Egyptian music is a broad umbrella that encompasses classical tarab traditions, folk and regional styles, religious chant, and modern popular forms that emerged from Cairo’s recording and film industries.
Its melodic language is built on the maqam system, using scalar “ajnas” and microtonal intervals to create characteristic colors such as Rast, Bayati, Hijaz, Saba, Kurd, and Ajam. Rhythm is organized in cyclical iqaʿat (patterns) like Maqsum, Baladi, Saʿidi, Malfuf, Wahda, Samaʿi Thaqil (10/8) and others.
Core timbres come from the takht and firqa ensembles—oud, qanun, nay, riqq, tabla (darabukka), violin/kaman, with mizmar, rababa, kawala, and arghul in folk settings—while later pop integrates accordion, keyboards, guitars, drum kits, synths, and samplers. Performance features vocal melisma, heterophony, and improvisations such as taqsim, layali, and mawwal.
From the early 20th-century nahda (renaissance) through the mid‑century “golden age” of long songs and film musicals, to shaabi street music and today’s mahraganat and hip‑hop, Egyptian music has continually shaped and reflected culture across the Arabic‑speaking world.