Materials
jam
ICH Materials 111
Audios
(12)-
Kelin salom (Bow of a bride)
family-related ceremonial song
Uzbekistan 1905 -
Gulyor-Shahnoz I-V
Uzbekistan 1905
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Kabate thake porowar go
India 2015
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Pirer hate hat dia na hoile bayat
Bangla Qawwali Song\nBangla Qawwali is a wonderful example of the journey of a music genre through different countries. Originating in Greater Persia, Iran, Kherson and Baghdad, the Qawwali tradition gained a new identity in Bengal at the shrines of Muslim saints. In Bengal the Qawwali songs synthesized with the philosophy and music of various traditions, such as Vaisnava Kirtan and Baul songs, to produce a new genre of Qawwali called Bangla Qawwali which retained the Sufi idioms of Silsila (teachings of Sufi masters), Sama (listening to music and chanting to induce mystical trance), and Fana (annihilation of the ego).
India 2015 -
Rojober chand utheche
Bangla Qawwali Song\nBangla Qawwali is a wonderful example of the journey of a music genre through different countries. Originating in Greater Persia, Iran, Kherson and Baghdad, the Qawwali tradition gained a new identity in Bengal at the shrines of Muslim saints. In Bengal the Qawwali songs synthesized with the philosophy and music of various traditions, such as Vaisnava Kirtan and Baul songs, to produce a new genre of Qawwali called Bangla Qawwali which retained the Sufi idioms of Silsila (teachings of Sufi masters), Sama (listening to music and chanting to induce mystical trance), and Fana (annihilation of the ego).
India 2015 -
Hoiya preme pagol,Ajmire khaja baba sahensha oli
Bangla Qawwali Song\nBangla Qawwali is a wonderful example of the journey of a music genre through different countries. Originating in Greater Persia, Iran, Kherson and Baghdad, the Qawwali tradition gained a new identity in Bengal at the shrines of Muslim saints. In Bengal the Qawwali songs synthesized with the philosophy and music of various traditions, such as Vaisnava Kirtan and Baul songs, to produce a new genre of Qawwali called Bangla Qawwali which retained the Sufi idioms of Silsila (teachings of Sufi masters), Sama (listening to music and chanting to induce mystical trance), and Fana (annihilation of the ego).
India 2015 -
Bhoktogone Chay Khaja tor choroner dhuli
Bangla Qawwali Song\nBangla Qawwali is a wonderful example of the journey of a music genre through different countries. Originating in Greater Persia, Iran, Kherson and Baghdad, the Qawwali tradition gained a new identity in Bengal at the shrines of Muslim saints. In Bengal the Qawwali songs synthesized with the philosophy and music of various traditions, such as Vaisnava Kirtan and Baul songs, to produce a new genre of Qawwali called Bangla Qawwali which retained the Sufi idioms of Silsila (teachings of Sufi masters), Sama (listening to music and chanting to induce mystical trance), and Fana (annihilation of the ego).
India 2015 -
Aye mohammad Kamnewala
Bangla Qawwali Song\nBangla Qawwali is a wonderful example of the journey of a music genre through different countries. Originating in Greater Persia, Iran, Kherson and Baghdad, the Qawwali tradition gained a new identity in Bengal at the shrines of Muslim saints. In Bengal the Qawwali songs synthesized with the philosophy and music of various traditions, such as Vaisnava Kirtan and Baul songs, to produce a new genre of Qawwali called Bangla Qawwali which retained the Sufi idioms of Silsila (teachings of Sufi masters), Sama (listening to music and chanting to induce mystical trance), and Fana (annihilation of the ego).
India 2015 -
Tale: Ghostly Khaan Shanag, Chutguriin Khaan Shanag
Tales are an important genre of the oral prose literature of the Mongolians. Tales typically begin with the phrase “Once upon a time, in such-and-such a place, in such-and-such a country.” Mongolian tales are symbolic. The most frequent ending is “and they lived happily ever after.” The legends are a popular genre of oral prose literature. The real-life legends are always complementary expressions of historical events within folk literature. Historical facts are usually adorned with fanciful magic and metaphoric devices to later become historical legends. Among the restored and digitised data, the tales take up the most recording hours. Within the framework of the project, over two hundred hours of tales and almost fourteen hours of legends were restored and digitised.
Mongolia 1905 -
Pelden of Namnan Gambiin, Namnan Gambiin Pelden (Mongolian sutra chanting)
This CD presents a selection from shamanic and Buddhist religious oral expressions, including recitation of shamanic verses and Buddhist services.
Mongolia 1905 -
Yor-Yor by Jamilakhon Nasriddinova
O`lan is a genre of people's oral creation. Mainly, it is performed by women with or without doira accompaniment. At Uzbek parties and celebrations, the o`lan is sung by a girls' team on one side and a boys' team on the other side, or it is sung by two people who take opposing sides so they can perform as though they are having a dialogue.
Uzbekistan 2015 -
Batufail-e-daman-e-Murtaza
This is a Manqabat, a Qawwali poem in praise of great religious personages, especially Sufi saints. \n\nLyrics: Batufail-e-daman-e-Murtaza, main bataaun kyaa mujhe kyaa milaa Keh Ali mile to Nabi mile, jo Nabi mile to Khudaa milaa Tere naqsh-e-pa se qadam qadam, woh maqaam-e-sabr-o- raza milaa Kahin khak-e-ahl-e-junun mili, kahin khun-e-rang-e-wafaa milaa Tu amir ibn-e-amir hai, teraa faiz-e-azim hai Tere dar se jo bhi milaa mujhe, mere hausle se siwaa milaa Tu sharik-e-haal e butul hai, tu rafiq-e-al-e-Rasul hai Main-e-marifat kas-e-ashiqi, yeh to jam kis ko milaa milaa. \nTranslation: “How can I describe what I have gained through my attachment to Murtaza*! When I reached Ali, I reached the Prophet; when I reached the Prophet, I reached God. Following your example, step by step I have attained perseverance and submission. Somewhere, I encountered the traces of the ecstatic; somewhere, the blood in the color of faithfulness. You are a lord of lords; your beneficence is the greatest of all. The uncountable blessings I have received from your bounty have gone beyond my aspirations. You are joined with the daughter of the Prophet, you are close to the Prophet’s kin.You are the wine of cognition, the object of love; oh, to receive this goblet!” Meraj Ahmad Nizami, Bulbul-e-Chisht, normally known as Meraj is the most senior among the descendants of Tan Ras Khan, the famous nineteenth-century court singer. Nizami indicates his attachment to the saint Nizamuddin Auliya, while Bulbul-e-Chisht is his honorific title, conferred upon him by the late Khwaja Hasan Nizami, who was a famous Sufi sheikh. .
India 1975