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Night of Persian Tradition, Intimate and Meditative

10/20/2008

Night of Persian Tradition, Intimate and Meditative

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NY Times -- Western classical musicians strive to make their interpretations memorable while respecting a strict set of criteria regarding notes, dynamics and tempos. With the exception of cadenzas, taking a maverick approach to a score is usually discouraged. In the Persian classical tradition, musicians improvise like jazz players, but only after years spent studying the established repertory.

Improvisation in Iran is the province of experts who have memorized a core set of works known as the radif, which consists of about 200 short modal pieces called gushehs. On Saturday night at Zankel Hall, the Iranian kamancheh player Kayhan Kalhor and his ensemble wove their extemporizing into long contemplative interludes in a program of Persian classical music.

The concert began with an intense, haunting solo by Mr. Kalhor, who held his kamancheh — a small spiked fiddle — upright, while kneeling on a purple cushion. The instrument makes a wide range of sounds, from a nostalgic timbre (like the soft-spoken viola da gamba) in the lower register to a much brighter, clearer hue in the upper register.

When Mr. Kalhor performed, it sounded like a conversation among several instruments, with the varying timbres at times evoking the wailing pleas of disconsolate lovers. From a simple, muted beginning, the music became more intense and embellished, as ornate melodies and ornaments unfolded with calligraphic detail above ostinato bass patterns.

Mr. Kalhor then switched to the setar, a plucked Persian lute. He was joined by the vocalist Hamid Reza Nourbakhsh, Siamak Jahangiry on ney (flute) and Behrooz Jamali on tombak (goblet drum) for three songs interspersed with improvised interludes. In Mr. Kalhor’s setar solos, as with his solos on kamancheh, it sounded as if he were playing multiple instruments.

Songs in the Persian tradition are often set to poems by medieval mystic poets, and both music and poetry are linked to Sufism, the mystical branch of Islam. The ensemble performed without pause on Saturday, an intimate hour of music that seemed a meditative experience for performer and listener alike.

Waves of sound progressed from mournful to more exuberant, then fell back to subdued introspection. The musicians took turns accompanying Mr. Nourbakhsh’s evocative singing, and played solo and as an ensemble, with the earthy timbre of the ney, the gentle rhythms of the tombak and the bright jangly sound of the setar intertwining with poetic refinement.

Tags: persian classical music, kamancheh, keyhan kalhor, radif, persian music

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