Rembetika: Difference between revisions

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'''Rembetika''' (sometimes transliterated '''rebetika''' ([[Greek language|Greek]] τα ρεμπέτικα) is a kind of popular urban [[Greece|Greek]] music often compared to the [[United States|American]] [[blues]].<ref>Strictly speaking, rembetika are the individual musical works, rembetiko (Greek: ρεμπέτικο) being the genre, but the plural has come to be the standard form for both.</ref>  The musicians were known as rembetes (Greek: ρεμπέτης).
'''Rembetika''' (sometimes transliterated '''rebetika''' ([[Greek language|Greek]] τα ρεμπέτικα) is a kind of popular urban [[Greece|Greek]] music often compared to the [[United States|American]] [[blues]].<ref>Strictly speaking, rembetika are the individual musical works, rembetiko (Greek: ρεμπέτικο) being the genre, but the plural has come to be the standard form for both.</ref>  The musicians were known as rembetes (Greek: ρεμπέτης).
Rembetika has its roots in the late-nineteenth-century music of the Greek community in [[Smyrna]].


==Notes==
==Notes==

Revision as of 12:58, 3 April 2007

Rembetika (sometimes transliterated rebetika (Greek τα ρεμπέτικα) is a kind of popular urban Greek music often compared to the American blues.[1] The musicians were known as rembetes (Greek: ρεμπέτης).

Rembetika has its roots in the late-nineteenth-century music of the Greek community in Smyrna.

Notes

  1. Strictly speaking, rembetika are the individual musical works, rembetiko (Greek: ρεμπέτικο) being the genre, but the plural has come to be the standard form for both.

Reading

  • Gail Holst Road to Rembetika: Music of the Greek Sub-culture. Athens: Denise Harvey, 1975. ISBN 960-7120-07-8

External links