Blue Fields |
Workshop with Mahsa and Marjan Vahdat Sat-Sun 23–24 November, 10am–2pm Na Grobli Studio Fee: 50 EUR Contact and application Please send your application form to Justyna Rodziñska-Nair: justyna@grotowski-institute.art.pl by 19 November 2013. We will get back to you within a few days. Applicants will be accepted on a first-come-first-served basis. The workshop will be conducted in English. Workshop as part of VoicEncounters, practical seminar The workshop will be dedicated to Persian singing technique, focusing on a vocal ornamentation technique called tahrir, which can be used in songs from other musical traditions. Participants will learn about Persian modes and about the way each mode can evoke emotions. They will discover the history and theory of Persian music and how culture, history and religion affect music, and will understand the significance of the relation between poetry and music. The programme of the workshop may change depending on the skills and mood of participants. But the most important thing is that we’ll all be singing from the first session. Sisters Mahsa and Marjan Vahdat were both trained in classical Persian singing by master musicians in Iran as well as in regional and traditional Iranian music. After the Islamic Revolution in 1979 in Iran, public female singing was banned and even many years after the revolution female singers can only perform for women-only audiences or alongside a male voice, and can never perform solo in public. But many female singers in Iran have continued singing regardless, as have Mahsa and Marjan, who give private concerts in Iran but mostly perform outside of the country. Their repertoire is inspired by regional and traditional music from Iran with their own musical expression; their lyrics are mostly mystical and love poems by great Persian poets like Hafez, Rumi, Saadi, who lived several centuries ago, as well as contemporary Iranian poetry speaking about Iranian society. An active campaigner for human rights, Mahsa gives numerous benefit concerts and, with Marjan, is one of the ambassadors of Freemuse, an independent international organisation advocating freedom of expression for musicians and composers worldwide. p, li { white-space: pre-wrap; }She has attracted considerable attention recently with her work on the Lullabies from the Axis of Evil album p, li { white-space: pre-wrap; } She has attracted considerable attention recently with her work on the Lullabies from the Axis of Evil album. |