THE SONG DOES NOT REMAIN THE SAME
by
RAMIN SADIGHI & SOHRAB MAHDAVI
________________________
Ramin
Sadighi is the director of Hermes Records, an independent music
label with over 50 titles, one of which, Endless Vision,
by Hossein Alizadeh and Djivan Gasparyan, was nominated for
a Grammy in 2007. Sohrab Mahdavi is co-founder and editor of
TehranAvenue.com
This article first appeared in Middle
East Report Online.
Starting
in the late 1990s, and especially following two stories by CNN's
chief international correspondent, the British-Iranian Christiane
Amanpour, Westerners were treated to a slew of articles and
broadcast reports aiming to ‘lift the veil’ on Iran.
Amanpour’s second story revolved around ‘youth and
the party scene.’ She visited the house of another hyphenated
Iranian to show a group reveling in youthful abandon, toasting
each other with alcoholic drinks to the tune of playful music,
and so consuming two illegal items of consequence in the Islamic
Republic. With youth, it seemed, came merriment and rebelliousness.
Iran
-- at the time, one of the youngest nations in the world --
soon became a top destination for the Western press corps, eager
to peek inside a country that had long been closed to outsiders
or at least been seen that way. This was a time when Iranians
had just elected a new president with genuine ambitions of reform.
But
it was not only President Mohammad Khatami who was heralding
a new era of ‘dialogue of civilizations.’ The Internet,
too, had changed the face of journalism. No longer was it necessary
for a journalist to trot across the globe to get the full story.
She could do the legwork at home, online, and then hop in and
out of Iran to show she had been there. Such efficiency was
essential to the Rupert Murdochs of the world who yearned for
the sensational, the immediate and the risqué.
The
interest in a glimpse at what was underneath the ‘veil’
in Iran was thus deliciously (in)appropriate for the emerging
global mass media. Meanwhile, Khatami announced that, during
his tenure, culture would take priority over economics. Artists
and writers made up a crucial constituency sweeping him into
office -- two others being youth and women -- and starting in
1997 the atmosphere of the country underwent a radical change.
Within
the music scene, TehranAvenue.com organized an online
Underground Music Competition (2002), where 21 bands mostly
interested in rock, jazz and blues submitted their works. At
the same time, Hermes Records released the rock album Barad
(2003) as part of its roster, which was otherwise alternative-classical.
Young musicians interested in rock organized small concerts,
especially at the University of Art in Tehran, and a few more
rock albums came out. The Underground Music Competition became
an overnight sensation. With a half-million successful downloads,
the competition startled many into believing something was afoot
under the stern gaze of hardline clerics who had deemed music
suspicious and possibly corrupting. Barad sold well at record
stores and small-venue concerts left no room to stand.
As
director of Hermes Records and founder of TehranAvenue.com,
we were buffeted from all sides by the stream of Western press
reports that celebrated the phenomenon for its political as
well as its aesthetic meaning. Time and again we saw Westerners’
nostalgia for the 1960s projected onto Iran. In the West, after
all, rock music was synonymous with the liberating counter-culture
of youth, the desire for freedom from stuffy formalities and
an electric connection to the zeitgeist. The headline
writers of the Washington Post, to cite one example,
exultantly evoked Chuck Barry: ‘Roll Over, Khomeini!’
Western reporters were careful to note that, though censorship
has loosened over the years, there were still severe restrictions
on the work of would-be concert and recording artists in Iran.
To this day, artists must submit their work to the Ministry
of Culture and Islamic Guidance, where it is vetted for adherence
to ‘Islamic standards’ and ‘public sensibilities.’
In
fact, there has been a radical transformation of the Iranian
music scene since the fall of the Shah -- but the salient changes
are not rooted in foreign forms like rock and rap. Rather, the
changes flow from a revitalization of the classical Persian
tradition that began around the same time as the revolutionary
ferment itself. Musical groups collectively known as the Chavosh
(Herald) movement altered the way that players of classical
Persian music viewed the world and related to their audiences.
Like Western rockers, these performers were ‘modern’
-- in the sense that they chose as lyrics the lines of contemporary
poets and they played in a style projecting impatience and idealism.
And these were also ‘underground’ bands -- in the
sense that their music stayed clear of the mainstream, defied
the demands of the market, sought momentum in the energy of
listeners and stayed true to the spirit of the times.
