Mystic Music of Pakistan

 When/Where?

Sunday , May 15th , 2022
07:00 PM - 9:00 PM
$50 regular, $45 Friends, $37.50 seniors and students. Includes same-day Museum admission
Aga Khan Museum
77 Wynford Dr, North York M3C 1K1 ,
Supported by TD Bank Canada

Small World Music, in partnership with Kabir Cultural Centre, and Aga Khan Museum, presents an evening of Sufi Music in the form of Qawwali performed by Abdullah Niazi Qawwals from Pakistan. Qawwali is a form of devotional singing, originating from the Indian subcontinent, and notably popular in the Punjab and Sindh regions of Pakistan; in Hyderabad, Delhi and other parts of India, especially north; as well as the Dhaka and Chittagong Divisions of Bangladesh.

Abdullah Niazi Qawwal (born 1960) is a Pakistani Qawwal. He belongs to the Qawwal Bachchon Ka Gharana of Delhi. He is the eldest son of Manzoor Niazi Qawwal. Abdullah Niazi Qawwal's grandfather was Mir Qutub Bukhsh who was awarded the title of Tanras Khan by the last Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shad Zafar. In 2015, he branched out with his sons supporting him. His performance style is steeped in Amir Khusro's Kalaam (verses) and is based on Indian Classical Music. Abdullah Niazi carries the qawwali performance with a command and virtuosity rarely found in contemporary Qawwals, capturing Amir Khusro's poetry and its musical emotionality in all its subtlety and intensity.

Abdullah Niazi Qawwal performs various genres of qawwali music such as Thumri, Khayal, Tarana, Sufism and classical. Abdullah Niazi Qawwal has released many CDs/VCDs and Audio Cassettes. He also has recorded qawwalis on ARY QTV channel and on Pakistan Television Corporation channel. He has recorded qawwalis on South Africa's Radio Lotus in 1989, Oslo Television in 1991, and on Doordarshan of India. Abdullah Niazi Qawwal also worked with Komal Rizvi in her video song Jhoolay Lal which was released by HMV India in 2013.

A group of Qawwals is made up of a lead singer, one or two secondary singers and musicians, and wildly clapping junior members. By repeatedly and hypnotically chanting salient phrases, they transport audiences to a spiritual nirvana, a trance-like state that some describe as akin to flying. Qawwali evokes the name of Allah in many languages, from its original Persian to Punjabi, Urdu, Arabic and other languages of India and Pakistan, though the medium’s passion and intensity has the ability to move even Western ears. Traditional Qawwali performances, or mahfils, are intimate gatherings which see listeners sitting on the ground rather than on seats. This setting, traditionalists believe, brings them closer to God— a state unattainable in the stadium-size affairs. Nevertheless, large concerts still have audience members whirling like dervishes.

Featured Artists include: Abdullah Muhammad Manzoor Niazi, Waqas Ahmed, Fahad Ahmed, Saad Ahmed, Burhan Ahmed, Irshad Muhammad, Muhammad Hammad and Waqar.

Presented as a part of 25 for 25 - Small World Music's 25th Anniversary Program

Upcoming Events

Sunday, May 15, 2022,
07:00 PM - 9:00 PM