Archive for the ‘Jazz’ Category

Hello all; first of all, I am sorry for my hiatus from posts (paucity of posting) for such a long time, but also, I am happy to say that I have found a new home on the web, and I will be once again posting much more frequently!

 

From now on, I will be posting about Tajikistan at

http://studentdigitalus.org/TajikistanFocus/

I hope you will head over and check us out.

Moein in Tajikistan – YouTube

Posted: April 24, 2012 in Art, Jazz, Tajikistan

via Moein in Tajikistan – YouTube.

Ballet Afsaneh – Fire Earth Air Water – YouTube.

Festival of the Silk Road – Ballet Afsaneh & Special Guests on Vimeo on Vimeo

via Festival of the Silk Road – Ballet Afsaneh & Special Guests on Vimeo.

Ballet Afsaneh: Rhythms of the Heart – Tajik/Uzbek dance – YouTube.

Ballet Afsaneh: New Afghan Dance – Parwaz – YouTube.

Mizrob | Music, Tour Dates, Photos, Videos.


  • Genre: Acoustic / Folk / Jazz

    Location DUSHANBETa

 

 

Nomad Dancers (via Nomad Dancers-About Us.) is a collective inspired by traditions of India, Persia, Central Asia, Middle East, and Turkey, traveling across borders and bridging cultures in search of the ultimate dance experience. The Nomad Dancers proudly present Persian, Afghan, Tajik, Azeri, Uzbek, Uighur, and Ottoman Turkish traditional folkloric dances, as well as Bollywood and Fusion choreographies, at cultural events, celebrations and festivals in the Washington DC metropolitan area and beyond. The individual Nomad Dancers’ fascination and interests in the graceful, playful, colorful, and rich dance traditions from across this vast region, coupled with the dancers’ myriad experiences and talents, have inspired a varied repertoire of dances and glorious costumes prepared by the Nomad Dancers themselves.

While the Nomad collective itself is a relatively new phenomenon, created in December 2008, each of the individual dancers brings years of professional experience in various dance styles to the group, and have performed in venues ranging from universities and embassies to Washington DC’s Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, to the majestic Registan Square in Samarkand, Uzbekistan; from across the United States to Italy, Greece, Cyprus, India and Afghanistan. The Nomad collective is dedicated to bringing master teachers from around the world to help us refine our skills and craft our choreographies, better enabling us to bring diverse audiences together, and to spread cultural awareness of the region.

Caroline Besley

Annetta Burger

Keely Fahoum

Parastoo Ghodsi

Annie Lum

Sema Muslu

Mindy Russell

Saghi Saghafi

Christel Stevens

Adriane Whalen

U.N. Day – October 2010

Nomad Dancers performed traditional dances in colorful costumes enhanced by the charming natural setting of the National Georgraphic Society courtyard as part of the celebration of the 65th Birthday of the United Nations.

Photos by Ellie Van Houtte Photography www.ellievanhoutte.com and Maria Dittrich.

 

    Selection of photos from our 2010 summer and fall performances

Performances include International Children’s Festival at Wolf Trap, International Children’s Festival Preview at Fairfax Corner, Reston Multicultural Festival, 8th Annual Washington DC Turkish Festival, and Children of Persia’s 7th Annual Walk 4 Children. Nomad Dancers premiered two new Uzbek dances and a passionate Russian Gypsy dance!


Meridian’s 4th Annual International Children’s Festival – May 2010

Nomad Dancers performed at this educational fun-fair that brought together the DC community and the diplomatic corps of Washington, D.C., as embassies hosted booths representing their country and culture. Nomad Dancers’ performance featured Persian, Afghani, and Uighur-style dance from the Kashgar region.

Norouz Around the World Concert – March 2010

Nomad Dancers presented a festival of dance traditions to celebrate the Persian New Year in Alexandria, VA. 
Guest performers: Kardelen Turkish Dance Ensemble, Raqs Jameel, Skyline Showstoppers, and special guest artists Olimdjon Beknazarov and Simone Verduin.

5th Annual Norouz Celebration at Philadelphia Museum of Art – March 2010

Nomad Dancers performed three shows with Rangeen Kaman youth dance company at this whole-day event to celebrate the Persian New Year.

(more…)

“Payvand” group (Khujand, Tajikistan) at Dushanbe Jazz Festival 2010 – YouTube.

