Showing posts with label Tambur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tambur. Show all posts

16.8.15

It takes two...

  
Sohrab PourNazeri
Nocturnal Gypsy Wind

2010

Tracks:

01 - Shabgard
02 - Kooliye Baad
03 - Saharkhani
04 - Rakhse Baad

Sohrab PourNazeri: Tanbour
Roubik Aroutzian: Duduk

♫☆`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•♫☆`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•☆♫

.ღ•:*´♥`*:•ღ. 

♫☆`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•☆♫`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•☆♫

  
 'Gypsy Wind's Nightwatch', ... by internationally acclaimed Iranian musician Sohrab Pournazeri was released ...

It was recorded in 2010 in Los Angeles, the US, Musicema reported.

The album features 'tanbur' player, Pournazeri, in duet with accomplished Armenian duduk player Roubik Aroutzian.

Pournazeri was born in 1983 in Kermanshah. His father, Keykhosro Pournazeri was a well-known musician who played 'tanbur' and tar. Keykhosro was the founder of the first ensemble of 'tanbur'. He introduced this instrument to the urban musical culture of Iran. His ensemble also introduced several musicians who later became noted artists of Persian music.

Sohrab began studying 'tanbur' and 'daf' from a very early age and later went on to 'tar' and 'setar' before finding his true interest by taking up 'kamancheh'.

His first choice was the folk instrument 'tanbur' due to his orientation, but he added 'kamancheh' to improve his career as Iranian classical musician. At the age of 15, he teamed up with 'Shamss' ensemble in performing before audiences.

Sohrab learned 'tanbur' from his father, Keykhosro, 'kamancheh' from Ardeshir Kamkar, vocalization from Hamid Reza Nourbakhsh.
  
  
Sohrab Pournazeri, virtuoso of the tanbour and the kamancheh, is a phenomenon in modern Iranian music. He is a singer and instrumentalist whose music has transcended the borders of Iran, fusing with cultures and artists as far and wide as China and the United States. His talent and courage have been acknowledged as extraordinary by no less than Mohammad Reza Shajarian, the great master of Iranian music.

Sohrab was born in 1982 to the musical Pournazeri family. His father Kaykhosro Pournazeri is one of Iran’s most influential musicians and musicologists, and his brother Tahmoures has sparked a new movement in Iranian music through his performances and compositions.

Music was Sohrab’s mother tongue; he learned it as other children learn to speak. At age 2 he would play his father’s tanbour (whose body was larger than his) and sing the poetry of Rumi and Hafez. At age 13 he was introduced to the stage as part of the Shams Ensemble, and today he is one of the core members of the group. Also at age 13, Sohrab began studying kamancheh with Ardeshir Kamkar, and because of his musical talent was able to begin performing as a soloist with the Shams Ensemble after just two years of study.

While following in the footsteps of his musical family, Sohrab has developed distinct and idiosyncratic instrumental, vocal and compositional techniques that have enabled him to steer the distinct Pournazeri musical form–with its emphasis on passion, emotion and inventiveness–toward new horizons.

Sohrab is well versed in the regional music of his native Iran, as well as in Western classical music, and he holds a degree in music performance. As an instrumental soloist and vocalist, Sohrab has collaborated with artists and ensembles worldwide, including Ostad Shajarian, Shujaat Hussain Khan, the Beyond Borders Project and the Pacific Symphony Orchestra.
  
 

Does anyone have any info about Roubik Aroutzian?!
  

  

24.6.13

My tambur

  
Nur Muhämmät Tursun
Tämbürum
  
Tracks:
1. Tämbürum
2. Tämbürum
 3. Tämbürum
 4. Tämbürum
5. Tämbürum

  ♫☆`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•♫☆`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•☆♫

.ღ•:*´♥`*:•ღ.

