays an
important role while performing taqsı̄m; artistic self-expression is
central to taqsı̄m. Seeing taqsı̄m as an improvisatory genre is not
a satisfactory approach, as discussed in the introduction. Thus,
we seek to interpret our data within an alternative approach.
We will examine whether our data on taqsı̄m fit within Hill’s
model of creativity, paying attention to each component and
whether we can find counterparts of these components in our
participants’ answers.
5
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409
Alkaei and Küssner
Taqsı̄m as Creative Musical Process
Generativity
Indeed, the connection to composition becomes clear in the
following quote from Wassim, even though it is a kind of instant
composition:
According to Hill (2018), generativity is the most basic aspect
of the creative process. Hill notes that this aspect can be
described as “building,” “making,” “creating,” or “constructing”
something. Hill adds that musicians and music scholars mostly
agree that composing, improvising, and arranging music are
creative generative acts. However, she notes that there is less
agreement on whether performing a pre-existing work should
be considered creative. A similar position was expressed by Nettl
(1974) who suggested that it is self-evident that improvised music
requires a greater creative effort on the part of the performer
than does composed music. Nettl noted that improvisation may
be defined by measuring the degree to which the performer is
creatively involved.
In this study, when the participants talked about taqsı̄m they
used expressions denoting the generative nature of the process.
Ala’a used verbs like “create” and “build” to talk about taqsı̄m.
Ala’a noted that taqsı̄m is a creation that uses building blocks
from the player’s repertoire. For him these building blocks are:
“What is special about taqsı̄m is that it is a work that is composed
immediately [while playing].”
This generativity is goal-oriented, as mentioned above. Such
goals can be summarized as: (1) room for individual artistic
expression, (2) interaction with the audience, and (3) support and
introduction of pre-composed pieces.
Agency
The second component of creativity according to Hill (2018)
is agency, which was also the most important component for
the majority of musicians she interviewed. Agency can be seen
as “individuals’ ‘room for action’, and the extent to which we
are either subdued by the larger mechanisms of society or can
freely decide our ways of being and acting within them” (Karlsen,
2011, p. 110). Such an understanding of agency emphasizes the
ability to make one’s own decisions determining musical act
and meaning. According to Marcus (1993) taqsı̄m allows the
musicians to demonstrate their abilities as composers and their
mastery of their instruments.
Our participants’ answers highlight the importance of agency.
For Ala’a, taqsı̄m is a musical space which is built from
“the musician’s character, his repertoire, his cultural heritage
of musical phrases, or learned techniques.” This shows that
taqsı̄m style is related strongly to the musician’s personality
and individuality. Moreover, playing taqsı̄m before or within
a pre-composed piece of music “opens up a way for any
musician to add some of his spirit to the piece and make the
piece a combination of several spirits . . ..” In this way, the
player is not only a performer of a pre-composed piece, but
rather a co-creator. The player may add, invent or change the
form of a piece by playing a taqsı̄m of his own, before or
during the piece, where he has the chance to introduce his
individuality as a creator.
Nabil expressed similar ideas. For him, taqsı̄m is “the most
important opportunity for the musician to present himself. He
presents himself as a musician with spirit and technique and he
reflects the atmosphere of the concert.” Moreover, taqsı̄m gives
the player control over the material of the concert because it is
not pre-composed. Thus, the player has the choice to adapt his
taqsı̄m to a different concert situation accordingly.
Wassim stated that taqsı̄m “should emphasize the player’s
technical skills, the understanding of his instrument and
interaction with the audience, with the music itself, and with
the other players.” Besides showing their technical skills, taqsı̄m
allows the players to interact as active agents.
“the player’s repertoire that he builds and collects over several
years. If you are a player in the first level, that is, in your first or
second year, you can create a taqsı̄m, but it can [only] be [either]
traditional or a mixture of the songs of Fairuz and Umm Kulthum
that you play in your first phase.”
