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Shajarian, Greatest Living Maestro of Persian Singing

Shajarian, Greatest Living Maestro of Persian Singing

Born on September 23, 1940, in the northeastern city of Mashhad, Shajarian started recitation of the Holy Quran and singing at the age of five under the supervision of his father.

At the age of 12, he began studying Radif, the Iranian repertoire of classical melodic figures, with some of the prominent maestros of his time, including Ahmad Ebadi, Esmaeil Mehrtash, Abdollah Davami, and Nour-Ali Boroumand.

In 1959, Shajarian officially began his singing career at Radio Khorasan and rose to prominence across the country in the 1960s with his distinct style of singing.

Meanwhile, he continued learning different vocal styles from other virtuosos, including Reza Gholi Mirza Zelli, Fariborz Manouchehri, Ghamar Molouk Vaziri, Eghbal Azar, Taj Isfahani and Gholam Hossein Banan.

Shajarian has cited legendary Iranian tar musician Jalil Shahnaz as the most influential to his development, saying that Shahnaz’s playing style was what he most tried to mimic throughout his artistic life.

To better understand and perform the traditional repertoire, Shajarian also started playing the santour, a percussion-stringed Persian instrument, under the instruction of prominent virtuosos Jalal Akhbari and Faramarz Payvar.

The iconic vocalist continued his career in different spheres, including teaching at Tehran University’s Department of Fine Arts, working at National Radio and Television, conducting research on Iranian music, and creating a repertoire of recordings.

He has also collaborated with several other iconic Iranian musicians, including Pariviz Meshkatian, Mohammad Reza Lotfi, Hossein Alizadeh and Keyhan Kalhor, recording numerous historic albums and performing many famous concerts across the world, with the ensembles Aref, Sheyda, Ava and Shahnaz.

Collaboration with the ensembles Art and Culture, also known as Payvar, and Aref have been considered as some of the brightest episodes in Shajarian’s singing career.

Awards

Shajarian has received some of the world’s most prestigious awards for his legacy of art works, including UNESCO’s Golden Picasso Medal (1999), UNESCO’s Mozart Medal (2006), the French National Order of the Legion of Honour (2014), Iran’s National Radio and Television Golden Cup (1977), Iran’s Best Classical Vocalist (2000) and NPR’s 50 Great Voices (2010).

He was also nominated for Grammy Awards in Best World Music for his albums Without You in 2003 and Faryad in 2005.

Rabbana (Our Lord)

The inspiring works of Shajarian have put an unforgettable signature on the Iranian life and culture, becoming an inseparable part of the life of Iranians from different social strata.

For decades, Shajarian’s breathtaking performance of Rabbana prayer has been reminiscent of the holy month of Ramadan for Iranians.

He selected and combined four different Arabic verses of the Quran, each beginning with the phrase “Our Lord,” and sang it based on the Dastgah Segah, one of the seven musical modes in the Persian traditional music.

People listen to Rabbana during every Iftar ceremony when they want to break their fast. The prayer has been interwoven with every big family gathering and other religious festivals in Iran during the month of Ramadan.

Prominent Quran reciters, including the late iconic Egyptian reciter, Ragheb Mustafa Ghalwash, have praised the work as a unique masterpiece in the history of Quran recitation.

In May 2017, Iran’s Cultural Heritage Organization registered Shajarian’s Rabbana as part of the country’s national heritage.

Versatile artist

Apart from his enthusiasm for singing, Shajarian also devotes time to different other artistic activities, including composing music, playing various musical instruments, inventing new musical instruments, calligraphy and designing Japanese gardens.

He has done the calligraphy of the cover of several of his own albums. In November 2010, Shajarian displayed some of his calligraphy works at an exhibition in Tehran’s Vahdat Hall which showed the works of several contemporary Iranian calligraphy maestros.

Apart from composing music for some of his albums and playing several instruments, the maestro has invented several new musical instruments, including Sorahi, Shahr Ashoub, Saghar, Kereshmeh and Sabou.

In May 2011, Shajarian’s invented musical instruments were put on display at the Iranian Artists Forum in Tehran.

The iconic vocalist has also been campaigning to discover and train new talents in Persian singing, including in a 2007 nationwide program that aimed to take traditional Persian signing tests from numerous singers.

Shajarian’s son, Homayoun, and his daughter, Mojgan, are among the famous vocalists trained by the maestro.

The globally-renowned vocalist has also been engaged in several humanitarian activities, including the establishment of the Bam Garden of Art in the southern Iranian city of Bam, after the city was struck by a deadly earthquake in December 2003.