♫☆`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•☆♫`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•☆♫
   
Nur Muhemmet Tursun
(10/01/1957 - 12/19/2004)
   
 Image
  
Mr. Tursun is a famous Uyghur folk music player. He is famous for his mastering the Uyghur music instrument "Tembur"
His music CDs has entertained thousand Uyghur households and enriched their lives. Mr. Tursun will honored by his great contribution to Modern folk music.
~*~

Biography of Nur Muhämmät Tursun

by Rachel Harris

Image

Nur Muhämmät Tursun was born and raised in Ghulja in a musician family, one of eleven children, several others of whom have also become professional musicians. He was one of the Uyghur region’s most prominent instrumentalists until his untimely death in 2004. His father worked for the Military Ensemble and later for the Ghulja Theatre. Recognising his son’s talent he trained Nur on the satar, an unusual choice of instrument in Ghulja. According to Nur’s sister, Sanubar Tursun, their father once had an argument with a certain famous Ghulja musician who questioned their father’s musical skill. He was bitter, and once when drinking swore that his son would be a greater musician than he who had insulted him. When their father died in 1979 Nur felt an obligation to fulfil his wish. He practised tämbür sixteen hours a day, saying his father wanted him to be a famous tämbür player.

Nur Muhämmät joined the Xinjiang song-and-dance troupe and did indeed come to be widely regarded as the finest tämbür player in the Uyghur region, with extraordinary virtuoso technique and a large repertoire of folk and classical pieces. He was also one of the very few musicians to play the satar seriously, and on this instrument he also excelled. He knew much of the Ili Muqam repertoire, and pioneered the solo instrumental performance of sections of the Muqam. He was also known for his innovative style of playing and his explorations of new repertoires. He released a series of cassettes, CDs and VCDs, including solo instrumental recordings and group recordings with his sister, the much-loved singer Sanubar Tursun.

A late CD released in 2003, ‘Kün wä Tün’ (Day and Night), is a fine example of his fusion experiments. It juxtaposes tämbür and satar renditions of popular Spanish tunes and Hindi film tunes, and includes a radical reinterpretation of a piece at the heart of the classical Uyghur repertoire, ‘Äjäm’, with synthesiser accompaniment. Nur Muhämmät was also well known for introducing new playing techniques on the tämbür, notably an idiosyncratic strumming of all three courses of stopped strings simultaneously to produce tuned chords, a technique which he claimed to have borrowed from popular flamenco guitar. He was probably the first Uyghur musician to be interested in flamenco, and contributed to its widespread popularity in the Uyghur region in the 1990s. Some of his more traditional-style releases have also been very popular, notably Tämbürum (My tämbür).

Nur was expelled from the Xinjiang song-and-dance troupe in 2002 following his involvement in a New Year concert where an audience member stood up and recited a poem referring to the coming of Spring. This was labelled a ‘separatist incident’. Following this Nur was also refused permission to travel abroad, and was thus unable to achieve his ambition of gaining recognition on the world stage. However he leaves behind a lasting legacy through his recordings and his pupils, and his innovative and virtuosic style is now widely imitated across the Uyghur region as well as by Uyghurs in Central Asia.


source

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   Sanubar Tursun, her older brother Nur Muhemmet, and younger twin brothers Hesenjan and Husanjan, were born into a large family in the northern town of Ghulja (in Chinese: Yining) in the Ili valley. Sanubar and Nur Muhemmet released a series of VCDs (cheap digital video technology) in the 1990s featuring the Ili repertoire performed in new ways. The artistry of Sanubar’s vocals and the extraordinary virtuosity of Nur Muhemmet’s instrumental playing propelled them to instant recognition.


  
The term Tanbur, Tanbūr, Tanbura, Tambur, Tambura or Tanboor (Persian: تنبور‎) can refer to various long-necked, string instrument originating in the Southern or Central Asia (Mesopotamia and Persia/Iran).[1] According to the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, "terminology presents a complicated situation. Nowadays the term tanbur (or tambur) is applied to a variety of distinct and related long-necked string instruments used in art and folk traditions in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Turkey, Tajikestan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan.

 The Uyghur tembor is played in West China (Uyghurs). Its neck is very long and has five friction pegs. It has five metal strings that are in fact three courses, both first (fingered) and 3th are double.



Lost in the muqam follows Mahmut Mehmet, a Uyghur musician living in China's Xinjiang province. The Uyghurs are a Muslim ethnic minority losing many traditions under Chinese rule, even music is beginning to suffer. Mahmut began playing the tambur when he was eleven years old and studied with the late virtuoso Nurmahemmet Tursun, but despite his immense talent he is now struggling to find an audience. He makes a living performing at dinner parties and teaching young students but can his music survive in the ever changing and hostile environment of modern China?