REVOLUTION
AND WAR
In
the late 1960s and early 1970s, Iran’s musical scene was
dominated by Western and local pop. Western pop had come to
Iran mainly through the oil industry, in the clubs and cabarets
that studded the cities of Khorramshahr and Abadan in the oil-rich
Khuzestan province and catered to foreign oil workers. The National
Iranian Oil Company regularly invited Western musicians to tour
the region, notably Duke Ellington, who played to large crowds
in Abadan and Isfahan in 1963. Armenian Iranians who were in
touch with relatives or friends in the Armenian Republic further
facilitated the entrance of pop into the mainstream of Iranian
music. The propagation of Western music naturally affected Iranian
musicians, some of whom, like Vigen, Martik, Farhad and Fereydoun
Foruqi, tried to assimilate to what they considered to be the
latest rage, while others strove to thwart what they found to
be a cultural infraction. The latter group, what later became
the Center for the Preservation and Propagation of Iranian Music,
found an important niche of their own.
So
it was actually the classically trained Iranian musician who
sowed the seeds of resistance to Western-inspired pop that sprouted
in the days of revolution. Composer-instrumentalist Hossein
Alizadeh dubbed his music razmi (militant) in contradistinction
to the bazmi (banquet) style heard at the fêtes
of the elite. The same was true of the well-known Mohammad Reza
Lotfi and Mohammad Reza Shajarian. They never challenged the
political system directly, participating in state-organized
events like the landmark Shiraz Art Festival in 1977, but they
practiced a brand of music of which orthodox musicians disapproved.
They argued that classical Iranian music was less a means of
entertainment than a vehicle by which the musician could speak
the truth about the issues of the day. At the Shiraz Art Festival,
Shajarian sang the constitutional revolution tasnif
(art song), “All night sleep doesn’t come to my
eyes / Oh, you who are asleep / In the desert those who are
thirsty die / While water is being carried to ostentatious palaces.”
Music, by the lights of the classically trained, was to be political
in orientation and iconoclastic in structure.
The
new revolutionary order that came to power in 1979 was out to
purge the cultural atmosphere of ‘corrupting’ elements,
and ironically some of the musicians who had previously been
part of the Center for the Preservation and Propagation of Iranian
Music set policies for what was permissible in music. The post-revolutionary
regime, in turn, citing religious injunctions against men hearing
the voice of a solo female singer, forbade public appearances
or records by solo women singers and further tightened the noose
on alternative, socially oriented works.
By
far the most important factor in shaping the musical environment
was the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988), an all-consuming, genuinely
national effort. Even those who opposed the new revolutionary
order were determined to defend the country from the outside
threat, and hence it is not surprising that the dominant musical
form was the military march, designed to encourage Iranians
to stand tall and resist occupation by the Iraqi army. Still,
giants of Iranian music, like Hossein Alizadeh and the Chavosh
singer Mohammad Reza Lotfi, went to the front to perform their
own music for the troops. As the war ground on, many young talents
died, among them technicians, poets and musicians who might
have continued the Chavosh movement or changed the direction
of musical production. Instead, the normal development of this
movement was arrested. Together with the international isolation
of Islamic Republic (answered in kind by the regime), revolution
and war put Iranian music into a state of hibernation.
RECONSTRUCTION
In
1989, shortly after war’s end, Khomeini was asked for
his opinion as a jurist on music. He who had spoken of music
being a ‘drug’ at the outset of the revolution now
saw “no objections to the purchase and sale of instruments
serving a licit purpose,” in an interview published in
Keyhan. Music was permissible as long as it did not
manipulate the emotions or carry a hint of sensuality, meaning
that women were to remain excluded from the musical sphere.
But
the icon of the Islamic Revolution had given the green light
to a group of religious musicians, including Qur’an reciters
and dirge performers whose music is built on classical Persian
foundations, to migrate to pop. State-run radio and TV was their
springboard. One such singer is Mohammad Esfahani, a Qur’an
reciter with staunch religious beliefs. After Khomeini issued
his opinion, Esfahani produced an album in which he sang the
stanzas of classical poets like Hafez and Sa‘di. On a
later album, he covered songs of Delkash, a renowned alto whose
deep voice and contemporary poetic lyrics appealed to all social
strata. Esfahani’s tribute to a woman was an event in
itself. Well connected in the clerical establishment, he is
among the few musicians in Iran today who can afford to appear
on stage with a big band. Women wearing the full chador
can be seen at an Esfahani concert, demonstrating that pop music
has penetrated the more pious circles. The extent of this penetration
has so alarmed the regime that Khomeini’s successor as
Supreme Leader of the Revolution, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, felt
he had to intervene. In a 2007 meeting with dirge singers, he
criticized the unrestrained use of pop melodies, notably one
by Mahasti, an exiled female pop singer.
