Necdet Yaşar


Necdet Yaşar was a Turkish tanbur lute player and teacher. A founding member of the Istanbul State Turkish Music Ensemble, he performed throughout the world as a cultural ambassador for Turkey and taught twice at the University of Washington. In 1991, the Turkish government awarded him the title of "National Artist".

Overview

In 1930, Necdet Yaşar was born in Nizip, a small town near Gaziantep, Turkey. He graduated from the School of Economics, Istanbul University.Aksoy 2005, op. cit.
Professor Robert Garfias, Director of the Ethnomusicology Program at the University of Washington --on the recommendation of graduate student Karl Signell—appointed Yaşar as Visiting Artist for 1972-73 academic year . Garfias again appointed Yaşar, together with the noted ney master Niyazi Sayın as University of Washington Visiting Artists for 1980-81 .
While in residence at the University of Washington, Yaşar gave lectures on the makam system of Ottoman classical music.
In 1972, Yaşar and Signell attended the annual meeting of the Society for Ethnomusicology where Yaşar in effect introduced the largely unknown Turkish Classical Music to ethnomusicologists by talking and performing on the tanbur
In 1981 he met Alan Prosser from England. He agreed to teach Alan and his children the complete makam list and system. This happened over the next 7 years. All the lessons were tape recorded. Yaşar later asked Alan to help preserve the true knowledge of the makams and the Traditional Turkish Art Music Society of Great Britain was started. Yaşar also asked Alan and his children to play a recital on Turkish Television to help with the revival of interest in the ancient makam system. As well as this he asked Alan to write to the Turkish Culture Minister to help establish Yaşar's music group officially.
In 1988, Yaşar was a founding member of the Istanbul State Turkish Music Ensemble. He directed it until 1995 when he retired.
In 1991, the Turkish government awarded him the title of "National Artist". at Kultur.gov.tr
In small and large ensembles, including his own "The Necdet Yasar Ensemble", he has performed throughout the world, in Europe, East Asia, and North America, as a concert artist and ambassador of Turkish classical music.
Yaşar is noted for his command of the Turkish makam melodic modes, his influential tanbur techniques, and the construction of his taksim improvisations; as described by fRoots magazine, "Yaşar's technical mastery is absolute, in particular his use of the range of plectrum techniques that is at the heart of tanbur playing. However, as a musician, what most distinguishes him is his unparalleled knowledge of and insight into the Turkish classical repertoire and the improvisational possibilities presented by its modal system. Yasar is one of those few artists who are both guided by and themselves guide tradition."William 2005, op. cit. He "belongs to a musical lineage going back to at least Tanburi Cemil Bey", and continued with Mesut Cemil, of whom he was the principal student.Aksoy 2002, op. cit. His taksimler solo improvisations and his dual improvisations with ney flutist Niyazi Sayın are noted for their sensitivity.
Experts cite two particular facets amongst all of his skills that make him amongst the most important musicians of his time and culture: his understanding of melodic movement that form the basis of traditional Turkish classical art music; he has even been called the "living embodiment of seyir today", and his understanding of how to employ the complex pitch-interval structure of Turkish classical music to a particular musical mode and piece; there is a theoretical definition of the musical pitch intervals used in this music, but there is wide acknowledgment amongst expert practictioners that good practice is not always in agreement with the theory, and Yaşar was widely consulted by even the most expert musicians about correct practice.
Yaşar died in Istanbul on October 24, 2017.