Battling cancer

In a Youtube message from Canada in March 2016, on the eve of Norouz – the Persian New Year – the artist hinted with a tinge of humor that he has been suffering from a disease, without elaborating on the details.

“I have been living with a guest that is my friend now for 15 years,” Shajarian said in the message, referring to his illness.

“I have stayed here (Canada) and cut my hair on his (my friend’s) order.”

“My friend and I need some more time to agree on some issues,” he added.

Later reports suggested that Shajarian has been fighting kidney cancer over the years, during which he had remained highly prolific.

Shajarian has continued his treatment in the US and Iran, with reports saying he is in the process of recovery.

Messenger for Iranian culture

Throughout his artistic career, Shajarian has mainly tried to distance himself from different established political viewpoints, stressing that he uses his voice to introduce the values of the Iranian culture to the world.

“My voice is part of the ancient culture of Iran, which seeks to remind the people of the world of the culture we have; the culture of humanity, the culture of love, peace and joy. We have no message other than friendship, love, life and happiness for the people,” he says in a documentary about his life.

Shajarian’s deep passion for the Persian poetry is one of the key elements in his artistic creations. In every single piece of his works, he meticulously selects poems from both classical and modern Persian poets based on the specific social conditions under which the song is created.

“Sometimes the richness of a poem takes me where I get intoxicated, until I realize I am singing for an audience,” he said in a 2015 speech in Tehran.

The maestro underlines the need for transcending beyond traditions in Persian music and at the same time maintaining the authenticity of the art, noting that art inevitably evolves according to the needs of its time.

Although Shajarian thinks that Iranian music has not been very well introduced to the global community, he has repeatedly expressed optimism over the future of the art and said that despite all the restrictions, the growing enthusiasm for music inside the Iranian society will eventually create major platforms for authentic Persian songs to be heard across the world.

OECD Upgrades Iran’s Risk Rating to 5

In a new report published in the wake of the OECD’s Country Risk Classification’s meeting on Friday, Iran managed to have its rating upgraded for a second consecutive year.
“Till two years ago, Iran’s rating in the country risk classifications stood at 7 which is the lowest in OECD’s ratings. But since 2016, with the efforts by the Organization for Investment Economic and Technical Assistance (OIETA) as well as Iran’s Foreign Ministry and Export Guarantee Fund of Iran (EGFI), the country managed to take long strides in economic progress upgrading its risk classifications from 7 to 6 in 2017,” a Farsi report by Khabar Online said.
The highest rating which Iran has recorded in the country risk classification is 4, which was made more than a decade ago.
Iran’s Minister of Industry, Mohammad Shariatmadari, said before the signing of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) between Iran and the six powers in 2015 that Iran’s rating had declined to 7 which inflicted heavy blows on the country’s economic exchanges with the outside world.
The Iranian minister also noted that the rating moved up to 6 in 2017 following the implementation of the JCPOA. “Now with a further notch for the second consecutive year, our rating has reached 5 in 2018.”
The Organization for Economic Cooperation & Development Country Risk Classification measures the country’s credit risk and the likelihood that a country will service its external debt. The index uses a scale of eight risk categories to determine a country’s credit risk.
“Reports by the International Monetary Fund on the economic conditions of countries, their foreign exchange reserves, capabilities to pay off external debts and financial records are among the main factors with a bearing on the rating of a country in the OECD’s Country Risk Classification,” the Iranian minister says.
According to Shariatmadari, Iran’s new rating plays a significant role in attracting foreign investments and improving the country’s status and image at the financial and international arenas.
For his part, the Governor of Central Bank of Iran Valiollah Seif praised Iran’s new upgrade saying the upgrade is the results of hard efforts by the government, banking system and businesspeople.
In a message on his Twitter account, Seif called for further coordination between all related economic organizations in Iran adding that the country should prepare itself for further economic reforms in future.
Meanwhile, Deputy Head of Export Guarantee Fund of Iran, Arash Sharaini, described the upgrade “a positive signal from the Europeans and a further indication of their interest in continued engagement with Iran within the framework of the nuclear deal.”
In an interview with the English-language Financial Tribune Daily, he added the upgrade reduces the cost of attracting foreign finance, and “as a result helps us increase our foreign exchange reserves.”
He underlined that Iran deserves a higher classification namely 3, or even 2 due to its reserves and low external debt.
According to a report by the International Monetary Fund released in February 2017, Iran’s official reserves were projected at $123.5 billion in 2016-17. Meanwhile, “the country’s total debt to GDP stood at 2.2%, which is lower than any other country in the world. Iran also recorded the highest economic growth in the world according to the global lender’s 2016 report – 12.5%.
Since the implementation of JCPOA in 2016, Iran has clinched several foreign finance contracts including two agreements worth $25 billion with China Development Bank and CITIC Trust, a no-cap deal with Russia’s Exim Bank, a €5 billion deal with Italy’s Invitalia Global Investment, a €1 billion deal with Austria’s Oberbank, a €500 million deal with Denmark’s Danske Bank and two contracts worth €13 billion with South Korea’s Exim Bank and K-Sure.