“Ode to hope” نوای امید : Pejman Hadadi, Kourosh Taghavi, Saeed Kamjoo – YouTube.

Live performance, interview with Andisheh TV on September 16, 2009 by Pejman Hadadi on the Tombak and percussion, Kourosh Taghavi on the Setar and Saeed Kamjoo on the Kamanche for the ODE TO HOPE نوای امید concerts on September 18, 2009 San Diego and September 20 , 2009 Los Angeles

Roshani Enseble – SOAS University – 03/08/2006

1. Farshad Mohammadi

2. Saeed Kamjoo

3. Hamid Khabazi

4. Hamid Ghanbary

 

via Roshani Enseble – 2006 (Part 2) – SD – YouTube.

Roshani Enseble – 2006 (Part 1) – HD – YouTube.

Roshani Enseble – SOAS University – 03/08/2006

1. Farshad Mohammadi

2. Saeed Kamjoo

3. Hamid Khabazi

4. Hamid Ghanbary

This group is Iranian-Turkish musi group which had a concert in Istanbul-Turkey.
the musicians:sanaz nakhjavani:ghanon-golnaz sabahi:santour-arezoo maleki:tar-bekir:oud-

via arezoo maleki vadeghani-tar. – YouTube.

The program of the Festival consists of three gala concerts that will take place in the Mayakovsky State Russian Drama Theatre and in the Aini Tajik State Academic Theatre of Opera and Ballet. The Tajik National Conservatory will accommodate a Jam-session of the Festival participants, a series of workshops and a round table. <>

Besides Tajik musicians, the Festival will also bring together musicians from Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan, among which are both beginners and distinguished masters of jazz, and the guest of the festival Demetrius Spaneas from USA.

The Second Dushanbe Jazz Festival with aspirations of the First Jazz Festival held in Dushanbe last year, aims at promoting jazz music in Tajikistan in its ethno-jazz national form, through searching for original ideas, trends and styles of ethno-jazz compositions, as well as disclosing new talents who are willing to demonstrate their abilities in jazz music, which is yet to be developed in Tajikistan. The primary artistic goal of the festival to be attained by Tajik musicians lies in exploring national forms of jazz based on musical traditions of makom and falak. Other participants of the festival have also been offered to include two compositions based on Tajik makom and falak into their concert program.

via SDC Central Asia – News Detail.

These are a few of my FAVORITE things….

Zarbituric – Jam with Mizrob – YouTube.

[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MfzB7ge_fwE]

Solam, Davlat Nazri & Navoi Darvoz 7 mars 2012 Dushanbe.mov – YouTube.

To the joy of Tajik jazz-lovers, which turned out to be more numerous than we expected, SDC, headed by Mr. Rudolf Schoch did invite a very well-known and popular in Switzerland and abroad alike, Swiss-German jazz trio, ZOOM. The band members are: Nils Wogram (trombone), Philipp Schaufelberger (guitar), and band leader Lucas Niggli (percussions). It was Lucas, who found the way for the band to follow and creep through the forests of various music trends and especially of contemporary jazz.

The main peculiarity of Lucas Niggli’s music is lightness.  Thanks to the professional unison with two tenor instruments (trombone and guitar), percussions and the performance of outstanding musicians like Schaufelberger (a great tonal esthete) and Vogram (a perfect trombone player) even the most knotty passages sounded as light as a feather. ZOOM plays contemporary jazz, mixing all kinds of music possible; an approach that is very hard for an unprepared audience to comprehend. That is why we were a little apprehensive while waiting for the reactions with our hearts sinking, looking into the eyes of listeners. The storm of applauses brought us relief – the audience appreciated the skillfulness of the musicians. Could it be that Tajik audience was indeed starving for jazz…?

via Jazz in Tajikistan. Bactria Cultural Centre.

» 2012 Dushanbe Ethno-Jazz Festival Video Promotion; Videos from 2010 Festival.

Dushanbe Ethno-Jazz Festival promo video 2012 – YouTube.

In Russian, from a larger piece broadcasted live on national Tajik Television.

via Video and Interview for the 2010 Dushanbe Jazz Festival on Stan.TV – YouTube.

Solam, Davlat Nazri & Navoi Darvoz 7 mars 2012 Dushanbe.mov – YouTube.