This repertoire and cultural heritage of the musician (like
maqams) and the musician’s technical skills play an important
role in building taqsı̄m:
“It is a kind of free form that depends on the musician’s character,
his repertoire, his cultural heritage of musical phrases, or learned
techniques. It is related to his ability to implement his repertoire
in a form determined by rules—to present his feelings through
the use of the repertoire he possesses or the technique he has
learned, and to present the maqam on which the musician builds
his taqsı̄m, to the listener.”
Nabil also used the verbs “create” and “build” to talk about
his taqsı̄m, with a focus on the idea that with time he started to
create his own building blocks, instead of borrowing from other
musicians:
“With time and with repetition, I was moving away from the basic
musical ideas and the main melodies of the [original] musicians. I
started to create a line [melody] that I liked and I [started to] focus
on the ideas that I want and like. Like that and with time I became
able to create a taqsı̄m that convinced me.”
Wassim used the verb “build” with melodies and musical
phrases. For Wassim, the process is comparable to composition,
especially when he speaks about building and developing musical
phrases which leads to growth:
Interaction
Hill (2018) points out that the next component of her crosscultural model of musical creativity can be shadowed –
especially in western culture – by agency, namely the interaction
component. According to Hill (2018, p. 5) “(i)nteraction includes
being stimulated by and responding to input from musicians,
audience members, and the environment.” Interaction, according
“taqsı̄m from the point of view of classical oriental music [. . .]
is tonal music accomplished through building melodies on a
rhythmic pattern and they follow the rules of tetrachords. Building
phrases and developing them and then move on to new phrases.
And later adding a conclusion, which is a kind of summary of the
previous phrases.”
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
6
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409
Alkaei and Küssner
Taqsı̄m as Creative Musical Process
before moving to the execution of another idea. They add that
the duration of each phase depends on the artistic mastery
of each performer. Such a flexible form may facilitate nonconformity.
Our participants expressed their attempt to integrate musical
material from sources other than Arabic musical tradition. For
example, Ala’a borrows “some techniques of Turkish music” and
“a combination of jazz and blues, especially after coming to
Europe and learning more about these styles and playing with
bands that play these styles.” More specifically, Ala’a noted he has
“a tendency to use certain blues scales in the bridge of the maqam
while keeping the shape of the maqam.”
For Nabil, being in Berlin gave him the chance to encounter
electronic music. “I am trying to learn the technique of repetition
in electronic music.” He described how he can deviate from
traditional musical ideas:
to Hill, includes being engaged with the other musicians
with whom one plays and with the audience. During taqsı̄m
performance, the same musicians may perform in varied
styles, depending largely upon their emotional state during the
performance and upon the nature of their audience (Racy, 1991).
Our participants expressed that interaction is an important
aspect of taqsı̄m. For Ala’a, taqsı̄m “will change because there
are other people [an audience].” Moreover, having other players
with whom one plays changes taqsı̄m as well because there is
“competition with the other players.”
For Nabil, taqsı̄m is “a direct interaction between the player
and the audience.” To Nabil, such interaction is multidimensional
“[with] the audience on one hand and [with] the band [with
whom one plays] on the other hand.”
For Wassim, taqsı̄m is “meant to highlight the technical skills
of the player, his understanding of his instrument and interaction
with the audience and with the music itself and also with other
players.”
In addition to the interaction with the audience and with
other musicians through taqsı̄m, as expressed by Ala’a and
Nabil, Wassim added that taqsı̄m is in interaction with the (precomposed) music itself, especially when taqsı̄m is played before
or within a piece:
“I have moved away from the basic musical ideas and the main
melodies of the [original] musicians. I created melodies that I like,
and decided to concentrate on the ideas that I wanted to create to
build a taqsı̄m that would convince me.”
Wassim integrated elements of Azerbaijani music into his
taqsı̄m style because one of his teachers was Azerbaijani.
Moreover, moving to Berlin and having a new audience gave him
more freedom to vary his taqsı̄m. This freedom comes from the
fact that his audience in Berlin includes – in addition to listeners
familiar with Arabic music – listeners familiar with Turkish
music or European classical music. Thus he has the freedom to
vary his taqsı̄m and he does not have to stick with only the “Arabic
way” of playing taqsı̄m.
