Piyanist Ibrahim Sen - Sen Ciftetelli Husnusen... 【Limited Time】
The name “Hüsnü Şen” attached to the piece suggests a possible compositional credit or a lyrical origin. “Hüsnü” is a masculine Turkish given name (meaning “beauty” or “virtue”), while “Şen” means “joyful” or “merry.” It is likely that “Hüsnü Şen” refers to a specific thematic motif or a tribute to a fellow musician (perhaps a clarinetist or vocalist), but over time, the title merged with the rhythmic descriptor “Şen Çiftetelli.” In the popular consciousness, Ibrahim Sen owns this melody. To say “Çiftetelli” is to invoke a specific, unmistakable rhythm. The word itself translates to “double stringed” (referring to a bowed instrument technique), but musically, it denotes a 4/4 or 8/4 rhythmic cycle with a distinct düms and teks (low and high drum sounds). The classic Çiftetelli pattern is often written as: Düm teka teka Düm tek / Düm teka teka Düm tek .
Furthermore, the piece represents a rare moment of in Turkish music. Much of the classical fasıl repertoire is melancholic ( hüzün ), dealing with lost love or existential longing. Sen’s piece has no melancholy. It is pure rhythm, pure şen . In a culture that reveres sadness ( hüzün ) as a high aesthetic, Ibrahim Sen’s “Şen Çiftetelli” is a populist rebellion—a reminder that the Anatolian spirit also knows how to laugh. Legacy: The Digitized Folk Hero In the 21st century, “Şen Çiftetelli” has found a second life. With the advent of YouTube and streaming, Piyanist Ibrahim Sen’s grainy, mono recordings have become viral sensations. Turkish wedding DJs sample the piano riff. Young bateri (drum) students learn the pattern by ear from Sen’s records. The piece has even crossed over into global “Oriental dance” playlists, often mislabeled as “Arabic Belly Dance,” to the chagrin of purists. PIYANIST IBRAHIM SEN - Sen Ciftetelli husnusen...
However, Sen did not use the piano to play Chopin or Mozart. He used it to play Oyun Havaları (dance tunes). He developed a percussive, glissando-heavy technique where the piano mimicked the darbuka (goblet drum) and the klarnet . In recordings of “Şen Çiftetelli,” one hears not a delicate classical touch, but a hammering of the bass register to drive the rhythm, while the right hand dances through the Hicaz or Uşşak makams (modes) with a staccato brightness. He was, in essence, a one-man fasıl orchestra. The name “Hüsnü Şen” attached to the piece