(click here for a great 8 minute news piece explaining who Ballet Afsaneh is, what they do, what they think about culture and art… very interesting group and project. 

(I tried, but could not embed the video).

http://science.kqed.org/quest/files/jw-player-plugin-for-wordpress/player/player.swf

From Uzbekistan to India, Turkey to Afghanistan, the Ballet Afsaneh Art and Culture Society brings to the stage the vibrant sights and sounds of the ancient route through Asia known as the Silk RoadSpark sits in as they rehearse Sharlyn Sawyer’s “Song of Generations,” a multi-generational collaboration with the Nejad World Music Daf Ensemble that celebrates Persian culture and history.

A crossroads of trade in ideas as well as goods, the 7,000-mile-long Silk Road connected the empires of Byzantium, the Ottomans, India, Persia and Mongolia with Western Europe for more than 2,000 years. Combining music, poetry and dance, Ballet Afsaneh’s performances offer a richly textured perspective on cultures that originate in modern-day Iran, Tajikstan, Uzbekhistan and Afghanistan — an alternative to the usual news about political upheaval and war in that region.

Founded in 1986 by California native Sawyer, Ballet Afsaneh’s repertoire spans the traditional as well as the contemporary, with colorful dances created by Sawyer in collaboration with the other members of the troupe. Sawyer’s training includes both Eastern and Western dance styles, and she focuses on preserving and presenting the traditional dances of women from the various countries that make up Central Asia and Asia Minor.

Lyrical, classically influenced dances like Barg e Behesht — with its expressive, twining arms and graceful movements under a canopy of blue silk representing the sky — evoke the elegant storytelling traditions of the Persian courts. In contrast, the company’s Uzbekh repertoire includes dances in the playful Bukhuran style as well as the softer, more emotional Ferghana style, which reenacts celebrations, such as weddings and festivals.

A troupe mainly composed of women, Ballet Afsaneh also showcases its members in the traditional folkloric and ritual dances of Afghanistan, such as the Loghari and Attan, as a response to the religious and political strife that has kept women from dancing or performing in public in Afghanistan during the rule of the Taliban.

….

Ballet Afsaneh, the professional performance ensemble of the Afsaneh Art & Culture Society, is based in the San Francisco Bay Area of California in the USA. This dynamic group presents performances and activities featuring dance, poetry, and music of the Silk Road —the historic trade route stretching 7,000 miles across the continenet of Eurasia from the China Sea in the east to the Mediterranean in the west. The Ballet Afsaneh repertoire displays a wide range, from the glittering lyricism of fairytale to incisive, thought provoking, contemporary work.

Traditional repertoire includes dances representing; Iran, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Armenia, Turkey, Chinese Turkistan, Azerbaijan, Kurdistan, and North India. In our rapidly changing world the need for cultural understanding and preservation has never been greater; Ballet Afsaneh brings to light the history, poetry, iconography, and spiritual heart of these enduring cultures. Promoting positive visibility for these expressive arts in all of their beauty and richness, so that such cultural treasures can be shared by the world.

Many of the 15 core dancers, poets and musicians performing with the company are from Central Asian families, a majority are women. Ballet Afsaneh often performs at large mainstream venues and provides programming for many smaller, community-oriented events as well. The company occasionally tours both nationally and internationally.
Past Performance Highlights

Since its founding by Artistic Director Sharlyn Sawyer in 1986, Ballet Afsaneh and the Afsaneh Art & Culture Society have produced critically acclaimed programs for San Francisco’s M.H. De Young Museum, the Asian Art Museum, British Museum in London, and the Cabrillo Music Festival. They have been honored by San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom for producing the annual Norooz (Persian New Year) event at SF City Hall, and are featured regularly in San Francisco’s Ethnic Dance Festival at the Palace of Fine Arts Theater. The company has toured in Central Asia and sponsors international artists during their visits to the United States.

– BOOKING INFORMATION –     – PRESS ROOM –       – PAST PERFORMANCES –       – VIEW VIDEOS –

Links to video of Ballet Afsaneh performing can be found here.

Ballet Afsaneh at the Asian Art Museum – MATCHA program for “The Hidden Treasures of Afghanistan” – 2008

Ballet Afsaneh

Ballet Afsaneh – Nejad: Norooz 2007

Dances of the Silk Road & Beyond