These insights show that the participants were seeking to
integrate non-traditional elements into their own taqsı̄m. These
elements are related to their interest in other musical genres and
styles. Moreover, there is some intersection in their preferences
and choices. However, the elements they choose to integrate
into their taqsı̄m may vary considerably: they could be musical
phrases (building blocks), technical skills, or esthetic principles.
“In my opinion, the taqsı̄m has essentially two roles: the first
role is to introduce the pieces by bringing the musicians and
the audience into a state where there is a preparation for the
atmosphere of the piece. Later to get into the piece, so that the
piece does not come as a surprise [. . .]. This is the first role.
The second role is to have one or more solos for one or more
instruments within the piece before the conclusion [...].”
The participants’ answers point out that interaction while
performing taqsı̄m might manifest itself in various ways and
on various levels. There is interaction with the audience, other
musicians, and with the music itself.
Non-conformity
To encompass a cluster of concepts such as novelty, innovation,
difference, and originality, Hill (2018) uses the term nonconformity, as the fourth component of her model of musical
creativity. Hill argues that this term helps to (a) explain why
and how creativity is restricted by social pressures to conform
to norms and standards and (b) to note that innovation and
novelty may not always be valued within music cultures that
prioritize historical authenticity and preservation of tradition.
However, Hill points out that this does not mean that such
traditionally oriented music cultures do not allow for creativity.
On the contrary, according to her, an extensive expression of
creativity can exist within the bounds of tradition. Hill notes that
the creative musician explores and realizes multiple possibilities
instead of conforming to an entirely predetermined model.
According to Ayari and McAdams (2003), taqsı̄m is organized
into several phases in the presentation and development of each
maqam. However, they note that the precise ordering is not
fixed: introduction, presentation of the basic maqam elements,
exposition, re-exposition, and confirmation. Ayari and McAdams
add that some performers may linger on a given phase of taqsı̄m
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
Recycling
The fifth component of Hill’s model of musical creativity is
recycling. Hill (2018) notes that creative processes also depend
on recycling, or reusing, remixing, and otherwise building on,
tradition. Racy (2000) notes that a taqsı̄m in a specific maqam,
or melodic mode, tends to be self-contained. This means that
it is begun, developed, and resolved in accordance with an
established modal plan. In many cases, the material that builds
such a structure is borrowed. Watson (2012) points out that,
even though most taqsı̄m performers view it as having no rules
as such, there is certainly a necessity for traditional musical
details to be enacted during the performance. Such details,
Watson notes, are internalized by modeling musical behavior
on traditional prototypes. Watson adds that the methods
through which musicians develop the ability to produce genrespecific musical elements are enabled by engaging in various
learning environments such as parental apprenticeships, informal
apprenticeships with master musicians, vocalists and ensembles,
musician networks, autodidactic study, and institutionalized
7
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409
Alkaei and Küssner
Taqsı̄m as Creative Musical Process
Nabil feels “absolutely free in solo concerts.” Moreover, he
describes how he plays his music for himself: “A large part of the
music is not for other people. I do what I am convinced of, what I
feel.” Following his feelings without a pre-established plan can be
seen as an important part of the flow experiences.
When Wassim plays on his own he feels that he is free and able
to “enter into a situation that is similar to a dialogue with the self
and [similar to] a Sufi experience.” He added that he may enter
a state comparable to flow when playing on his own, where he
does not feel the pressure of having an audience: “I don’t have the
crisis [the issue, the question] whether the audience is enjoying it
or not. Therefore, I can take long breaks and enter into a situation
that is closer to the dialogue with the self and a Sufi process. . .
Meditation through the music.” When asked about playing with
others, Wassim stated:
study. Watson (2012) points out that musicians who play taqsı̄m
and other genres absorb pre-composed melodic prototypes as
stylistic and theoretical blueprints.
Ala’a stated that “borrowing phrases from a song or an older
work is a normal thing, because this is the repertoire of the
musician that gets realized and embodied.”
