Mohammad Omar (musician)
Ustad Mohammad Omar (1905–1980) was a musician from Afghanistan who played the rubab.
Mohammad Omar | |
---|---|
Born | 1905 |
Origin | Kabul, Afghanistan |
Died | 1980 |
Genres | Klasik |
Occupation(s) | musician |
Early life and career
Mohammad Omar began music lessons under his father, Ibrahim, who taught him singing, sarod, rubab and dutar. In the mid-20th century, he was Director of the National Orchestra of Radio Afghanistan, which brought together folk musicians from the different regions and distinct ethnic communities of Afghanistan.[1]
In 1974, Mohammad Omar received a Fulbright-Hays Foreign Scholar Fellowship to teach at the University of Washington, making him the first Afghan musician to teach at a major university in the United States. On November 18, 1974, Mohammad Omar gave a public concert at the university, his first rabab performance in front of a Western audience; he was accompanied on tabla by Zakir Hussain. In 1978 he met the German jazz-rock groupe Embryo at the Goethe Institut in Kabul. The concert was filmed for the movie Vagabundenkarawane by Werner Penzel.
Discography
- Embryo's Reise 1980 (Schneeball 20)
- Virtuoso from Afghanistan 2002 (SFW)
Notes
External links
- Smithsonian Folkways Page on Ustad Mohammad Omar
- Review of one of his albums on RootsWorld
- World Music Central - Ustad Mohammad Omar