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Moluk Zarabi

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Moluk Zarabi
ملوک ضرابی
Background information
Birth nameMoluk Farshforosh Kashani
BornMarch 22, 1907 
Kashan, Qajar Iran (now Iran)
DiedJanuary 5, 2000
Tehran, Iran
GenresPersian traditional music
Occupation(s)Singer, actress
Years active1920–1978

Moluk Farshforosh Kashani (Persian: ملوک ضرابی, Moluk Żarrābi; March 22, 1907 Kashan – January 5, 2000 Tehran), known as Moluk Zarabi, was an Iranian singer of Persian traditional music and actor.[1]

Life

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Moluk Farsh Kashani was born in a music-loving family. Her grandfather Haji Jafar was a singer in the court of Naser al-Din Shah Qajar. She inherited good voice from her father and grandfather and showed talent at the age of seven. Early interest in singing caused her family displeasure and social exclusion at school. But with all these problems, Zarabi has been singing in various Kashan groups since he was 13 years old.[1]

Hossein Taherzadeh discovered Zarabi's singing talent at the age of 9 and taught her to sing for two years. Haji Khan Ain al-Dawlah (drums) also taught her to play percussion instruments for a year. Zarabi's alto voice was very suitable for singing percussive ballads. Later, she became so famous by singing percussion ballads that they gave her the stage name "Zarrabi". Zarabi learned singing from Abul Hasan Iqbal Azar and was one of his students.[2]

Professional experience

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Zarrabi's career as a singer began in 1924 with two public performances at Firooz Bahram High School in Tehran and another performance with Ahmad Ebadi at Tehran's Grand Hotel.[1]

later she joined Ismail Mehrtash's theater group called Anjuman Barbad, which was founded in 1926, and performed with this leading orchestra in plays such as Adalat and musical plays and pieces such as Khosrow and Shirin and Layla and Majnun and established her position among the leading singers and actors of Iranian theater and cinema in the first half of the 20th century.[3]

Shortly after the establishment of Radio Tehran in 1940, Zarrabi was invited along with several different groups. In these radio programs, he collaborated with musicians such as Abolhasan Saba, Hossein Yahaghi, Morteza Mahjubi, Habib Samaei and Hossein Tehrani. The first radio performance of Zarrabi was the ballad "Kisti", whose lyrics were written by Hassan Salek and whose music was composed by Hossein Yahaghi.

Around 1957, Zarrabi was chosen as an honorary member of Tehran Radio Orchestra No. 7 (special orchestra) which operated under the supervision of Abdullah Jahanpanah.[4]

Zarrabi traveled to Syria and Lebanon in 1938 to record songs with Ismail Mehrtash, Abolhasan Saba, Hossein Qoli Tatai and singers Javad Badiazadeh, Taj Esfahani, Melke Broumand and Adib Khansari. The pieces recorded by Meluk Zarrabi were "Eshg Man" for Odeon and the operettas "Khosro and Shirin" and "Khodstaei Shirin" which were performed with the Barbad community orchestra.[5]

Among the famous ballads of Meluk Zarrabi, we can mention "Sargasht Deladar and Gham Hejran", "Bride's Flower from the Wind of Saba", "Daughters of Cyrus", "You went and broke your promise", "O Shukh, O Negara". And "flower season" is mentioned.[6]

At the age of 25, Zarrabi sang the song "Flower Bride" in Tehran theater on the occasion of Kashf-e hijab, and because of this, she was beaten by religious fanatics, but he continued his work with a stronger will. She performed many times at Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's birthday party.[1]

Death

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Zarrabi died on January 5, 2000, in her private apartment in Tehran, and was buried in Behesht-e Zahra, plot 48, row 67, number 34.

Albumology

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  • Rana's album on YouTube (Faramarz Asif later performed a song with the same name inspired by Rana's song)
  • Sokhni ba del album
  • Whose album?
  • The best album 1
  • The best album 2

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Naḵjavāni, Erik (July 20, 2004). "Żarrābi, Moluk". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Encyclopaedia Iranica Foundation. Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  2. ^ "آواهای کم‌شنیده از دیروز تا امروز • ملوک ضرابی" [Rarely Heard Voices from Yesterday to Today, Maluk Zarrabi]. Deutsche Welle (in Persian). Retrieved 2023-09-20.
  3. ^ فرهنگنامه موسیقی ایران، نصرت‌الله حدادی، نشر توتیا، تهران.
  4. ^ چشم‌انداز موسیقی ایران، ساسان سپنتا، نشر ماهور، تهران.
  5. ^ چهره‌های موسیقی ایرانی، شاپور بهروزی، نشر کتابسرا، تهران.
  6. ^ "آن صدا آن روزها (۹): ملوک ضرابی؛ خواننده‌ای که هم صفحه سنگی را دید هم سی‌دی را" [That Voice of Those Days (9): Maluk Zarrabi; The Singer Who Saw Both the Record and the CD]. (BBC Persian) فارسی (in Persian). October 16, 2016. Retrieved 2023-09-20.