Nabil describes listening to taqsı̄m masters and trying “to
repeat them as if they were pieces.” Moreover, Nabil’s teachers
told him that “the musician gets richer every time he learns
pieces and taqsı̄ms from other musicians.” Nabil elaborated:
“Sometimes it is possible to build a taqsı̄m from a song without
the audience noticing. The musician can take ideas from a song
and change them—or from a melody or a piece—and make a
taqsı̄m out of it.”
For Wassim, the melodies heard within taqsı̄m have different
sources, but mainly they are based on “sequences of the
tetrachords and on the repertoire of each musician.”
These insights from our interviews show that it is a common
practice to use recycled materials when playing taqsı̄m. These
materials may be motives or melody segments from songs and
other pieces or more abstract building blocks like maqams.
“The solo player [in such a situation] has less freedom for
the taqsı̄m, but at the same time there is a higher level of
communication, because at that moment [the whole] ensemble
can participate [in playing, and this can be] a spiritual experience.”
Wassim’s statement may point to a sense of saltana which
Shannon (2003) describes as melodic flow or groove. Yet these
experiences need further investigation to find out whether saltana
is part of a flow experience or not. The mapping of the interview
final codes and Hill’s model is shown in Figure 1.
Flow
Flow is the sixth component of Hill’s model of musical creativity
(Hill, 2018). She points out that Csikszentmihalyi, (1996, p. 110)
defines flow as “the feeling when things were going well as
an almost automatic, effortless, yet highly focused state of
consciousness.” According to Shannon (2003), music lovers and
performers of the classical Arab musical repertoire associate
esthetic quality and authenticity with the ability of artists and
their audiences to achieve tarab. Shannon (2003, p. 74) further
notes that in Arabic, tarab refers linguistically to “a state of
heightened emotionality, often translated as ‘rapture,’ ‘ecstasy,’
or ‘enchantment’ but can also indicate sadness as well as joy.”
Shannon adds that tarab also describes a style of music and
musical performance which evoke such emotional states in
performers and audiences. According to Shannon (2003), in
the performance of a taqsı̄m, an artist can establish a sense of
saltana which Shannon describes as melodic flow or groove.
Shannon suggests that these strategies have the effect of altering
the listener’s experience of temporality. According to Shannon,
the experience of detemporalization and retemporalization may
in fact be critical to the production of tarab. Shannon points
out that although technical ability may generate excitement
among audiences, for listeners, the artists’ ability to alter the
experience of time is a primary indicator of their creativity
and authenticity. Shannon notes that listening to a traditional
taqsı̄m brings listeners out of the normal flow of time where
melodic repetition and fluency of movement create a sense
of suspended time.
In our study, the musicians expressed comparable opinions.
Ala’a stated that “when the time of the taqsı̄m comes and I play
my taqsı̄m, I may close my eyes because I am building inner
images and experiencing a certain situation.” Ala’a expressed
a common experience related to flow, which is forgetting
the surroundings.
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
Tensions
Hill (2018) points out that all these components—generativity,
agency, interaction, non-conformity, recycling, and flow—
usually coexist and overlap. However, tensions between them
may occur. According to Hill, interaction and recycling can be
hindered by too much focus on individual agency and nonconformity. Moreover, agency, non-conformity, and flow can be
hindered by too much concern about external evaluation.
We found some indications of tensions in our participants’
answers. These tensions might be a part of interaction in different
situations. For example, Ala’a noted the audience evaluation is
important during taqsı̄m:
“Maybe the musician experiences an ideal state, that is, he feels
that he is playing a beautiful taqsı̄m, but the audience is wondering
what this person is doing on stage.”
This statement shows that there might be a tension between
agency and external evaluation of the creative process. Nabil
pointed out that tensions may occur among musicians playing
together. He might wish to play a free taqsı̄m without a predetermined duration but this can be irritating to other musicians:
“A long taqsı̄m puts pressure on the other musicians on stage, who
are waiting for it to end!”
Moreover, he noted that taqsı̄m—when performed within a
piece—should fit that piece, which may create a tension between
the generated material on stage and the pre-composed piece:
“I can think that the taqsı̄m is beautiful and the audience enjoys it,
but it doesn’t fit well with the piece.”
