Weekend Herald

Isolated Iranian musicians take to the rooftops

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On the rooftop terrace of her Tehran apartment building, 28-year-old Mojgan Hosseini’s fingers pluck the strings of her qanun, an ancient stringed instrument, bringing life to an Iranian capital stilled by the coronaviru­s.

With performanc­e halls closed and many isolated in their homes as a result of the Mideast’s worst virus outbreak, Hosseini (pictured below) and other Iranian musicians now find performanc­e spaces where they can. That includes rooftops dotted with water tanks and littered with debris, empty front porches and opened apartment windows. Their music floats down on others stuck in their homes, fearful of the Covid-19 illness the virus brings.

Their impromptu concerts draw applause and offer hope to their listeners, even as public performanc­es still draw hard-line scrutiny in the Islamic Republic.

“We’re not frontline medical workers, hospital custodians, or grocery workers, but I think many musicians — myself included — have felt an obligation to offer our services of comfort and entertainm­ent in these trying times,” said Arif Mirbaghi, who plays the double bass.

Iran has been hard-hit by the virus with more than 76,000 confirmed cases, including more than 4700 fatalities.

Musicians long have been a mainstay in Iranian life, dating back to the ancient Persian empires. Legend has it that King Jamshid, the fourth king of the Pishdadian Dynasty, known as the “king of the world”, created music with a fourstring­ed lyra.

Over time, Western influence brought with it the symphonies of Europe. Initially after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, pop and Western-influenced music all but disappeare­d. Classical music slowly re-emerged in the 1990s and has become increasing­ly popular. But women still cannot sing before audiences including men and hard-liners have broken up concerts that pushed the cultural limits imposed by Iran’s Shiite theocracy. Outside of Tehran, officials increasing­ly break up performanc­es.

But the coronaviru­s pandemic has loosened some norms, as doctors and nurses dance in social media videos that earlier could have served as grounds for arrest.

For Hosseini the music gives her an outlet she’d otherwise have as a member of Iran’s National Orchestra. Only the occasional motorbike or bird’s chirp could be heard as she played.

“Since Covid-19 hit Tehran, the rooftop terrace of my apartment has become my stage to perform and my neighbours have became my main audience.”

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