Muhammad Juman
Ustad Muhammad Juman | |
---|---|
Born | Sorra, Lasbela, Balochistan |
10 October 1935
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan |
Genres | Classic, Kafi, Ghazal |
Occupation(s) | Musician |
Instruments | Vocals, harmonium |
Years active | 1935–1990 |
Ustad Muhammad Juman (10 October 1935 - 24 January 1990) was a Sindhi musician and classical singer whose impact on Sindhi music is still pervasive .[1]
He was born in the village of Sorra, Lasbela District, Balochistan, Pakistan to a musicians family of Sakhirani clan.His father Haji Ahmed Sakhirani was also a Singer.Thus he became fond of music from his childhood.He learnt the music formally from great Pakistani musician Ustad Nazar hussain who was also music teacher of clebrated singer Noor Jehan.
1980, he was awarded Pride of Performance by the Government of Pakistan in recognician of his services in the music of Pakistan
Biography
Early life and career
He went to Radio Pakistan in Karachi to start a career as a "Surando" Player (fiddler).He played symphony of Kohyari in audition and started working as staff musician of Radio Pakistan Karachi.he played "Surrando" in hormany of many artists especially Ustad Muhammad Ibrahim. In 1955, he came into Radio PakistanHyderabad as musicians where he composed Kalams of various Sufi saints of Sindh.
Muhammad Jumman received his music education from Ustad Nazir Hussain and Bary Waheed Ali Khan, expert on Bhittai's Surs (Symphonies). He became very famous when he sang a Sindhi Kalam of Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai:
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منهنجو ملڪ ملير،ڪوٽن ۾ آءُ ڪيئن گذاريان
Munhjo Mulk Maleer
This Kalam(Song) was composed by notable musician D Bhattacharya.Muhammad Jumman became well-known everywhere after performing a Seraiki Kafi of Usman Faqir: <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
Yaar Dadhi Ishq Atish Lai Hai
He also sang Mir Sikandar Khan Khoso's kafis "Ishq munjhon izhar thee ayo" and "Kech Punhal day hal kahay hal" at Radio Pakistan. Juman's son, Shafi Muhammad, also followed his style of kafi singing.[clarification needed][2]
Juman was awarded a Bedil Award, Gold Award, Saga Award, and Latif Award, and Pride of Performance by the Pakistani government.
Death
Juman died on 24 January 1990 in Karachi.[3]
References
- Maro Je Malir Ja, by Khadim Hussain Chandio
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- Articles with hCards
- Articles containing Sindhi-language text
- Wikipedia articles needing clarification from February 2009
- 1935 births
- 1990 deaths
- Sindhi people
- Pakistani male singers
- Pakistani Muslims
- People from Lasbela District
- 20th-century singers
- Sindhi-language singers
- Singers from Sindh
- Pages with broken file links
- Pakistani singer stubs