8
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409
Alkaei and Küssner
Taqsı̄m as Creative Musical Process
FIGURE 1 | Mapping between the interview codes and Hill’s model components of musical creativity (generativity, agency, interaction, non-conformity, recycling, and
flow). All components of Hill’s model were evident in our analysis of the particpants’ answers on taqsı̄m.
tension when playing with others: “the solo player [in such a
situation] has less freedom for the taqsı̄m.”
Moreover, when talking about taqsı̄m’s functions, Wassim
noted that tension may occur between the wish to play virtuously
and the introductory function of taqsı̄m:
In addition to that, playing with an orchestra may limit the
freedom of taqsı̄m:
“For example, they [the orchestra, other musicians] asked me to
create a clear and specific duration of taqsı̄m. So I had to make
a taqsı̄m that is similar to a composition, because I had to know
exactly what I was going to do and play.”
“This second function is to highlight the player’s skills, while the
first function is to support and prepare for the music. Preferably,
the player does not play very virtuously [in the first function], so
as not to divert full attention from the piece.”
These examples given by Nabil point out a pressure to adapt
to other musicians, pre-composed pieces, or to other musical
practices (like playing with an orchestra). A further tension may
take place between the desire to be creative and the concern about
feedback from the audience. Nabil stated:
This can be described as a tension between recycling and
individual agency.
Moreover, Wassim stated:
“I try to play original material in every concert, when I do so, I feel
happy and comfortable and feel that the taqsı̄m is more than just
a repetition. [. . .] When I play for an audience, there is a lack of
oxygen in my body because I am nervous. Also, because I’m afraid
of making mistakes. I have to say that [there] I am less brave. My
[musical] thoughts at home are always more important, because
even if I make a mistake, big or small, I can repeat and repeat
the phrase [phrases] until I play it correctly. On stage, that’s not
allowed, I play the safest phrases on stage while I’m free on my
own.”
“When I play alone, I generally don’t have to give a pattern or
explain my style, so I don’t have to do the same repetitions and
I can do fewer repetitions. At the same time, I don’t have the
crisis [the issue, the question] whether the audience is enjoying
it or not. Therefore, I can take long breaks and enter into a
situation that is closer to the dialogue with the self and a Sufi
process. . . Meditation through the music – I try to keep that
away from the stage, especially at concerts when there is a mixed
audience of different cultures. I try to make the taqsı̄m clear and
understandable for the wider audience. This is because I will lose
a part of the audience if I radicalize my music in any direction
[being too meditative, or making it so clear]. But when I am alone,
I can go in the direction I want and without losing anything.”
This tension, which may limit non-conformity, results from
the concern about external evaluation. Wassim noted a similar
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
9
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409
Alkaei and Küssner
Taqsı̄m as Creative Musical Process
and novelty, freedom and limitation, the artistic expression of the
moment and the coherence of the concert program.
Hill’s model of creativity—which highlights the components
of generativity, agency, interaction, non-conformity, recycling,
and flow—may facilitate positioning, linking, and comparing
taqsı̄m with other musical genres and cultures. Such a theoretical
framework provides the opportunity to investigate general
features that characterize many creative musical practices without
denying the specific details of each genre. The multidimensional
view of taqsı̄m as a creative practice with multiple components
appears to be more fruitful in capturing the full breadth of this
musical practice than placing it on an improvisation-composition
continuum. We envisage that having applied Hill’s model in
this study will further open up pathways for incorporating
transcultural musical processes in the study of creativity.
Wassim’s statement shows that he might experience a tension
between the wish of entering a meditative state, where his
music cannot be completely understood or followed by his
listeners, and trying to keep his music clear and concentrated
at the price of not entering such a meditative state. This can
be described as a tension between agency, non-conformity,
and flow on the one hand and with the concern about
external evaluation on the other. The participants’ answers show
that tension may appear between many different components:
between recycling and novelty, freedom and limitation, the
artistic expression of the moment and the coherence of the
concert program etc.
