Ustad Saami - Twilight

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  • Опубликовано: 12 окт 2024
  • order CD/LP/DL: goo.gl/GDeJi2
    digital: idol.lnk.to/Go...
    Release Date: January 18th, 2019 / Glitterbeat Records
    Hawks crowd the skies above Karachi as a blessing. They are fed the scraps from animal sacrifices due to the prayers of the non-verbal being thought to reach God more powerfully.
    75-year-old, Ustad Saami risks his life daily in Pakistan to keep alive his microtonal, pre-Islamic, multilingual (Farsi, Sanskrit, Hindi, the ancient and dead language of Vedic, gibberish, Arabic, and Urdu) music. Handed down by his ancestors for over a thousand years, he is the only practitioner of Surti left in the world and when he passes, this music will die with him as well. Though he is a master of many genres (Khayál, Sudh Bani, et al), Ustad Saami works from his own custom 49-note system and custom tunes his accompanying instruments accordingly. He believes that the modern, rigid divisions of what are and are not notes has done “violence” to music and he is trying to restore ancient “lost” pitches. Extremists resent his work as they do anything else pre-dating Muhammad.
    In the land where Osama Bin last hid, Master Ustad Naseeruddin Saami has spent his entire life mastering the nuances of every given note.
    It has been said that India always had a region where all of the greatest singers came from. And that place is Pakistan.
    Driving in from the airport I noticed a man cleaning what I thought was a musical instrument, but then realized was a machine gun. Weaponry is another visual motif throughout the city. Enroute, we passed celebrity-soldier sponsor billboards for house paint. Here, army officers carry a similar hollow cache to reality stars in America.
    “To sing is to listen.” These are the words of the master. The translation of his own last name, Saami, even means “to hear.”
    For him, everything centers on one note. From that, all else grows and music is seen as a sixth sense for people to better communicate with each other. With great precision, Saami utilizes 49-notes versus the West’s mere seven. The scale was founded by a mix-raced royal whose lifelong endeavor was to make peace with duality through art. This predecessor of Qawwali music is called Khayál, the Arabic word for “imagination” and in it the melody carries the meaning. The lyrics are almost incidental during these call-and-responses.
    But today neophyte, urbane media-moguls tell the master that he doesn’t know how to sing since his notes fail to align on a sanitized and dumbed-down grid. Engineers are unable to see his notes on their Pro Tools system, so they assume that it is the artist not the machine that is mistaken. But it is the uneven pitches that the master values as being the most searching, while those with even numbers too stable.
    A compounding cultural force is that extremists are driving the music out of Islam, viewing it as having no place in a righteous society. So now the five calls to prayer blasted over intercoms around the clock are harsh and off-pitch. Harmonium, the instrument that is now so strongly associated with the region, was actually introduced by missionaries and banned from the radio until 1962. That was D-Day culturally for Pakistan. The instrument restricted music to off/on keys, excluding all other possibilities.
    The master shapes the notes with his hands as he sings like conducting a Theremin. Most master’s now hide their knowledge, possessively passing their skills down through family only. Subsequently, traditions have died and wither. Master Saami’s mission is to share his knowledge with the world, so that the music may live on freely.
    With the musician’s tongues reddened and teeth devastated from chewing Paan, we recorded all night long taking only a short break for a meal. In the morning after the sun had come up, the younger players were understandably collapsing from exhaustion. The master, though, displayed markedly more energy than when we had begun the night before. He urged the others to keep going, but was unsuccessful. His power proved too much for them to keep up with.
    -- Ian Brennan

Комментарии • 15

  • @prasenjitduara686
    @prasenjitduara686 2 года назад +1

    Bhimpalasi, with love. I think his son/nephew is also a very sensitive singer.

  • @micafreedom3413
    @micafreedom3413 3 года назад +2

    Pure Love, Divine I will continue listening till I die..... May you be blessed for ever and ever.....and may joy an happiness reside with You! Thank You!!!!!!!

  • @imtiyazchandwale2297
    @imtiyazchandwale2297 3 года назад +1

    Masha Allah

  • @kenagibaloch4109
    @kenagibaloch4109 3 года назад +1

    ❤️

  • @NicholasKlacsanzkyICM
    @NicholasKlacsanzkyICM 4 года назад +2

    I'm glad Ustadji is on a new record. Wonderful performance.

  • @benabdelkadersadjia3269
    @benabdelkadersadjia3269 5 лет назад +1

    الاغنية تدافع عن الحق بلغة الفن و الموسيقى تحياتي الحارة الى صاحب هذه الاغنية الجميلة

  • @fullautumnmoon
    @fullautumnmoon 4 года назад +1

    Stunning bhimpalasi!

    • @notebuddha4692
      @notebuddha4692 3 года назад

      Isn't it Bageshree ??

    • @fullautumnmoon
      @fullautumnmoon 3 года назад

      @@notebuddha4692 isn't ab to badi ber in bhimpalasi?

  • @michaelm9519
    @michaelm9519 5 лет назад +2

    Yeah this is actually awesome

  • @penafidelensespelomundo966
    @penafidelensespelomundo966 5 лет назад +2

    So amazing !

  • @mrcharming5053
    @mrcharming5053 5 лет назад +3

    Womad 2019.... Wow

    • @gavmcadam6932
      @gavmcadam6932 Год назад

      I saw him in Utrecht the same year. One of the greatest performances I've ever seen in my life.

  • @arupsengupta2454
    @arupsengupta2454 3 года назад

    Why not enlighten us about this 49 note system and give us a list of modes he is singing here?

  • @magik9653
    @magik9653 4 года назад

    xd god is not terri