Noziya Karomatullo

Noziya Karomatullo (Tajik: Нозияи Кароматулло; born 7 February 1988) is a Tajik, Persian, Hindi pop singer from Tajikistan. Nozia sings mostly in Tajik, however occasionally she also sings in Hindi. She performs in concerts, New-Year Parties, National Day Parade, Radio and TV Programs in her native Tajikistan as well as other neighboring countries.

Noziya Karomatullo
نازیه کرامت الله
Нозияи Кароматулло
Background information
Born (1988-02-07) 7 February 1988
Dushanbe, Tajikistan
Genres
Occupation(s)Singer
InstrumentsTabla, Piano, Violin
Years active2010 – 2015
LabelsVarious

She got married in the year 2014 and gave birth to a girl on 7 December 2015.

Her father, Karomatullo Qurbonov, died on 17 October 1992 in an attack by bandits during the civil war in the Yavan district, while returning from a wedding party at night.

Early life

Noziya Karomatullo was born 7 February 1988 in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, then part of the Soviet Union. She is the daughter of a famous Tajik singer Karomatullo Qurbonov .

Education

Noziya graduated in 2005 from Maliki Sobirova and entered the conservatory in New Delhi for the academic diploma course in classical singing and dancing.[1]

In 2010 she graduated from the Indian Conservatory with honors, and in the same year performed her first solo concert.

Noziya Karomatullo is now a 5th-year student of the Institute of Entrepreneurship and Service, Faculty of International Relations.

Achievements

In 2007, she won the competition of classical dance kathak in India.[2]

gollark: Which is technically correct, `<p>` meaning paragraph and all.
gollark: Looks like you can use the selector `.content__article-body > p` to get the content... yay?
gollark: ... inside another four divs.
gollark: The actual text looks to be in `l-side-margins`?
gollark: Hmm. There's a `maincontent` div but it appears to be empty.

References

  1. A short Bibloghraphy of Nozia, www.clips.tj, retrieved 2015-05-01
  2. www.clips.tj, retrieved 2015-05-01
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.