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・ Music of Andalusia
・ Music of Andhra Pradesh
・ Music of Andorra
・ Music of Angel Beats!
・ Music of Angola
・ Music of Anguilla
・ Music of Anhui
・ Music of Annapolis
・ Music of Antigua and Barbuda
・ Music of Apulia
・ Music of Aquitaine
・ Music of Aragon
・ Music of Argentina
・ Music of Arizona
・ Music of Arkansas
Music of Armenia
・ Music of Armenia (website)
・ Music of Arunachal Pradesh
・ Music of Asia
・ Music of Assam
・ Music of Athens, Georgia
・ Music of Atlanta
・ Music of Austin, Texas
・ Music of Australia
・ Music of Austria
・ Music of Auvergne
・ Music of Azerbaijan
・ Music of Badakhshan
・ Music of Bahrain
・ Music of Bali


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Music of Armenia : ウィキペディア英語版
Music of Armenia

The music of Armenia has its origins in the Armenian Highlands, where people traditionally sang popular folk songs. Armenia has a long musical tradition, that was primarily collected and developed by Komitas, a prominent priest and musicologist, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Armenian music has been presented internationally by composers Aram Khachaturian, Arno Babadjanian, duduk player Djivan Gasparyan, composer Ara Gevorgyan, producer DerHova, singers Sirusho, Eva Rivas and many others.
==Melodic basis==

Traditional Armenian folk music as well as Armenian church music is not based on the European tonal system but on a system of Tetrachords. The last note of one tetrachord also serves as the first note of the next tetrachord – which makes a lot of Armenian folk music more or less based on a theoretically endless scale.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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