music.wikisort.org - Singer

Search / Calendar

Iqbal Bano (Urdu: اِقبال بانو; born 1928 in Delhi – died 21 April 2009 in Lahore)[1][2] was a ghazal singer from Pakistan. She was known for her semi-classical Urdu ghazal songs and classical thumris, but also sang easy-listening numbers in the 1950s films. Iqbal Bano's prominent work includes her singing of ghazals of the great Urdu poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz. In 1974, she became the recipient of the Pride of Performance award.

Iqbal Bano

PP
Iqbal
Born1928 (1928)
Delhi, British India
Died21 April 2009 (2009-04-22) (aged 80)
OccupationSinger
Years active1939 2007
StyleGhazal • Thumri • Dadra • Khayal
AwardsPride of Performance (1974)

She worn a black saree in Lahore against Zia, for trying to ban saree’s ( The sari had been banned by the country's military dictator, General Zia ul Haq in his efforts at Islamising Pakistani society). Iqbal went against his words and went on stage in Lahore with a black saree and sang "Hum dekhenge". A lot of women started to wear a saree which where Zia got angry. After his death a lot of women started wear saree’s again. Iqbal Bano sings Hum Dekhenge in protest, Iqbal Bano sang it to a full house at Lahore’s Alhamra Arts Council in 1985 at the Faiz Foundation annual event. Zia’s regime was in full swing, and many bans were in place, including one on sarees. The garment was deemed too Indian, and therefore anti-Islamic. Legend has it that Iqbal Bano defied the ban and turned up in a black saree to sing at the event.


Early life


Iqbal Bano was born in 1927 in Delhi, British India.[1][3][2] From a young age, she developed a love for music. It was a crucial moment of her life when her friend's father told Bano's father, "My daughters do sing reasonably well, but Iqbal Bano is especially blessed in singing. She will become a big name if you begin her training." Her father allowed her to study music. She spent her childhood years in Rohtak near Delhi.[3]

In Delhi, she studied under Ustad Sabri Khan and Ustad Chaand Khan of the Delhi gharana, an expert in all kinds of pure classical and light classical forms of vocal music.[3][4]

He instructed her in pure classical music and light classical music within the framework of classical forms of thumri and dadra. She was duly initiated Ganda-bandh shagird (formally initiated disciple; Ganda-bandh is a traditional knot-tying-ceremony which cements the relationship between guru and student) of her Ustad (teacher).[2]


Career


Ustad Chaand Khan referred her to All India Radio, Delhi, where she sang on the radio and recorded her first songs.[4][1]

In 1952, aged 17, she migrated to Pakistan and also married into a land-owning family in Multan, Pakistan.[4][3] She moved to Multan with her husband who promised her that he would never try to stop her from singing, but would rather encourage and promote her. She had become a 'singing star' by the 1950s, singing soundtrack songs for famous Pakistani Urdu films like Gumnaam (1954), Qatil (1955), Inteqaam (1955), Sarfarosh (1956), Ishq-e-Laila (1957), and Nagin (1959).[4][1]

Her husband died in 1980,[4] after which she moved to Lahore from Multan. It was observed by many music critics that her temperament was particularly suited to vocal genres like thumri, dadra and ghazal. According to BBC News website, "Few singers of classical music matched the brilliance of her voice and her command over musical notes".[1][4]

Iqbal Bano was later invited by Radio Pakistan for classical performances on the radio. Her debut public concert took place in 1957, at the Lahore Arts Council.[4][3]

She was considered a specialist in singing the ghazals of Faiz Ahmed Faiz, a Lenin Prize-winning poet.[3][4][1] In 1985, Bano became a cult icon when she roused a strong crowd of 50,000 people in Lahore by singing Faiz's passionate Urdu anthem, Hum Dekhenge (We Will See),[4] despite the poet's works being banned by General Zia ul-Haq's military regime on the grounds of his close ties with Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto. In due course, she generated more and more public appeal and became a specialist in singing the kalam of Faiz Ahmad Faiz and had the moral courage to violate the government ban on singing Faiz's poems. Her inciting ghazals were seen as an act of defiance and resistance.[3][1]

She was considered a great singer of the ghazals of Nasir Kazmi. She rendered voice to a Baqi Siddiqui's ghazal, "Daagh e Dil Humko Yaad Anay Lagay" and made it a popular gem.[5] She also sang Persian poetry, which became popular in Iran and Afghanistan. In pre-1979 Afghanistan, she was often invited to the annual cultural fair, the Jashn-e-Kabul.[1][3]

In light classical, her presentation of Thumris in Raag Khamaj (Kaahe Sataye Mohey), Raag Tilak Kamod (Sautan Ghar Na Ja), Raag Des (Nahin Pare Mohe Chain), Raag Pilu (Gori Tore Naina Kajar Bin Kaare) and other such renderings which have become ever-green classics.[1][4]

Music lovers noted some similarities between Iqbal Bano and Begum Akhtar,[4] especially some marked resemblances in their styles of singing. Bano's recitals stuck to a classical style that lays more stress on the raag purity.[4]


Awards



Death


After a short illness, at the age of 82 , Iqbal Bano died in Lahore, Pakistan on 21 April 2009.[1][4][3][2]


Tribute


On 28 December 2019, Google celebrated her 81st birthday (as born in 1938) with a Google Doodle.[6] However, some other sources indicate her birth date as 27 August.[7]



21 April- Black Sari Day for Pakistani’s across global, an honour for Iqbal Bano.


References


  1. M. Ilyas Khan (22 April 2009). "Pakistani singer Iqbal Bano dies". BBC News website. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  2. Ken Hunt (5 May 2009). "Iqbal Bano: Singer who transformed the genre of the ghazal". The Independent newspaper [UK]. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  3. "Iqbal Bano – Renowned Pakistani singer of Urdu ghazals". The Guardian (UK newspaper). 10 May 2009. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  4. Iqbal Bano ghazal personified Dawn (newspaper), Published 22 April 2009, Retrieved 3 July 2020
  5. "dagh-e-dil hum ko yaad aane lage". rekhta. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  6. "Iqbal Bano's 81st Birthday (Google Doodle on her birthday)". Google website. 28 December 2019. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  7. "Iqbal Bano". Discogs website. Retrieved 3 July 2020.



На других языках


- [en] Iqbal Bano

[ru] Бано, Икбаль

Икбаль Бано (урду اقبال بانو‎; 27 августа 1935, Дели[2] — 21 апреля 2009, Лахор[3]) — пакистанская певица XX века. Исполняла полуклассические газели, классические тумри на языке урду, а также озвучивала песни во многих фильмах 1950-х годов[4].



Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.

Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.

2019-2024
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии