Mohammad-Reza Lotfi

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Mohammad-Rezā Lotfi
Background information
Birth name Mohammad-Rezā Lotfi
Born 1947 (age 6667)
Gorgan, Golestan, Iran
Origin Tehran, Tehran Province, Iran
Genres Classical Persian Music
Occupations Musician
Instruments -Tar
-Setar
-Kamancheh
Years active 1964 - Present
Labels Avaye Shayda
Website www.shayda.info

Mohammad-Rezā Lotfi (Persian: محمد رضا لطفی , born 1947 in Gorgan, Iran) is a Persian classical musician renowned for his mastery of the tar and setar.

Life and career

Encouraged by his elder brother, he learned to play the tar and showed his talent by winning the first prize in Iran's Young Musicians Festival in 1964. [citation needed] The following year, he started his studies at the National Conservatory in Tehran under Habibollah Salehi and Master Ali Akbar Shahnazi. While at the conservatory, he also studied western classical music and the violin which led to his collaboration with various orchestras under the direction of Hossein Dehlavi. Some of his other eminent teachers were Abdollah Davami, from whom he learned the Radif, and Master Sa'id Hormozi, who taught him the setar. While attending the College of Fine Arts at Tehran University, Lotfi became the student of Master Nour-Ali Boroumand. He also worked at the Center for the Preservation and Propagation of Traditional Iranian Music, both as a soloist and a conductor. His other accomplishments were teaching at the Center for Intellectual Development of Children and Adolescents, researching folk music for National Radio and Television, and appearing at the Shiraz Arts Festival. After graduating in 1973, Lotfi joined the faculty of Fine Arts at Tehran University. He continued his collaboration with Radio and Television and co-founded the Shayda Ensemble. Between 1978 and 1980, Lotfi became the Head of the School of Music at Tehran University. He served as the director of the Center for the Preservation and Propagation of Traditional Iranian Music and the Chavosh Conservatory. In 1984 Lotfi was invited by Fondazione Cini to participate in a seminar and perform concerts in Italy where he resided for two years. He has been living in the United States since 1986 and has performed widely throughout Asia, Europe, and North America. A prolific musician, he has made numerous recordings both as a solo artist and with major Iranian musicians such as, Mohammad Reza Shajarian, Shahram Nazeri, Hossein Alizadeh, and Parviz Meshkatian. Lotfi is one of the greatest contemporary masters of the tar and setar. He is among the major figures who, in the past twenty years, have revolutionized the Persian traditional (classical) music. His innovative approach of combining the classical with folk elements, both in terms of music and technique, has injected a new vitality into a very old tradition. His original creativity and the deep-rooted emotional quality of his playing have made him the father of a new aesthetics in Persian music.

See also

References

  • Laudan Nooshin, in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, edited by Stanley Sadie, second edition (Macmillan, London, 2001). ISBN 1-56159-239-0. (Oxford University Press, 2001). ISBN 0-19-517067-9.

External links

  • The Art of Improvisation in Persian Music, in Persian, Institute of Culture and Arts, Āvāy-e Shaydā.
  • Mohammad-Rezā Lotfi playing the Tār (a solo piece in Abu Atā Dastgāh), a slide show, YouTube: (8 min 34 sec).
  • Mohammad-Rezā Lotfi (Tār and song), Mohammad Ghavihelm (Tonbak), Hushang Ebtehāj (Poem), at Bāl dar Bāl Conecert, London, October 2007, YouTube: (1) (6 min 28 sec), (2) (7 min 28 sec).
  • Mohammad-Rezā Lotfi (Se'tār and song) and Mohammad Ghavihelm (Tonbak), playing in the Bāl dar Bāl Concert, London, October 2007, YouTube: (9 min 42 sec).


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