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Music
has, no doubt, the power to transcend all barriers of language and
culture. This was borne out by the response to a qawwali event sponsored
by Stanford University in California, starring Farid Ayaz and humnava,
descendants of the classic qawwal Munshi Raziuddin who traced his
family's lineage back all the way to Tan Sen.
Their
performance was part of the "Pan Asian Music Festival, South
Asia." The event was presented by the Department of Musicand
the Asian Religions and Cultures Initiative. The programme included
Sufi Rock with Salman Ahmad and Junoon, a tribute to A.R.Rahman,
performances by Katrik Sheshadr on Sitar and Swapam Chaudhuri on
tabla, Carnatic morning Ragas by Sanjay Subramanium and the Stanford
Symphony Orchestra.
Jindong Cai, Associate Professor of Music at Stanford wrote,
"
the best way to understand other peoples is through
their art and their culture. Unfortunately, though our world is
ever more globalised, these are often overlooked in favour of reporting
on problems, conflicts and differences."
The festival was one
step in the right direction, an effort to enable a sharing of experience.
Among the highlights was a two-day symposium on Sufi music (Theme:
South Asian Qawwali and Debates on Music in Islam). Unquestionably,
the most exciting event of the entire symposium was the Farid Ayaz
Qawwali performance on the night of February 13. The auditorium
was packed with Indian and Pakistani desis, and students and faculty
of the campus and beyond.
Regula Qureshi, author of Sufi Music of India and Pakistan: Sound,
context and meaning in Qawwali, gave a pre-concert talk explaining,
as best she could, the wonder of the qawwali tradition. But as lovers
of this form of devotion well know, no words can capture the mystical
quality of ecstasy that hides, lurks and predictably explodes in
the hands of craft masters, such as these descendants of the great
Munshi Raziuddin himself.
Farid Ayaz introduced his family's tradition and gave a brief talk
on the history of Qawwali, Amir Khusro's role and its relationship
to the Hindu traditions of Sanskrit sounds and letters. His three
brothers, nephews and others astounded the audience with their brilliant
performance. Abu Muhammad, the group's second lead and harmonium
player, touched the hearts of the audience with his gentle, yet
powerful voice. Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, Christians and Jews alike
were soon offering dollar bills to the qawwals.
It was a stiff stage-like setting - a far cry from the relaxed gardens
and drawing rooms of home - but the magic of Farid Ayaz and humnava
came through loud and clear.
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