A musician plays a newly made oud. Photos: AFP
A man plays the flute in the Maranjab desert in Iran. Above: A musician plays a newly made oud. Photos: AFP
The Oriental lute is making a comeback in Iran after decades in the shadows as musicians reconnect with an instrument integral to Arab and Turkish musical tradition in a fragmented region.
Known as the
oud in Arabic, it is commonly called the
barbat in Persian, although some would argue the instruments differ slightly.
"The number of [
oud] students has increased considerably over the past 15 years or so; before a known teacher would have had a dozen students whereas today they'll be about 50," said Majid Yahyanejad, a 35-year-old
oud teacher in Tehran.
Noushin Pasdar, a 40-year-old musician in the Iranian capital, made the same observation.
She started teaching the stringed instrument "about 23 years ago" after graduating from a professional arts school, known as
honarestan in Persian.
"At the time, most of my students were old, really old. Now they're more on the young side," Pasdar said.
"We only knew the
oud as played in Egypt and Iraq. We knew nothing of the
oud in Turkey. But today we know it's also played in Syria, Kuwait and Jordan."
Internet friendsYahyanejad noticed young Iranian
oud players were "taking more interest in Arabic and Turkish culture... and Turkish, Arab and Iranian musicians are becoming friends on the internet."
The
barbat has been around for centuries and it takes up a whole chapter of the
Shahnameh (
Book of Kings), written in the 10th century.
Iran and Syria are lobbying for the manufacture and playing of the
oud to be added to UNESCO's "intangible heritage" list.
The
barbat had fallen out of Iran's classical and traditional repertoires, with other stringed instruments such as the
setar, tar,
santur and
kamancheh given preference.
But in the second half of the 20th century, a man named Mansour Nariman introduced
oud instruction at the
honarestan and published the first Persian-language manual on the musical instrument, Yahyanejad points out.
Nariman, who died in 2015, had been drawn to the "warmth" of its sound, at a time when the Arab
oud did not even figure on Iran's musical periscope.
In the absence of any teachers back then, Nariman taught himself and wrote off letters to Egyptians he had heard playing the instrument on the radio.
He received a reply from one of the biggest names in Arab music, Mohamed Abdelwahab.
Instrument to 'reconcile'Many years later, Mohammad Firouzi, a student of Nariman, recorded several pieces of music with the undisputed maestro of Persian song, Mohammad-Reza Shajarian, who died in October.
Among them were masterpieces such as "Aseman-e Eshgh" in 1991, "Aram-e Jan," 1998, and "Ghoghaye Eshghbazan," in 2007.
Pasdar remembers the first time music teachers showed her an
oud, triggering a hunt for the instrument in central Tehran's Baharestan Square, a paradise for musicians.
She said she found only two, both made in Egypt, and too bulky for a budding musician.
Fatemeh Moussavi, who crafts
ouds in a small Tehran studio, says very few artisans manufactured the instruments and they were pricey back in the day.
Things didn't change much until the early 2000s, when thousands of
ouds landed in Iran, mostly from Syria and Turkey, bringing down prices.
It was a time of liberalization under the reformist Mohammad Khatami who served as president between 1997 and 2005.
The arts scene benefitted from this period in the Islamic republic, where the Shiite clergy prioritizes close study of the Koran holy book and religious jurisprudence.
For Hamid Khansari, who has written an introduction to the
oud, the bow-shaped instrument is "a blessing" that "expands the possibilities of creation."
Lebanon's Charbel Rouhana played the instrument on stage in Tehran with Iranian group Gardoun in 2016, followed in 2017 by Yurdal Tokcan from Turkey.
Tunisian Dhafer Youssef has woven Persian poems into his repertoire and given several concerts with Iranian musicians figuring in his international orchestra.
In a Middle East tormented for decades by war and conflict, Yahyanejad harbors hope that musical interaction will forge bonds of friendship across religions, ethnicities and cultures.
"This instrument could finally help reconcile the peoples of the region."
AFP