Iran Expresses Regret Over South Korea Hospital Fire

In a statement on Friday, Qassemi sympathized with the victims’ families and the Korean government and nation.

At least 37 people were killed and more than 140 injured after a hospital fire in the South Korean city of Miryang on Friday.

Initial reports show that around 200 patients were inside the building and the adjoining nursing home at the time of the fire, the cause of which remains unknown.

If the reports are true, the fire would be one of the deadliest South Korea has suffered in recent years, with the death toll still expected to rise.

Renegotiation of Iran Nuclear Deal Not Possible: Zarif

Mohammad Javad Zarif said in an interview with famous German Journalist Jürgen Todenhöfer that Europe cannot maintain the nuclear agreement by trying to violate the deal.

According to a Farsi report by Fars News Agency, the Iranian top diplomat called on Europe to support the nuclear deal because the international community is expecting the same as well. Iran’s Zarif said all parties must comply with the nuclear accord without making excuses.

In response to a question regarding the escalations in the region, Zarif stressed that to resolve the issues only a peaceful solution can work as many wars have been waged in the region and this situation cannot continue.

“From our point of view, the Persian Gulf issues require a dialogue that takes all aspects into consideration. It must be borne in mind that no one can dominate the region, and all sides must work together,” underlined Zarif.

Iran’s foreign minister further mentioned that it is needed to trust each other, and this has to be done through military inspections and signing non-aggression treaties with all countries in the region, including Saudi Arabia.

“Saudi Arabia is one of the most important countries in the Persian Gulf region; therefore, without Saudi Arabia we cannot reach a conclusion.”

Zarif also highlighted that Iran has not attacked any country in the past 300 years adding that “during the Iran-Iraq war, it was the Islamic Republic that was attacked, and after the war, we were a close friend of the Iraqi people and helped them in the fight against ISIS.”

About Iran’s missile program, Zarif noted that Iran spends the least on weapons in comparison with other regional countries.

“Saudi Arabia has missiles with higher range than ours. These missiles are capable of carrying nuclear warheads, while our missiles are not designed so. Saudi missiles are Chinese intercontinental ones with a range of 2500 kilometres. The main features of such missiles have a range of 12,000 kilometres.”

However, he added, Iran has missiles that are not capable of carrying nuclear warheads and their maximum range is 2,000 kilometres.

He also noted that “we will not use these missiles against any country, and we have announced we will only use them in case of being attacked.”

Zarif’s comments came after French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian accused Iran on Monday of not respecting part of the UN Resolution 2231, which calls on Tehran to refrain from working on ballistic missiles.

Later, Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, Ali Shamkhani, emphasized that Tehran’s missile program and defense capabilities would by no means be subject to negotiations.

Iranian Government Spokesman Mohammad Nobakht also said at his weekly conference on Tuesday that Tehran “will not negotiate with any party over its missile capabilities.”

Fire in Korean Hospital Kills 37, Wounds 70 (+Video)

Initial reports indicate that around 200 patients were inside the building and the adjoining nursing home at the time of the fire, the cause of which remains unknown.

The blaze is thought to have started in the emergency room at Sejong Hospital.

If the reports are true, the fire would be one of the deadliest South Korea has suffered in recent years, with the death toll still expected to rise.

Firefighters said the victims appeared to have died from smoke inhalation. Three hospital medical staff – a doctor, nurse and nursing assistant – are among the victims, BBC reported.

Authorities have given varying death tolls, with police earlier saying 41 had died, but fire officials and hospital sources now say at least 37 are dead.

Miryang is about 270km (168 miles) south-east of the capital, Seoul.

Iran Blasts US’ Measures to Kill Nuclear Deal

Iran Urges Collective Cooperation to Tackle Regional Security Challenges

In an exclusive interview with Al-Alam TV on Thursday, Shamkhani called the JCPOA a comprehensive document which cannot be changed under any condition.

