Balochi music explained

Balochi music is the musical traditions of the Baloch people and music in the Balochi language.[1] The Baloch people have a rich oral tradition that includes poems and songs to celebrate or commemorate many events such as religious rites, festivals, or holidays and dance.[2] [3]

Types of Baloch songs include Balochi praise songs (sipatt and nazenk), love songs (dastanag), elegies (Mōtk or Mowtk.), lullabies (lilo), wedding and circumcision songs (halo and lado), songs of separation (zahirok, liko), epics (sher), fishermen’s songs (amba and lewa), healing songs (gwati, sheki, sheparja, and malid, Zar), and Zikri ritual songs.[4]

As with spoken language, Baloch music varies from region to region.[5]

Balochi music has been very popular in Iran, Oman and Pakistan.

Music instruments

Instruments in traditional Balochi music include suroz, donali, ghaychak, dohol, sorna, rubab, kemenche, tamburag and benju.[6]

History

The Balochi zahirok dates back to the 15th century,[7] and some Baloch think it is the original form of Balochi music.[8] They were originally sung by pahlawan, or mintrels, and Baloch scholar Gul Khan Nasir believes that zahiroks were originally composed by women.[9]

baloch songs are strongly melancholic, expressing deep emotions that culturally distinct from other region. Many Balochi songs and form of music originate from the Safavid period and Mir Gwahram Khan Lashari and Mir Chakar Rind.

Baloch music continues to have a presence, with Baloch artists releasing both traditional songs and contemporary compositions. Baloch musicians have brought their traditional music to places like Europe on tours,[10] and to online music platforms like YouTube and Bandcamp.[11]

Traditional baloch dance

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2019-12-24 . آشنایی با موسیقی نواحی سیستان و بلوچستان . Getting to know the music of Sistan and Baluchistan. Hamshahri. fa.
  2. Badalkhan . Sabir . 2003 . Balochi Oral Tradition . Oral Tradition . 18 . 2 . 229–235.
  3. Web site: Massoudieh . M. T. . 2016-06-21 . BALUCHISTAN iv. Music of Baluchistan . Encyclopædia Iranica.
  4. Frishkopf . Michael . 2006 . Music of Makran: Traditional Fusion from Coastal Balochistan . Asian Music . University of Texas Press . 37 . 2 . 164–171 . 10.1353/amu.2007.0002 . January 5, 2024 . University of Alberta.
  5. Murer . George H. . 2020 . The Performance and Patronage of Baloch Culture through Music (and Related Arts) in the Eastern Arabian Peninsula . City University of New York.
  6. Web site: Regional Music. January 5, 2024.
  7. Web site: Hafeez . Somaiyah . 2023-01-01 . Baloch music through history and time . 2024-01-06 . The Express Tribune . en.
  8. Sakata . Hiromi Lorraine . 2001 . Music of Makran: Traditional Fusion from Coastal Balochistan. Topic. TSCD 916. Recorded and annotated by Anderson Bakewell. 2019. . Yearbook for Traditional Music . 33 . 10.2307/1519672.
  9. Web site: Khan . Badal . Zahirok: The Musical Base of Baloch Minstrelsy .
  10. Web site: Uddin . Zahra Salah . 2023-09-13 . From the Makran Coast to Europe, Ustad Noor Bakhsh’s music has a way of bringing people closer . 2024-01-06 . DAWN.COM . en.
  11. Web site: Thomas . Martina . 2021-03-17 . The Baluch Twins want to revive Balochi music, one song at a time . 2024-01-06 . Images . en.