In
the post-war reconstruction period, government cultural programs
focused on the young. President Ali Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani’s
administration sought to polish Iran’s image abroad, always
important to Iranian youth, by revitalizing cinema. At home,
the state thought that relaxing the strictures on music would
keep the young content and give them an incentive to help with
reconstruction. But to avoid backlash from the pious masses,
officials of the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance had
to present the music they wanted to promote -- with radio broadcasts
or permission to release records or hold privately funded concerts
-- as morally sanctioned. Sometimes they even changed the meaning
of words, for example, assigning the name ‘anthem’
to a run-of-the-mill pop tune simply because it was suggestive
of the marches played during the war. The ministry tried to
limit musical expression to religious, mystical or mainstream
political themes. In this endeavor, they faced criticism from
hardline clerical elements, but this opposition was never able
to stop their undertaking, as the political needs of the country
called for such a change in direction. Among high-ranking clerics,
too, there were those, like Ayatollah Yusuf Sanei, who looked
approvingly upon music.
The
state set aside a budget for the promotion and dissemination
of approved music. The annual Fajr Music Festival, convened
every year concurrent with the celebrations of the victory of
Islamic Revolution, brought musicians from abroad, like Nusrat
Fateh Ali Khan and Bismillah Khan. But the unstable economy
was not conducive to long-term investment by those in the music
business. As such, producers sought out projects that could
bring short-term returns. The easiest sell was music exploiting
nostalgia for pre-revolutionary pop, and so the voices of many
singers who broke into the scene during the early 1990s closely
resembled those of exiled or departed counterparts. This commercial
trend continued until 1998, when a cadre of pop musicians, notably
Shadmehr Aghili, whose album Dahati smashed sales records,
came out with albums that did not try to imitate pre-revolutionary
singers or adhere to the officially sanctioned themes of religious
devotion, God’s love and epic history. This type of music
was similar to the Iranian pop produced in exile, but had its
own identity.
The
cautious opening of musical production in the reconstruction
era reduced state pressure on musicians and listeners alike.
The revolutionary militia that patrolled the streets and set
up roadblocks during the war could no longer stop someone for
carrying a musical instrument or for playing music on the car
radio. It was during this time, also, that the maverick mayor
of Tehran, Gholamhossein Karbaschi, established cultural centers
(fahangsara) around the city. In these centers, residents
could sign up for painting, music and photography classes, in
addition to the customary Qur’an and sewing classes, usually
for free. One such center, the Bahman Cultural Center, was built
upon the site of a slaughterhouse in southernmost Tehran, in
an impoverished neighborhood known as Koshtargah. Overnight,
municipal authorities, in conjunction with law enforcement,
took control of the abattoir, evacuated a large swath of land
surrounding it and bulldozed the area. Scant weeks later, prefabricated
structures appeared and Bahman opened its doors, not only offering
diverse cultural activities but also bridging socio-economic
divides in the city. Before Bahman, there were only a few major
venues that offered music to Tehran residents. The 800-seat
Vahdat Hall and the Niavaran Cultural Center in the tony northern
part of the capital hosted classical Western and Persian concerts.
People had to wait in line far in advance. Bahman was so successful
that it supplanted these venues, attracting well-to-do Tehranis
to the south of the city, an area they would otherwise avoid.
The new center also showcased the joys of music for the children
of the poor, who are more likely than affluent classes to be
religiously conservative and hence consider music sacrilegious
in deference to the original fatwas of Ayatollah Khomeini.
Reza Sadeghi, a war veteran (and Qur’an reciter) whose
outward appearance is reminiscent of the militiamen who formerly
stopped cars suspected of playing pop music, is one pop singer
who hails from south Tehran and retains a large following to
this day. Authorities initially declined his first album a permit
for release, but when bootleg copies seeped out, they reluctantly
gave it the green light.
THE
SCREWS LOOSEN . . .
The
Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance, as well as orthodox
practitioners, had long considered the sound of classical Persian
music to be sacrosanct. New musical genres began to appear as
part of a further cultural opening during the presidency of
Mohammad Khatami (1997-2005), particularly the first term. Groups
like Avizheh, Rumi and Raz-e Shab invented a genre called talfiqi
or fusion, employing Western rock instruments like electric
and bass guitar, keyboard and drums next to the traditional
dulcimer called the santur and the violin-like kamancheh.
Together, these fusion bands were able to introduce the sonorities
of rock to the official music scene of Iran, though Rumi did
continue to rely on the lyrics of classical Persian music, as
its name suggests. Fusion sold well in the late 1990s.
