Abida Parveen :queen Of Myistical Singing - Page 3

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roy thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#21
abida parveen mere se inspired hai , she sings just keeping me in mind , u guys shd thank me for tht.
a_b thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#22

Originally posted by: roy

abida parveen mere se inspired hai , she sings just keeping me in mind , u guys shd thank me for tht.

oye aate hi naatak once in a blue moon aata hai yahan kaiko natak karta hai😆

*dolly* thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#23

Originally posted by: roy

abida parveen mere se inspired hai , she sings just keeping me in mind , u guys shd thank me for tht.

Nice to see you rage.take care.

and thank you ..is that you wanted 😆

*dolly* thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#24

some MP3

Asan ishq namaz

http://www.savefile.com/files/562938

Dama dum

http://www.savefile.com/files/562948

Nukte vich

http://www.savefile.com/files/562962

kitthe mehar ali

http://www.savefile.com/files/562963

latthe di chader

http://www.savefile.com/files/562968

Maahi yaar di ghadoli

http://www.savefile.com/files/562972

menda ishaq vi

http://www.savefile.com/files/562977

Edited by *dolly* - 17 years ago
*dolly* thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#25

Magical sounds of Abida Parveen

By Reshil Charles - CNN-IBN - New Delhi, India
Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Pakistani Sufi singer Abida Parveen is widely known for having one of the most powerful female voices in the Sufi world.

Also known to stay away from the mainstream unlike many of her contemporaries, the one festival that brings her India is the Jahan-e-Khusrau.

CNN-IBN caught up with her in New Delhi just days before the festival kicks off.

Reshil Charles: We saw you last at the Jahan-e-Khusrau and now again at the same festival. What has kept you away for so long?
Abida Parveen: I was busy. I had other commitments and that consumed a lot of my time and most of the year.

Reshil Charles: Sufi singers like Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and his nephew Rahat have marketed themselves well. They have associated themselves with Bollywood. But you have kept away. Why so?
Abida Parveen: It is important to sing from the heart. And when the singer is able to strike a chord with the audience, nothing can be better than that.
Edited by *dolly* - 17 years ago
Qwest thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#26
Thanks Dolly for your great contribution for (IF. As always enjoy reading your post.
trishancku thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#27

God in Gucci

Selfless Surrender

She believes in purity of the soul, which is what Sufism is all about. Do good deeds and you'll get closer to Him,vouches Abida Parveen

Abida Parveen


MY relationship with God has been beautiful all along. It's a unique mohabbat that I have for Him. And my music is symbolic of my utmost devotion for Him. The acknowledgement of God is an awakening. For me, it came through my music. Singing Sufi songs got me closer to Allah.

The word 'Sufi' comes from the word 'Saf', which in Persian means pure. Sufism is simple and pure as true love. Love teaches selflessness. I believe when you go through bad times in life, it strengthens you and in turn purifies your soul.

When you think of God with all sincerity, with a pure heart, you glow. There's an energy chakra that surrounds you. When you do good to others, good things come your way. Always remember, God fulfils all good wishes. He brings to you all material pleasures, gains and riches. If you praise Him, He shows you His miracles. That's why I believe, you can be materialistic and also spiritual.

Faith is universal. When people listen to my
songs, I know they are trying to find God through my music. Sometimes, as I sing, I am overwhelmed. I am lost in it and it feels like I'm in a trance. It is my way of reaching out to Him.

Where is God? He is everywhere. He is in my music, in my heart, in my soul. You don't need to live many lives to find Him. Sufi teaches you 'selfless spirituality'. Spirituality is about purity of thoughts, feelings, emotions and relationships. You have to give yourself completely and truly.

I believe God is within each one of us. All our lives we keep visiting places of worship, from one religious dargah to the other in pursuit of God, while all along, He resides inside us. So why not search within?

We sing Baba Bulleh Shah in joy; we praise Baba Farid for his simplicity and spirituality. Everyone should try to reach within to discover their real being. Life is devotion, the rest is unseen. 'Yeh duniya raen basera.' Use it to find the God within you.

My name is Abida which means the one who prays. My entire life is like a prayer through music. Sur is a medium to reach Him. But it necessarily may not be Sufi music. One can find a link with God even through a film song.

Everything which one does with the thought of the Almighty is a prayer. Any noble gesture is like praying to Him. Even something like looking after your mother is ibadat. Everything in this universe is meant for peace. All we need is patience. And God brings everything to us. I seek God in everything around me. He is the complete truth. I find people are so restless. They try to find peace everywhere, but within. My music soothes, heals and brings you in touch with your inner self as Sufi music isn't pretentious. The songs come from the soul. It teaches you selfless spirituality. There's no space for selfishness. Through my music, I have rediscovered the innocence of soul.

(Abida Parveen is a popular Sufi singer)

Source

Edited by trishanku3 - 16 years ago
Rasny thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#28
Abida Parveen
Begum Abida Parveen (Urdu: ????? ?????), Pride of Performance, Sitara-e-Imtiaz, a Pakistani singer, is one of the foremost exponents of Sufi music. Her forte is the kafi and the ghazal, though she has also ventured into traditional male territory and sung qawwalis. She is known for her particularly stunning voice, as well as her vivid musical imagination. She has attained legendary status in the Indian Sub-Continent, especially within her home province of Sindh, Pakistan

Life and Career
Abida was born in Larkana (Sindh province, Pakistan) in 1954. She received her musical training initially from her father, Ghulam Haider, and subsequently from Ustad Salamat Ali Khan.