“The JCPOA meets the least demands of the Islamic Republic raised during our talks with the six powers,” he noted, as quoted in a Farsi report by the SNSC’s website.

Shamkhani also slammed the US for hampering the implementation of the JCPOA and said despite Iran’s full commitment to the nuclear deal, it has not yet benefited from the economic openness the deal was expected to bring.  

The Iranian official dismissed as flagrant and delusional the remarks by the US president who has called for revising the JCPOA.  

Shamkhani also described Iran’s defence capabilities as totally indigenous which have been built on the 8-year-old experience of the Sacred Defence (Iraq’s war on Iran) and the oppressed Iranian nation’s hapless efforts to meet its basic needs to defend itself against the aggressors.

He said the nation will press ahead strongly with its development plan within its pre-emptive measures against threats.

“Based on the national consensus among the officials of the Islamic Republic establishment, Iran will hold no negotiation with any other state over its missile and defence capabilities,” he pointed out.

Shamkhani also touched on the regional policy of Iran and its future strategies saying the measures of the Islamic Republic in the region don’t violate the resolutions passed by the United Nations Security Council.

“The US’ attempts to portray a false image of Iran’s stabilizing behaviours in the region are rooted in Washington and its allies’ failures in using terrorism as a tool to impose its will on the independent states of the region.”

Shamkhani then referred to the latest moves by the US diplomatic apparatus to make coalitions with the European and Arab countries against Iran and said, “Following the spread of Takfiri terrorism in Europe and the close encounter of European citizens with terrorist threats, it seems the European governments have realized the leading role of Iran in fight against terror and understood the US’ destructive policies in the region,” he concluded.

US, Saudis Arm ISIS Terrorists: Iran FM

In a tweet published on Thursday, Zarif said, “No amount of ‘alternative facts’ by Trump and Co’s echo chamber, ‘vision of light’ spin by KSA, or credit-grabbing by the US for defeat of ISIS will change the facts that it was Iran, who helped the people of Iraq and Syria defeat ISIS, and it was the US and KSA who armed it.”

Saudi Minister of Foreign Affair Adel al-Jubeir on Wednesday accused Iran of destabilizing the Middle East through backing sectarian conflict and terror.

He told the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, that Tehran is promoting a “vision of darkness” in the region.

“In the Middle East, we have two competing visions: We have a vision of light … and we have a vision of darkness,” Al-Jubeir told the forum.

 

BBC Criticised for Double Standards on Syria Extremists

Farahmand Alipour, an Iranian journalist and commentator, has sarcastically looked at the story in a piece which is going viral in the Persian-language media these days.

Here is the full text of Alipour’s piece:

On Monday, the BBC Persian TV channel in a report said that Turkey has brought dozens of “extremist jihadists” from Syria’s Idlib to the border areas to fight the Kurds.

How interesting! So, is Idlib the main hideout of the of jihadist forces? Since when has it been so? Did you say such things in your reports before?

When the Syrian army fights against these “extremist jihadists”, BBC Persian does not call them extremist jihadists. At that times, they are called “Assad’s dissidents” or “rebels”, and the reports just depict the story of the civilians who are living under the rebels’ rule and zooms in on the suffering of their “poor, innocent families who are deprived of everything.”

Now that they have attacked the US allies, they are called extremist jihadists! If these people are in Iran’s prisons, the BBC Persian introduces them as “Sunni prisoners” and just highlights that they are Sunnis. If they are in Afghanistan, there will be no reference to their religion and the TV channel just calls them extremists!

If they fight against the central government in Iraq, they are called “dissatisfied Sunni tribesmen”, but as Washington wages a war against them, suddenly they turn into “extremist Jihadists!”

If they launch attacks in London and Paris, they are not either Shiites or Sunnis! At those times, they are not oppressed anymore and there is no discrimination against them! They are not rebels or dissatisfied people anymore! The BBC calls them just “Muslim terrorists!” Period!

(For the BBC) it does not really matter who they are. The only thing that matters is where they are located and whether they are working to the benefit of the UK government in the Middle East.

Why Iran FM Decided Not to Attend WEF in Davos

Qassemi dismissed as baseless any report on the last-minute cancellation of the visit to Davos by the Iranian foreign minister, saying despite receiving an official invitation to attend the forum, Zarif preferred to stay in Tehran to oversee the implementation of some structural changes in the Iranian Foreign Ministry.

