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Workshop on Classical Persian Music

Workshop on Classical Persian Music

Sunday, November 16, 2008 at 10:00 AM (PT)

Stanford, CA

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Ticket Information
Ticket Type Remaining Sales End     Quantity
Workshop 1: Tetrachords in Classical Persian Music Sold Out Ended Free   Sold Out
Workshop 2: Mahur Mode in Classical Persian Music Sold Out Ended Free   Sold Out
Event Details

Registration is full for the second workshop. If you are interested in attending you may send an email to hekmat@stanford.edu to be added to the waiting list.

 

Hossen Omoumi's Workshop Poster

The Persian Student Association and the Iranian Studies Program at Stanford University are hosting two workshops on classical Persian music by renowned Iranian musician, Hossein Omoumi.

Workshop 1: Tetrachords in Classical Persian Music (in English) 10:00am-11:30am
Workshop 2: Mahur Mode in Classical Persian Music (in Persian) 3:00pm-4:30pm

About the speaker:

Hossein Omoumi was born in Isfahan, Iran, and began his musical education singing with his father. At age 14 he began to study the ney, the traditional reed flute of Iran. In 1962, Omoumi entered the National University of Iran to study architecture, but also played the ney in musical competitions, later entering the National Conservatory of Music in Tehran.

Hossein Omoumi is a noted scholar and teacher of Persian music, having served on the National Conservatory and Tehran University in Tehran, Center for Oriental Music Studies of Sorbonne University in Paris, UCLA in Los Angeles and the Ethnomusicology department of the University of Washington in Seattle. He is now Maseeh Professor in Persian Performing Arts of music at university of California, Irvine. He is also an architect, having received his Doctorate from the University of Florence, Italy. Hossein Omoumi has collaborated with many prominent Persian musicians including Hossein Alizadeh, Parissa, Madjid Derakhshani, and Sima Bina. His research on the making of the ney and percussion has opened new possibilities and introduced significant innovations to the ney, tombak and daf.
When
Where
Encina Hall West, Graham Stuart Lounge (Room 400)
616 Serra St.
Stanford, CA 94305



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