The oud: a short guide to a long history

Ouds from the Cantigas de Santa Maria, c. 1257–83.

The oud or, in Arabic, al-ʿūd, is probably best known in the west for being the predecessor of the European lute; but it does have an independent life of its own in the history of early music, rooted in medieval cultural exchange between east and west. We know, for example, that ouds played an important part in the musical life of the royal court of Castile (in modern Spain) in the 13th century and, by extension, almost certainly Iberian musical life in general. But was the oud fretted, unfretted, or both? How did western musicians come to play an eastern instrument? And did the oud really originate in desiccated human remains?

What is an oud?

The word oud in Arabic, al-ʿūd, means literally the wood. The back is made of several strips of bent wood, glued together to form a bowl, with a flat wooden soundboard. In common with all early plucked instruments, the oud has a rosette or rose, a decorative carved sound hole. The wood may seem an obvious and prosaic name for an instrument, possibly so named to indicate a wooden soundboard rather than one made from a stretched animal skin.

It is strung in courses (pairs of strings) made of gut, processed from the small intestines of sheep, as most instrument strings were in the medieval period. There were four courses until the 15th century, when a fifth course was added; and it was played with a plectrum made from an eagle quill.

Origins    

There is a traditional story that Lamak, sixth grandson of Adam (the very first one), hung the remains of his son in a tree and used the desiccated skeleton to form the world’s first oud. The angle of the foot from the leg explains the bent peg box. If you’re conversant with the English song tradition and its American offshoots, this will be a familiar theme: there are similarly plenty of traditional songs where female corpses are made into fiddles, harps and banjos.

No one knows for sure how far the oud dates back, and whether its origins are in Persia, Arabia, or elsewhere. It belongs to what we may loosely call a ‘family’ of similar instruments, but tracing the relationships between different branches of a putative and disputable family tree is fraught with difficulties, and we should beware of assumptive claims which lack clear evidence.

Depending on what you are prepared to believe, the oud may first have appeared between 3500 and 3200 BCE, but they’re such vague depictions that they could be almost anything. The first evidence of instruments we can really say are ouds are in the art of the Sassanid era of Iran, the last Iranian empire before the rise of Islam, from CE 224 to 651.

An image on the left of something or other from Mesopotamia, 3500–3200 B.C. While the British Museum, who holds the artefact, would like the claim this is the earliest depiction of an oud, this vague outline of a figure could just as well be holding a fishing rod or a clothes hanger. Middle and right are two very clear oud players depicted on a metal cup in the Sassanid era of Iran, A.D. 224–651.
An image on the left of something or other from Mesopotamia, 3500–3200 BCE.
While the British Museum, who holds the artefact, would like to claim this is the
earliest depiction of an oud, this vague outline of a figure could just as well be
holding a fishing rod or a clothes hanger. Middle and right are two very clear
oud players on a metal cup in the Sassanid era of Iran, CE 224–651.

East and west

We usually take early music to mean medieval, renaissance and baroque western music, but there is a good reason for including the oud: then as now, those geographic, cultural and musical boundaries are porous and, especially in medieval music, distinctions between east and west can soon become impossible to pin down. In the middle ages, easterners and westeners were not only knocking seven bells out of each other in the Crusades, they were also trading and engaging in fruitful cultural exchange.

Alfonso X, “The Wise”, 1221-1284, was King of Castile and other regions in modern day Spain and Portugal, and nothing illustrates the spread of the oud from east to west better than his reign – quite literally, illustrates. During his reign he wrote and commissioned a large number of books, with subjects ranging from art and literature to scientific texts translated into Castillian from Arabic originals. The most significant of Alfonso’s books for our purpose is the Cantigas de Santa María, a collection of 420 songs in praise of the Virgin Mary, written by Alfonso, aided by anonymous courtiers. (Click here for an article about the composition of the Cantigas.) His melodies were adapted from sacred sources or popular melodies from both sides of the Pyrenees, including some derived from Provençal troubadour songs. The Cantigas, written c. 1257–1283, are richly illustrated with pictures of musicians, giving us much information about the instruments of the day. Though the oud is an eastern instrument, entering Europe in the 9th century via Moorish rule in Iberia, one striking feature of the depiction of the three ouds in the Cantigas is that they are all played by western Christian musicians. Two of these ouds are at the head of this article, the third is below.

