Ottoman and Arabic music is based on “makam theory” which is extremely rich and complex. But there is one makam that I find so evocative that an initial few notes powerfully invites more exploration. So I’ve offered one possible initial statement, and invite you to do the rest!

It’s a prompt for creativity, so feel free to change anything: transpose it, use a different time signature, rise up from tonic with a series of notes rather than one big leap, whatever. What is essential to Huseyni is that you

In Turkish and Arabic, the second (here, B) is microtonally flat, particularly when a melody descends to the tonic. Since this minor scale is really a five-step minor tetrachord based on A, with a four-step minor tetrachord stacked on top (rooted on E), the second of this upper tetrachord (F#) also benefits from being microtonally flat. If you have a fretless or otherwise non-tempered instrument, try these to bring out additional color. But even if you can’t, a Western-tempered minor scale still gives lots of room to experiment.

Here are some great examples of Huseyni in action:

Have fun!

Jim Garrett