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Drumming to the Heartbeat of Afghan Music with Tabla Virtuoso Salar Nader – P1/2 (In Dari)
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Today’s
Enlightening Entertainment
will be presented
in Dari and English,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
“NATURAL
MAGNETISM!”
- Los Angeles Times
“…MESMERIZING
PERCUSSION OF TABLA”
- Theater Review
“MAGIC!”
- San Jose Mercury News
“…FAST FLYING FINGERS
SEEM TO DEFY
HUMAN DEXTERITY”
- Cleveland Jewish News
The pulsating sound
of drums, the world’s
oldest musical instrument,
is like
the rhythmic beating
of our hearts.
And in the pure hearts
of the Afghan people,
music forever resonates.
Elegant viewers,
welcome to today’s
Enlightening Entertainment
as we journey
on melodious notes
to the culturally-rich land
of Afghanistan, where
the drumming of the tabla
reveals the epic history
and vibrant heritage
of this ancient people.
Our 2-part program
features tabla virtuoso
Salar Nader, who translates
beats and rhythms into
a heartfelt experience
through his drumming.
He is one of the most
sought-after percussionists
of his generation,
having performed
throughout the world
and with some of
the most esteemed
classical musicians
such as popular Afghan
ghazal singer Ahmad Wali,
and master Pakistani
vocalist Ghulam Ali Khan
to name a few.
Hailed by the media
as a “singular sensation”,
Salar Nadar
composed music
and performs on
the tabla drums for
the theatrical adaptation
of renowned Afghan
author Khaled Hussaini’s
#1 best-selling novel,
“The Kite Runner.”
Salar Nadar has graciously
set aside his time
to share with
Supreme Master Television
his love
for his art and culture.
The audiences’ reaction
always intrigued me, and
as a child, I had no idea
what the give and take was
between performer
and audience member.
So when I noticed that, I
was only 8 or 9 years old,
but I am actually
entertaining people who
are 3 or 4 times my age,
I felt
an immediate satisfaction.
Born in Germany to
parents who were both
from Kabul, Afghanistan,
this musical prodigy
eventually settled
with his family
in California, USA,
but remained faithful
to his ancestral roots.
Well, having grown up in
Germany and the States,
what was the reason
or inspiration for you
to pursue traditional and
folk Afghan music versus
more of a Western style?
Yes.
Well, Afghan music,
it’s actually very dominant
and predominant in
every Afghan household.
For me, it was actually
a very early calling.
Very early on,
my father introduced me
to the harmonium
and tabla, and when
I was 6 or 7 years old,
I was introduced
to Ustad Zakir Hussain,
so I started studying
very early in my childhood.
While growing up
in the United States,
Salar spoke Farsi at home,
English at school,
and in his classes with
Ustad Zakir Hussain,
he learned the language
of music, in particular
the language of tabla bols,
which is the spoken,
rhythmic system of
North Indian percussion.
I didn’t know that
I really had the talent,
I was just really drawn
to it, but I guess
people around me
felt like I did.
I was very passionate
about it from day one
I would say.
Yes, it wasn’t really like
my soccer ball
or my baseball mitt
which I’d only pick up
like whenever the season
was happening;
tabla was always in season.
At a tender age,
Salar’s talent and passion
for playing the tabla
were already apparent.
When world-renowned
classical musicians
visited the United States,
Salar had the great honor
to accompany them.
By the time he was twelve,
Salar had provided
percussions for
respected Afghan singers
Farida Mawaash,
Ahmad Wali, legendary
Pakistani vocalist
Ustad Salamat Ali Khan,
and his gifted sons
Shafquat, Sharafat,
and Sukhawat.
Did your parents
play instruments as well,
he taught you?
My father would sing
Afghan folk
in the house and
not really professionally,
I mean he really
aspired to become
a professional singer
in Kabul in the late 70s
actually, and due to
what was happening
at that time his dream
actually really fell short,
he was really
not able to pursue it at all.
So, when I was born
he, he still, till today says
that he was trying to
live his dream through me,
be it vocal music or
percussion and eventually,
when he noticed
that I had the passion
for percussion and table,
he knew that
I had to be groomed
by one of the best
and a master.
Ustad Zakir Hussain
is considered
a tabla maestro
and highly regarded
around the globe as
a musical phenomenon.
In his native country
of India, he is considered
a national treasure for
his musical genius and
brilliant performances.
His contributions
to world music are heralded
as historic works of art
with which
he has teamed up with
a wide range of artists
that includes
George Harrison,
Yo-Yo Ma, Van Morrison,
Mickey Hart,
Pharoah Sanders
and many others.
