As the first general introduction to the musical worlds of the successor states to Soviet
Central Asia, this admirable work fills an important gap. Moreover, it does so in an individual and
highly attractive way, eschewing the would-be objectivity of a dryly analytical monograph in favor
of a looser framework of travel accounts, each rich in specific and revelatory detail but, at the
same time, developing a series of thematic constants. To cover all of Central Asia in this way
would have been an impossible task, however, and what we are presented with is in essence an
exploration of widely separated and contrasting urban and rural areas of Uzbekistan supplemented
by forays into northern Tajikistan. Beginning in Tashkent, the itinerary proceeds successively
through Bukhara, Surxandarya, and Qashkandarya in the south, and Khorezm; then to Tajikistan
(the Upper Zaravshan and Yagnâb, and Shahristan); and finally (following the fortunes of
Bukharan Jewish émigré musicians) to New York.