CONCLUSION
The aim of this study was to shed light on taqsı̄m as a creative
process from a transcultural point of view. The interviews with
the three Berlin-based oud players from Syria revealed that
taqsı̄m is a kind of instant composition with a flexible form
that highlights the technical skills of the player and/or serves
as an introduction for pre-composed music. Moreover, it serves
as a space for interaction between the musicians, the audience
and the pre-composed music. Taqsı̄m is learned by imitation
and experimenting, and contains recycled musical materials
from maqam music amongst others. The migratory situation
enabled our participants to have new musical experiences and
to integrate new musical materials, playing techniques and
esthetic values into their taqsı̄m. Their contact with various
musical genres in Berlin—in addition to experiencing diverse
concert audiences—gave our participants new opportunities to
negotiate the boundaries of taqsı̄m. We mapped the codes and
themes of the thematic content analysis onto Hill’s cross-cultural
experiential model of musical creativity. This mapping showed
that: (1) generativity in taqsı̄m is goal-oriented. Generating
taqsı̄m aims to create room for individual artistic expression,
for interaction with the audience, and to support and introduce
the pre-composed pieces. (2) Due to the freedom of taqsı̄m,
and due to its role in showing the technical skills of the
musicians, taqsı̄m allows the players to interact as active agents.
(3) There is interaction with the audience, other musicians,
and with the music itself. (4) The participants were seeking to
integrate non-traditional elements in their own taqsı̄m. (5) It
is a common practice to use recycled materials when playing
taqsı̄m. (6) A state of flow or meditative experience when
one forgets the surrounding may appear when playing taqsı̄m.
Some of the tensions that may appear between the different
components of Hill’s model were evident, too, in our analysis
of the interviews. Such tensions may appear between recycling
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
The raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be
made available by the authors, without undue reservation.
ETHICS STATEMENT
Ethical review and approval was not required for the study
on human participants in accordance with the local legislation
and institutional requirements. The participants provided their
written informed consent to participate in this study. Written
informed consent was obtained from the individual(s) for the
publication of any potentially identifiable images or data included
in this article.
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
ZA and MBK developed the idea and design of the study. ZA
conducted the interviews, analyzed the data, and produced the
first draft. MBK provided substantial comments and assisted
with the argument development. Both authors approved the final
version of the manuscript.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We acknowledge support by the German Research Foundation
(DFG) and the Open Access Publication Fund of HumboldtUniversität zu Berlin. We thank the participants for their
time and interest and the two reviewers for providing very helpful
comments on our manuscript.
REFERENCES
Ayari, M., and McAdams, S. (2003). Aural analysis of Arabic improvised
instrumental music (Taqsı̄ı̄m). Music Percept. 21, 159–216. doi: 10.1525/mp.
2003.21.2.159
Baer, J. (2015). The importance of domain-specific expertise in creativity. Roeper
Rev. 37, 165–178. doi: 10.1080/02783193.2015.1047480
Auh, M.-S. (1997). Prediction of musical creativity in composition among selected
variables for upper elementary students. Bull. Council Res. Music Educ. 133, 1–8.
doi: 10.2190/ec.40.1.a
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
10
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409
Alkaei and Küssner
Taqsı̄m as Creative Musical Process
Marcus, S. L. (1993). Solo instrumental improvisation (Taqāsı̄m) in Arab Music.
Middle East Stud. Assoc. Bull. 27, 108–111. doi: 10.1017/s002631840002
7127
Mazzola, G., Park, J., and Thalmann, F. (2011). Musical Creativity: Strategies and
Tools in Composition and Improvisation. Berlin: Springer Science & Business
Media.
Nagy, Z. (2016). Embodiment of Musical Creativity: The Cognitive and Performative
Causality of Musical Composition. Abingdon: Taylor & Francis.
Nettl, B. (1974). Thoughts on improvisation: a comparative approach. Music. Q.
60, 1–19. doi: 10.1093/mq/lx.1.1
Nettl, B., and Riddle, R. (1973). Taqsim Nahawand: a study of sixteen performances
by Jihad Racy. Yearbook Int. Folk Music Council 5, 11–50. doi: 10.2307/767493
Nooshin, L. (2017). “(Re-) imagining improvisation: discursive positions in Iranian
music from classical to jazz,” in Distributed Creativity: Collaboration and
Improvisation in Contemporary Music, eds E. F. Clarke and M. Doffman
(Oxford: Oxford University Press).
