Folk music is the music of a nation, culture or ethnic group. 
Each such group has its own characteristics, which includes such things 
as behavior, food, language, history, traditions, etc. The music and 
dance reflect these aspects and, as aesthetics, are communicated with 
soul. Folk music is almost like a language that tells of the various 
victories, hardships, sorrows and other survival factors that have 
transpired, usually over centuries. This gets passed down from 
generation to generation, without the formalities of academics and, most
 often, not in written form. But it is ingrained in the hearts of its 
people. It tends to apply to all of its people, regardless of social 
statuses or classes, and is therefore embracive but unique to its group.
The
 melodies are usually simple and could be no more than four notes. They 
are often repetitive with very simple harmonies and little to no 
modulation to other keys. However, some can have complicated rhythmic 
patterns, such as West African and Indian folk music. The instruments 
are unique, but quite often very similar or even the same in neighboring
 regions, such as the Chinese sanxian and the Japanese shamisen. 
However, the essence of each culture's music has its own characteristic,
 just like language. While there are nuances of each micro-region of a 
nation or area, just like a language and its dialects, they each possess
 the unique essence of their nation or area.
Listen to a 
traditional Persian folk tune and then an Irish one, or a Mongolian song
 and then a Balinese one. You will instantly note the flavor of each 
one.
Being simplistic does not mean that the artistic value of 
folk music is lost. It has its own intrinsic aesthetic value as it comes
 from the soul of the people and is performed with emotion, spirit and 
meaning. It tells a story.
Many classical composers have 
incorporated the folk melodies from their own cultures to their 
masterpiece compositions, such as Alexander Borodin (Russian) or Aram 
Khatchaturian (Armenian). In such a case, one cannot look at that piece 
as being folk music anymore, but instead, it becomes a more refined 
creation. It sophisticates into something finer and more worldly as 
opposed to something just localized. Its aesthetic quality is of a 
different nature.
However, certain world-class classical composers
 have incorporated folk elements from other cultures outside their own 
to their own compositions. We hear Russian, Chinese and Spanish elements
 by composers who are not of those ethnicities. Inspired by various 
melodies, masterpieces have been created. Again, one has to look at this
 from another perspective.
A great analogy would be Da Vinci's The
 Last Supper. This is strictly a work of fine art but it is obviously 
inspired by ancient cultural phenomena. Though, it does not reflect the 
exact customs and aspects of that culture in the way folk art would. The
 figures of that work all possess Western European features. The bread 
on the table is shown as leavened. These are peculiarities, perhaps even
 anachronisms, included by the creative license of the artist, which 
immediately show this work to be one of a fine art composition and not 
just a cultural artifact. The same principle may happen in music too, as
 in any other form of art.
Folk music is one of the key essences 
of a people, and is the aesthetic beauty that binds a culture. And this 
has expanded into being a major influence on music of an international 
level, which makes it even more special.






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