Ustad Zakir Hussain’s
collorabative albums,
“Planet Drum” and
“Global Drum Project”
both earned the prestigious
Grammy Awards.
His beautiful
tabla performances
can be heard
in several movies, such as
Francis Ford Coppola’s
“Apocalypse Now” and
Bernardo Bertolucci’s
“The Little Buddha.”
The widely respected
Ustad Zakir Hussain
accepted
the promising Salar
as a student when he was
only seven years old
to begin his
classical music training.
I’ve been so blessed
to have been introduced
and met him
when I did as a child
because he’s been
the one and only person
who’s actually guided me
all my life, as far as
my music is concerned and
the tradition I come from
is the guru
shishya parampara
which is the
teacher-student tradition.
Which, even here today
in California or
no matter where you are
in the world, you still
practice this tradition,
and it’s just
submitting yourself
to your teacher
and to the knowledge
that’s being passed down
to you, and preserving it
and just cherishing
every moment you have
with your teacher.
Normally,
students are only initiated
through the sacred
ghandaband ceremony
after years of study, but
impressed with Salar’s
natural musical intuition,
Ustad Zakir Hussain
took him under
his guidance and became
the twelve-year-old’s guru.
Salar Nader
is considered one of
Ustad Zakir Hussain’s
most talented protégés.
He has
such a relaxed approach
and friendly approach
to his students
and he makes you
feel so comfortable.
Of course,
when you realize
how much knowledge
and performances
and experience he has,
it’s very humbling
as a student.
But he has a really,
really beautiful saying
and he says, himself,
Zakir Ji says that,
“It’s always good
to remain a student and
try to be the best student
possible, because
this life is an entire
learning experience.”
Salar’s mother and father
not only secured
their talented son’s
musical future
through the tutelage
of Ustad Zakir Hussain,
but as wise parents,
they fostered in him
the admirable qualities of
hospitality and humility
that is a trademark of
the noble Afghan people.
They didn’t know
that I was actually
going to become
a professional musician,
so they didn’t want to
get me used to being paid
for performances
as a child.
They made sure
that I donated to charity
all of the time, regardless
if it was a concert
that was for a charity
helping Afghan refugees
in Pakistan, Afghanistan
or outside,
or if it was just a concert
that I’d been invited
to perform for,
they always made sure
and it was great
because I felt really,
really good about it.
I was never into
the dollars and cents,
I was always more
into performing and
that was always a plus
because
that also kept my passion.
It never turned into a job.
I’m actually involved with
Most recently,
the Pakistani flood victims,
just a week ago
in Louisville, Kentucky,
we had a charity where
we donated a percentage
of ticket sales
to the flood victims
and then also I donated
all proceeds of CDs sales
for that weekend to
the Pakistani flood victims.
So, I’m very active
and someone who’s very,
very much influenced me
these days and
made me more active
is actually my wife.
She also was recently
in Haiti and
working there, so we both
try to do our part when
it comes to worldly causes.
One of the causes dearest
to Salar’s heart now
is serving as
an ambassador for
Afghan music and culture
through his tabla playing.
By sharing
the common humanity
and rich heritage
of the Afghan people
with the world, Salar helps
to foster understanding
and friendship.
The tabla is known
for being at least eight to
nine hundred years old.
But its predecessors
are actually up to
thousands of years old,
and in the Indian tradition,
the instrument,
the pakhawaj
and the mridangam,
are actually used
in the mythology in India.
And then in Afghanistan,
it’s been something
that has been traded.
I think its way of origin
was through the Silk Road.
So, you know,
they were constantly
trading instruments and
whatnot and instruments
and cultures were
influencing each other,
at least along those
border cities, I think.
And in the last
hundred years or so,
the tabla has actually
shrunk in height
and it’s become
a little more compact.
And that’s not just
so we can get on Jet Blue
and United flights and
fly around with these guys.
It’s so that
the tonal possibilities
have been expanded
in both drums.
The drum has
a range of notes
and tonal possibilities.
That’s what’s so distinct
about the tabla
in comparison to
any other percussion
in the world.
Please join us
for the conclusion
of our program
featuring gifted
tabla player Salar Nader
and the beauty
of Afghan music on
Saturday, December 18.
For more about
tabla virtuoso Salar Nader
and his performances,
please visit:
It was a pleasure
to have your company
today.
Coming up next is
Words of Wisdom,
after Noteworthy News,
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May all be uplifted
through celestial music.
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