She embarked upon her professional career from Radio Pakistan, Hyderabad, in 1973. Her first hit was the Sindhi song "Tuhinje zulfan jay band kamand widha". This song had been sung by many other Sindhi singers before her, but Abida brought her own unique style to it, rooted in classical music. She has sung in Sindhi, Urdu, Hindi, and Seraiki.

Although she is associated most closely with the verses of the Sufi saint Shah Abdul Latif, she has also sung the verses of other Sufi saints, including Amir Khusrau, Bulleh Shah, Sachal Sarmast, Sultan Bahu, and others such as Kabir and Waris Shah.

In recent years, it has become fashionable to compare Abida with the legendary Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, a giant of Sufi music who died in 1997. While such comparisons are necessarily subjective, there is certainly much that Abida has in common with Nusrat. Like him, she possesses a truly magnificent voice, is unassuming despite her superstar status, and her music is informed by a deep commitment to the ideals of Sufism. For both, the act of singing is a passionate offering to God, and for both the deepest part of their magic lies in the fact that they are able to bring the listener's heart to resonate with the music, so deeply that we ourselves become full partners in that offering. Despite all the comparisons, traditionalists believe that Abida and Nusrat belong to somewhat different genres within the Sufi spectrum, and that they enjoy principal status in their own areas. Their comparison, therefore, would always be unjust.

Abida Parveen is regarded as a singer who has compromised neither the form nor content of her classical training while nevertheless retaining a compelling freshness that is endearing to a contemporary and often younger audience. Her singing has been compared to Afro-American Blues and Jazz singers like Nina Simone, Billie Holliday and Mahalia Jackson. While this comparison may have merit, it would be technically inaccurate to compare classically trained devotional singing to Jazz or Blues traditions. Where these two traditions do occasionally meet, however, is in the deep soul-searching, the melancholy that is sometimes expressed in anticipation of the divine release of the soul from its earthly torpidity and bondage. The only western style of singing remotely comparable to Abida's would be certain forms of sacred music, for example the Tallis Scholars. Sacred music, like sacred art, draws its inspiration and technical brilliance from years training at the feet of a musical director, spiritual Guru or Ustad in Urdu. Such training is incomplete without devotional homage to the teacher and an understanding of the ideals of transcendence as well as immanence in artistic expression. This training, under a good Ustad can take the shape of heightened awareness of the healing and spiritual properties of music, much like Nada Siddha, the inner sounds discovered through deep meditation and yoga under a competent Guru. Abida has repeatedly said that her singing has many healing effects on the listener, and in this sense Abida may be compared to the great North Indian musician, Tansen, whose music was said to have created spontaneous and miraculous effects on his listeners.

Abida is perhaps equally renowned as an accomplished Ghazal singer in Urdu and Sindhi, and an exponent of Punjabi, Urdu and Sindhi Sufiana Kalam, which literally translates as the 'Sayings of the Sufis', comprising the poems and aphorisms of the great Sufis of the Indian sub-Continent. Sufiana Kalam is also closely aligned to Sikh Punjabi devotional singing, otherwise known as the "Shabad Kirtan tradition". It is always interesting to witness, in times of heightened communal tensions in the Indian Sub-Continent, Abida's husky but equally delicate voice proclaiming a deeper bond of Universal Love that soars above the boundaries that divide religious and secular denominations. In this sense, her message can be compared to the likes of Kabir and Nanak, both of whom united Hindu and Muslim. Although it is generally accepted that the mystical aspect of Abida's musical message contains broad humanitarian appeal the appeal does not itself contain Sufism when considered from in its penultimate aim, the mystical union with God.

Abida Parveen has been gifted with perhaps one of the very greatest female voices of recent times for the proclamation of arguably one of the most important messages of our time. Abida has received many prestigious music awards for her singing, and is often invited to music festivals in India and abroad. Widely and professionally regarded as the "Singers' Singer" or the Artists' Artist, it is not surprising that her admirers include many of the very best singers of the sub-continent. Although she is not as well known as Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan in the West, Abida regularly tours the USA, Europe and the UK.


Awards
President's Award for Pride of Performance (1982) and the Sitara-e-Imtiaz (2005).

Albums
Aap Ki Abida
Are Logo Tumhara Kiya
Best of Abida Parveen
Baba Bulleh Shah
Arafin Hag Bahu Rematullah
Abida Parveen Sings Songs of the Mystics Vol 1
Arifana Kalam
Chants Soufis Du Pakistan
Faiz by Abida
Ghazal Ka Safar Vol I
Ghazal Ka Safar Vol II
Har Tarannum
Hazrat Sultanul Arafin Hag Bahu Rematullah
Ho Jamalo
Ishq Mastana
Jahan-e-Khusrau
Jeewey Sain Yan Jeewey
Kabir by Abida
Kafian Bulleh Shah
Kafiyan Khwaja Ghulam Farid
Khazana
Kuch Is Ada Se Aaj
Latthe Di Chadar
Mahi Yaar Di Ghadoli
Mere Dil Se
Meri Pasand - Abida Parveen
Raqs-e-Bismil - Dance of the Wounded
Sarhadein
Sings Amir Khusrau
Tera Ishq Nachaya
The very best of Abida
Yaadgar Ghazlen Vol 1
Qwest thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#29
Abida Parveen - Mere Yaar Dhi Gharoli

[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zGYpOiNPcE[/YOUTUBE]
Summer3 thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#30
Yes music bridges heaven and earth and in it we find the best expression of the loftiest ideals; somehow the unseen can be felt as it slowly takes shape.
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