Odena, O., and Welch, G. (2012). “Teachers’ perceptions of creativity,” in Musical
Creativity: Insights from Music Education Research, ed. O. Odena (Farnham:
Ashgate), 29–48.
Peterson, E. M. (2006). Creativity in music listening. Arts Educ. Policy Rev. 107,
15–21. doi: 10.3200/aepr.107.3.15-21
Pressing, J. (1984). Cognitive processes in improvisation. Adv. Psychol. 19, 345–363.
doi: 10.1016/s0166-4115(08)62358-4
Racy, A. J. (1991). Creativity and ambience: an ecstatic feedback model from Arab
music. World Music 33, 7–28.
Racy, A. J. (2000). The many faces of improvisation: the Arab Taqāsı̄m as a musical
symbol. Ethnomusicology 44, 302–320. doi: 10.2307/852534
Rose, S., MacDonald, R., and Collins, D. (2012). “Improvisation as real-time
composition,” in The Act of Musical Composition: Studies in the Creative
Process, ed. D. Collins (London: Ashgate Publishing), 187–213. doi: 10.4324/
9781315612256
Sarath, E. (1996). A new look at improvisation. Journal of Music Theory 40, 1–38.
doi: 10.2307/843921
Sawyer, R. K., John-Steiner, V., Csikszentmihalyi, M., Moran, S., Feldman, D. H.,
Gardner, H., et al. (2003). Creativity and Development. New York, NY: Oxford
University Press.
Schiavio, A., and Benedek, M. (2020). Dimensions of musical creativity. Front.
Neurosci. 14:1208. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2020.578932
Shannon, J. H. (2003). Emotion, performance, and temporality in Arab music:
reflections on Tarab. Cult. Anthropol. 18, 72–98. doi: 10.1525/can.2003.18.1.72
Sloboda, J. A. (1986). The Musical Mind. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Solis, G., and Nettl, B. (2009). Musical Improvisation: Art, Education, and Society.
Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press.
Sorce Keller, M., and Barwick, L. (eds) (2012). “Thoughts on music and migration,”
in Italy in Australia’s Musical Landscape, (Melbourne: Lyrebird), 225–231.
Touma, H. H. (1971). The maqam phenomenon: an improvisation technique in the
music of the Middle East. Ethnomusicology 15, 38–48. doi: 10.2307/850386
Van der Schyff, D., Schiavio, A., Walton, A., Velardo, V., and Chemero, A. (2018).
Musical creativity and the embodied mind: exploring the possibilities of 4E
cognition and dynamical systems theory. Music Sci. 1:2059204318792319.
Villarreal, M. F., Cerquetti, D., Caruso, S., Schwarcz López, Aranguren, V.,
Gerschcovich, E. R., et al. (2013). Neural correlates of musical creativity:
differences between high and low creative subjects. PLoS One 8:e75427. doi:
10.1371/journal.pone.0075427
Watson, C. (2012). How Musicians Develop the Ability to Improvise: A CrossCultural Comparison of Skill Development in the Egyptian, Hindustani Classical,
and Jazz Traditions. PhD Dissertation. Sydney NSW: University of New South
Wales.
Baily, J., and Collyer, M. (2006). Introduction: music and migration. J. Ethnic
Migrat. Stud. 32, 167–182.
Beaty, R. E., Smeekens, B. A., Silvia, P. J., Hodges, D. A., and Kane, M. J. (2013).
A first look at the role of domain-general cognitive and creative abilities in jazz
improvisation. Psychomusicol. Music Mind Brain 23, 262–268. doi: 10.1037/
a0034968
Bishop, L. (2018). Collaborative musical creativity: how ensembles coordinate
spontaneity. Front. Psychol. 9:1285. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01285
Boyatzis, R. E. (1998). Transforming Qualitative Information: Thematic Analysis
and Code Development. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Braun, V., and Clarke, V. (2006). Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qual. Res.
Psychol. 3, 77–101. doi: 10.1191/1478088706qp063oa
Burnard, P. (2012a). Musical Creativities in Practice. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
Burnard, P. (2012b). “Rethinking “musical creativity” and the notion of
multiple creativities in music,” in Musical Creativity: Insights From Music
Education Research, ed. O. Odena (Aldershot, Hants: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.),
5–28.
Campbell, P. S. (1990). Crosscultural perspectives of musical creativity. Music Educ.
J. 76, 43–46. doi: 10.2307/3401077
Clarke, E. F., and Doffman, M. (eds) (2017). Distributed Creativity: Collaboration
and Improvisation in Contemporary Music, Vol. 1. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
Crow, B. (2008). Changing conceptions of educational creativity: a study of student
teachers’ experience of musical creativity. Music Educ. Res. 10, 373–388. doi:
10.1080/14613800802280126
Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1996). Creativity: Flow and the Psychology of Discovery and
Invention. New York, NY: HarperPerennial.
Deliège, I., and Wiggins, G. A. (2006). Musical Creativity: Multidisciplinary
Research in Theory and Practice. Hove: Psychology Press.
Glãveanu, V. P. (2019). Measuring creativity across cultures: epistemological and
methodological considerations. Psychol. Aesthet. Creat. Arts 13, 227–232. doi:
10.1037/aca0000216
Goldman, A. L. (2019). Beyond the Continuum: Towards a Typology of
Improvisatory Processes. Available online at: https://legacy.societymusictheory.
org/files/2019_handouts/goldman-handout-0044.pdf (accessed November 25,
2020).
Hargreaves, D. J. (2012). Musical imagination: perception and production,
beauty and creativity. Psychol. Music 40, 539–557. doi: 10.1177/030573561244
4893
Hargreaves, D. J., Hargreaves, J. J., and North, A. C. (2011). “Imagination and
creativity in music listening,” in Musical Imaginations: Multidisciplinary
Perspectives on Creativity, Performance and Perception, eds D. Hargreaves,
D. Miell, and R. MacDonald (United Kingdom: Oxford University
Press)
pp.
156–172.
doi:
10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199568086.003.
0010
Hayes, N. (1997). Theory-led Thematic Analysis: Social Identification in Small
Companies. Hove: Psychology Press.
Hill, J. (2018). Becoming Creative: Insights from Musicians in a Diverse World.
New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Karlsen, S. (2011). Using musical agency as a lens: researching music education
from the angle of experience. Res. Stud. Music Educ. 33, 107–121. doi: 10.1177/
1321103x11422005
Kenny, A. (2014). ‘Collaborative creativity’within a jazz ensemble as a musical
and social practice. Think. Skills Creat. 13, 1–8. doi: 10.1016/j.tsc.2014.
02.002
Kim, J.-A. (2017). » Cross-cultural music making «: concepts, conditions and
perspectives. Int. Rev. Aesthet. Sociol. Music 48, 19–32.
Lehmann, A. C. (2005). “Komposition und improvisation: generative
musikalische performanz [Composition and improvisation: generative
musical performance],” in Allgemeine Musikpsychologie, eds T. H. Stoffer and
R. Oerter (Göttingen: Hogrefe), 913–954.
Lehmann, A. C., and Kopiez, R. (2002). “Revisiting composition and improvisation
with a historical perspective,” in Proceedings of the 10th Anniversary Conference
of the European Society for the Cognitive Sciences of Music (ESCOM): Musical
Creativity, Liège, Belgium, Citeseer, 5–8.
Lehmann, A. C., and Kopiez, R. (2010). The difficulty of discerning between
composed and improvised music. Music. Sci. 14, 113–129. doi: 10.1177/
10298649100140s208
Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.org
Conflict of Interest: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the
absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a
potential conflict of interest.
Copyright © 2021 Alkaei and Küssner. This is an open-access article distributed
under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use,
distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original
author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication
in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use,
distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
11
June 2021 | Volume 12 | Article 640409