In a Farsi interview with the Fars News Agency, the spokesman also said Iranian foreign minister decided not to have any foreign trips these days due to the importance of implementing the fundamental changes in the ministry.

“Since Iranian foreign minister had held talks with a number of delegates attending Davos over the past few months, he decided to stay in Tehran and put his focus on the implementation of the structural changes in his ministry,” he noted.

Qassemi went on to say that the structural changes, initiated by Zarif, had been under discussion over the past years. “The changes were finalized after long hours of discussion among experts, specialists and high and mid-ranking officials at the ministry.”

The spokesman also cited the changes as the most fundamental ones in the structure of Iran’s Foreign Ministry and added the new changes have been implemented since January 21.

Earlier a report by Reuters claimed that Iranian foreign minister decided to cancel his visit to Davos at the last minute because US President Donald Trump was expected to deliver speech during the Annual World Economic Forum.

The four-day forum in the Swiss Alps began on January 23 with chief executives and world leaders in attendance. The main theme of the 48th edition of the annual World Economic Forum is ‘Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World.’

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on November 18

A deadly fire in a tar storage tanker in southern Iran, which killed 3 and wounded 2, made the headlines in many newspapers today.

Also a major topic of discussion in all papers was France’s call for talks over Iran’s missile program, and the firm reaction of Iranian officials who categorically reject such an idea.

President Hassan Rouhani’s Monday interview also remained a top story in some papers, which continued to discuss what he said and what he was expected to say.

The above issues, as well as many more, are highlighted in the following headlines and top stories:

 

Aftab-e Yazd:

1- MP: French Officials Not Allowed to Visit Iran without Apology

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Arman-e Emrooz:

1- Law of Citizenship May Change

2- Reformist Figure: Government’s Actions Shouldn’t Be Passive

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Ebtekar:

1- Iran Starts Decoding Sanchi Oil Tanker’s Data Recorder

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Etemad:

1- Government’s Red Line: Cutting Cash Subsidies Needs Checking People’s Bank Accounts

2- Return to Rouhani: Have Conservatives Declared a Truce?

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Ettela’at:

1- Government’s Measures to Supply People’s Needs ahead of Nowruz

2- Hamas: Ayatollah Khamenei Pioneer in Supporting Palestine, Resistance

3- 41 Killed, 100 Injured in Benghazi Terror Attacks

4- Washington Post: Saudi People’s Rise against Al Saud Imminent

5- Chair of EU’s Foreign Affairs Committee Defends Iran’s Missile Program

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Hamshahri:

1- Supporting Online Jobs in Villages

2- US Insists on, Europe Rejects Revising Iran Nuclear Deal

3- Contemporary Poet Nima’s House Back on National Heritage List

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Iran:

1- Rainbow of Iranian Culture in Tourism Exhibition

2- Deadly Fire in Bitumen Storage Tank: 3 Killed, 2 Wounded in Bandar Abbas

3- Indices of Tehran Stock Exchange Market Rise

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Javan:

1- Those Who Boycotted Netanyahu Turn into Indians’ National Heroes

2- French FM: US Imposing Pressure to Change Iran Nuclear Deal

3- Wrong Electricity Policies Imposed by Oil Mafia!

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Jomhouri Eslami:

1- Labour Minister: Employment Loans to Be Given to Villagers in Five Provinces as of Today

2- People in Switzerland March to Protest at Trump’s Davos Visit

3- Iran First VP: People Don’t Need to Be Worried about Price, Supply of Goods ahead of New Year

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Kayhan:

1- Iraq’s Popular Forces Put in Charge of Security of Iraq-Syria Borders

2- Two Different Looks at Rouhani’s TV Interview

  • What Do Those Who Have Made People Dissatisfied with Gov’t Want from Rouhani?

3- Popular Protests ahead of Davos Summit: You Dirty Trump! Get Out!

4- Palermo Convention, another Trap for Iranian Nation

  • Gov’t Promised the West, Parliament Approved It

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Khorasan:

1- Intelligence Ministry Find 23 Ready-to-Explode Bombs Imported by Saudi Mercenaries

2- US President’s Sex Scandals Sour Trump’s Relationship with Melania

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25


 

Vatan-e Emrooz:

1- Rouhani’s Chief of Staff: We Definitely Won’t Hold Talks over Our Missile Program

2- Erdogan: Obama Deceived Turkey on Issue of Syria

3- Ayatollah Makarem Shirazi: It’s Not Acceptable for Officials to Trust Foreigners’ Promise

A Look at Iranian Newspaper Front Pages on January 25