Zahida Parveen | |
Birth Name: | Zahida Parveen Begum |
Birth Date: | 1925 |
Birth Place: | Amritsar, Punjab, British India |
Death Place: | Lahore, Pakistan |
Alias: | The Nigtingale The Queen of Kafi[1] |
Education: | Patiala Gharana School |
Children: | Shahida Parveen (daughter) |
Years Active: | 1940 – 1975 |
Relatives: | Peeran Ditti (sister) |
Awards: | Gold Medal award from All Pakistan Music Conference in 1964 |
Zahida Parveen (1925 15 May 1975) was a Pakistani classical singer and a film playback singer.[2]
She was known as The Nightingale and The Queen of Kafi.[3]
Zahida Parveen was born in 1925 at Amritsar, Punjab during British India.[4] Her parents died when she was very young so she was raised by one of her sisters, Peeran Ditti.[3]
She joined Patiala gharana school of classical music to learn singing from sarangi player Baba Taj from Kapurthala. Then she studied with Hussain Bakhsh Khan, a sarangi player from Amritsar.[3]
After partition, she moved to Pakistan and learned singing from Ashiq Hussain of Patiala Gharana in Lahore. Then she started singing at Radio Pakistan, Lahore. In 1949, she worked as a film playback singer and recorded a qawwali with Iqbal Bano and Munawar Sultana in the film Mundri. The qawwali was composed by G.A. Chishti.[3]
At Radio Pakistan, she performed the songs "Kya Haal Sunawan Dil Da" and "Maindi Ajj Kal Akh Phurkaandi Aei", a composition of Khwaja Ghulam Farid with kafi style the songs were recorded for His Masters Voice (HMV) on gramophone and became popular hits.[5] Then she recorded many more Kafis in Urdu, Saraiki, Hindi, Punjabi and Sindhi languages for HMV, radio and stage.[3]
In the 1940s, she began to sing songs for films in Kheyal style and in classical vocalization and she did playback singing by singing light classical music in different forms like in geets and ghazals.[3] In 1957, she along with Ustad Fateh Ali Khan recorded a song Nain Se Nain Milae Rakhoni Ko for film Waadah (1957 film), the song was composed by Rashid Attre.[3]
In 1958, she worked in film Begunah and sanged a classical song Kaisi Raat Rageeli Aai in duet with Naseem Begum. The same year she was hired again by music composer Rashid Attre for film Jan-e-Bahar and was paired with Naseem Begum. The duo sang the song Ab Tou Ji Bhar Ke Khanjar Chalaenge Hum in raag darbari style.[3]
In 1964, she was honoured by All Pakistan Music Conference with a Gold Medal Award for her contribution to the music industry.
Zahida was married and had a daughter named Shahida Parveen. She also wanted her daughter to be a singer. So she trained her daughter in a similar style and Shahida became a student of Ustad Akhtar Hussain Khan at the insistence of her mother.[3] [6]
Zahida Parveen died at the age of 50 on 15 May 1975, in Lahore, Pakistan.[3] [7] She was laid to rest in Miani Sahib Graveyard.[8]
Year | Film | Language | |
---|---|---|---|
1949 | Mundri | Punjabi | |
1950 | Anokhi Dastan | Urdu | |
1951 | Billo | Punjabi | |
1953 | Barkha | Urdu | |
1953 | Shehri Babu | Punjabi | |
1955 | Pattan | Punjabi[9] | |
1956 | Morni | Punjabi | |
1956 | Dulla Bhatti | Punjabi | |
1957 | Waadah | Urdu | |
1957 | Yakke Wali | Punjabi | |
1958 | Begunah | Urdu | |
1958 | Jan-e-Bahar | Urdu | |
1958 | Darbar | Urdu | |
1959 | Bacha Jamoora | Punjabi | |
1964 | Baap Ka Baap | Urdu | |
1965 | Dil Ke Tukre | Urdu |