To fret or not to fret

Though some parts of the oud-playing world, such as Iran, had fretted ouds all the way from the 10th to 17th centuries, they were always in a minority. For most of its history and in most places, the oud has been fretless and, even in Iran, the abandonment of frets started to take place in the 16th century.

In 1283, Alfonso X commissioned a book of chess endgame problems, from which the illustration on the left comes. We see a woman in Arab clothes on the left of the board (notice the henna-decorated fingers), a woman in Christian clothes on the right of the board and, on the far left of the picture, a Christian oud player, playing with a quill and what certainly appears to be a fretted neck. The two ouds in the illustration that heads this article, taken from the Cantigas de Santa Maria, 1260–80, also commissioned by Alfonso, are fretless, as is the one above right, the placing and patterns of the lines on the neck showing them to be clearly decorative.
In 1283, Alfonso X commissioned a book of chess endgame problems, from which the
illustration on the left comes. We see a woman in Arab clothes on the left of the board,
with henna-decorated fingers, a woman in Christian clothes on the right of the board and,
on the far left of the picture, a fermale oud player, playing with a quill. The different
colours of the vertical lines on the neck of her instrument indicate fingerboard decoration
rather than frets. Looking at the single rose instead of the oud’s multiple roses and the more
lute-like peg box, it is tempting to describe this as a transitional instrument, a proto-lute.
The two ouds in the illustration that heads this article are fretless, taken from the
Cantigas de Santa Maria, 1257–83, as is the one above right, the placing and patterns
of the lines on the neck showing them to be clearly decorative.
Cantiga353
Click picture to play – opens in new window.
A dance on Cantiga 353: Quen a omagen da Virgen from the
Cantigas de Santa Maria, played on two Cantigas instruments by
The Night Watch: Ian Pittaway on oud and Andy Casserley on bagpipe.

The spread and popularity of the oud

After uncertain origins, the popularity of the oud spread across the Mediterranean, the Middle East and north and east Africa, where it remains popular to this day.

By between 1300 and 1340 the oud had become modified enough by Europeans to become a different and distinct instrument, the medieval lute. By a little after c. 1400, western lutes were increasingly fretted and by 1481 the medieval lute had developed into the renaissance lute, the most important western instrument of the period, by then mirroring the importance of the oud in the east. To pick up the next part of the story and read about the medieval, renaissance and baroque lute, click here.

 

© Ian Pittaway. Not to be reproduced in any form without permission. All rights reserved.

7 thoughts on “The oud: a short guide to a long history

  • 5th January 2016 at 1:09 pm
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    Do you have a view on the Sufi specialist Sayeed Idris Shah’s assertion that the original troubadours were from 10th century (Christian calendar) Spain, and that the word Troubadour derives from the Arabic roots TRB (to play) and OUD? Western iconography may suggest otherwise, but the etymology feels convincing to me.

    Reply
  • 5th January 2016 at 2:22 pm
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    Hello, Meic. I haven’t heard that idea before. I’d need to be convinced that the French ‘troubadour’ derives from the Arabic ‘play wood’. I know there were troubadour connections with Spain and Italy, so it’s not impossible, and of course there were so many medieval musical connections between east and west. Often the most straightforward answer is the right one, so I’m more convinced by the simpler and more obvious evolution from ‘trobador’ (Old Provençal) meaning someone who finds or invents musically, itself probably derived from ‘tropare’ (Vulgar Latin), meaning to compose or sing, which is where we get ‘trope’, a figure of speech or motif. Either are possible, but Sayeed Idris Shah’s assertion seems a little like special pleading to me and the Provençal connection seems more natural linguistically and geographically. I wonder what you make of that.