Around
the same time, a straightforward rock band called O-Hum burst
onto the underground scene, setting the classic poems of Rumi
and Hafez to rollicking guitar riffs reminiscent of the 1970s
band Kansas. O-Hum overestimated the extent of the delicate
freedoms attained bit by bit during the years of war and reconstruction,
and the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance denied the
band permission to distribute their debut album. Thinking that
they were playing the music the world was listening to, O-Hum
stood their ground. They failed to gain access to the legal
market, but as a result they kick-started a trend in music production
and distribution -- indeed, in the relationship between musicians
and audiences -- whereby officially disapproved music is posted
online. Their website (www.o-hum.com) was launched in January
2001, featuring all the songs on their first album, Nahal-e
Heyrat (Saplings of Wonder, a Hafez phrase), and word buzzed
around the Internet. O-Hum became disillusioned with the breadth
of their reach, nonetheless, and the band members went abroad
to record their second album.
But
the Internet music sharing initiated by O-Hum had pushed the
envelope, and state censors felt compelled to loosen the screws
still further. Slowly, lyrics and sounds that resonated with
experiences of ordinary life -- lost since revolution and war
smothered Chavosh in its crib -- began to reappear. In TehranAvenue.com’s
inaugural competition, for example, the top vote getter was
the band Fara, for their song “Pasheh” (Mosquito).
The track is out of tune, yet listeners warmed to the amusing
account of a musician speaking to a mosquito in his room, pleading
that it stop biting him. Such lyrics were previously thought
of as trite or lowly. Of late, bands like Kiosk, whose members
moved from Iran to the US and Canada in the mid-2000s, mix sharp
political commentary with an urban feel. The lyrics of Mohsen
Namjoo took the politics in Iranian pop to a new level, “Look
how they have fed Diazepam to the masses / See how they have
made hypocrisy fashionable / Look how they break plexi instead
of glass / Look how we are paying for oil, electricity / See
how we see dollar signs everywhere,” he sang in “Gozar,”
which was never published legally. Still, the majority of pop
lyrics are selected from the centuries of classical Persian
verse.
The
resplendent reserve of Persian poetry is akin to a verdant pasture
where musicians can graze. Perhaps this is why, while there
is no shortage of contemporary poets in Iran, there are so few
songwriters. Before the 1979, a small number of lyricists, associated
with Chavosh, had begun to set their own words to music, and
they continued to do so through the tumultuous early years of
the revolution before state repression and self-censorship exacted
their toll. The consequences run deep. Unlike Iranian cinema,
for example, Iranian music has yet to deal with the effects
of the calamitous war with Iraq -- the longest such conflict
in the twentieth century -- on Iranian society.
. .
. AND TIGHTEN
It
is a cliché -- but one that concentrates the minds of
those in power -- that a country’s young people are its
future. The 1979 Keyhan article decrying the narcotic
power of music was titled Radio and Television Must Strengthen
the Young. Obsession with youth explains the vagaries of the
Islamic Republic’s cultural policies over 30 years, as
well as the persistent interest of Western press in Tehran’s
underground music scene. These articles belong to the larger
journalistic genre touting the presumed emancipatory clout of
the 25 percent of the Iranian population between the ages of
15 and 24. Under Khatami, when a younger generation of Iranians
listened to promises of a transformation in social values, Western
journalists poured in to record the tearing down of yet another
wall. It seemed that, yet again, a scowling, repressive state
might be overrun by democracy from below, even if the ‘below’
in question consisted mainly of upper middle-class urbanites
imitating the globalized Western youth culture. The pieces continue
to appear in the era of Ahmadinejad.The flower children are
not taking over in Tehran tomorrow, concedes Mark LeVine, one
writer on the music scene, but he nevertheless goes on to see
heavy metal and hip-hop ‘as an important part of the soundtrack’
to Iran’s political struggles, completely blind to the
fact that these genres are mostly listened to by certain privileged
social strata of the country.
In
seeing what they want to see in the Tehran music scene, Western
observers have blown the influence of the underground out of
proportion. Coupled with the space that Internet has opened,
these reports sow dissatisfaction among young musicians with
the constraints under which they live without making them fight
for the rights to produce and play what they like. They choose,
instead, to live in cyberspace, where they will remain, in the
words of the Western press, a counterculture, without bothering
to look for solutions elsewhere. The same illusion grips the
censors in the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance, who
are suddenly confronted with a picture of Iranian music as subversive.
The paranoia of the Ahmadinejad administration is exacerbated.
The Chavosh movement engaged with the dominant culture of its
day to effectuate an overhaul of Iranian classical music. The
same is hard to imagine within the sphere of Western-inspired
rock music in Iran. For music to bring sweeping change in Iran,
as did rock music in the West, both the musical and the political
registers have to be different. The song, in other words, does
not remain the same.
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