    I cover the troubadours a little in my article on the vielle, which you may have seen.

    Reply
    • 5th January 2016 at 2:41 pm
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      As I understand Shah (it’s some years since I read the book) TRB OUD R became “trobador” in Spanish also meaning “finder” and spread to Provencal, where the verbal connection to the lute was lost and the finder use was transliterated directly from Langue d’Oc to “trouvere” in Langue d’Oil. Given the pleasure the Moors and Sufis took in punning, the convergence seems pausible to me, and the crossword setter in me finds the idea delightfuil, but I’m not a scholar of historical philology.
      I did read the articles (both of them!) on the vielle, and certainly the western iconography places the fiddle at the heart of troubadour culture in Provence.

      Hope to see you when the Night Watch play the Lewes Folk Club later in the year.

      Reply
  • 5th January 2016 at 3:24 pm
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    Oh, I see, Meic, so Shah takes the Old Provençal into account. I’m not a scholar of historical philology, either, but that’s an intriguing theory. It would be interesting to know if he has any evidence for the connection, factual or conjectural, or if he can trace cultural and musical connections as well as linguistic ones.

    Yes, it will be great to see you at Lewes Folk Club.

    Reply
  • 27th February 2016 at 8:25 pm
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    It is clear that many early Ouds had frets, and that the Oud eventually lost its frets. In ancient times, ouds of both fretted and un-fretted types were in use. The great theorist al-Farabi (10th century) used the fretting of the oud to analyse the tonal system. Safavid [Persian] miniatures occasionally portray fretted ouds, but the Ottoman instruments of that period seem to have been unfretted. During the 16th century the Ottoman Empire ruled the entire Middle East and North Africa with the exception of Iran and Morocco. The unfretted oud spread with Ottoman cultural influence in the region, which extended to the local musical traditions in the provinces. When playing Western style medieval music with an Oud, I prefer to tie on frets. This has proven to be an historically informed practice.

    Reply
  • 4th February 2018 at 1:28 pm
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    Hi, good article! I wanted to comment on the Mesopotamian image of the ‘something or other’ that the British Museum claims is a lute. I’ve been doing my PhD on long neck lutes and spent my first year researching the ancient Mesopotamian images, and I’m convinced that that figure is not playing a lute of any kind! The whole cylinder seal depicts a royal barge called a maghur that kings of the time would use to travel from city to city in their domains via the canals that provided irrigation and served as ‘roadways’–maintaining these was one of the king’s main tasks in that rather arid region. The seal shows fairly typical iconography for that subject: there’s a standing man in front, a punter, who uses his long pole to push the barge along and move objects out of the way. In the middle there’s a bull with a square throne on its back–a symbol of the king himself who often had the title ‘Wild Bull of the Mountain’, and an actual bull who would be the sacrifice at temple rites in the city the king was traveling to. At the rear of the boat is this guy, and what he’s the rudder man using an oar to guide the barge in the right direction. If you look at any other cylinder seal image from then, or in fact any image of these or similar barges (I’ve seen some from Byzantine manuscripts done 3,000 years later!), you’ll see basically the same layout: punter in front, enclosed area or important passenger in the middle, rudder man at the back, in the same posture. The reed boats used by Marsh Arabs in southern Iraq today use the same setup. Certain scholars, eager to find a much earlier date for the first lute instruments than what we have (the Akkadian era, c. 2334-2150 BCE) have unfortunately seized on the lute interpretation in spite of how easy it is to show otherwise. I know, I’m a jerk, raining on their parade, but I also have a degree in Art History so it’s my professional duty… 🙂 :/

    Reply
  • 4th February 2018 at 10:39 pm
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    Hello, Jeffrey. Mesopotamian royal barges are well outside my area of knowledge! I’m therefore very pleased that you’ve given additional information, so for me you are far from being “a jerk”, and I’m grateful for your contribution in the line of your “professional duty”! Thank you. Ian

    Reply

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