Posted on October 2, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Music, People, Religion
59 Comments
Total Views: 110100

Email a copy of 'The Past and the Future of Qawali in Pakistan' to a friend

* Required Field






Separate multiple entries with a comma. Maximum 3 entries.



Separate multiple entries with a comma. Maximum 3 entries.


E-Mail Image Verification

Loading ... Loading ...

59 responses to “The Past and the Future of Qawali in Pakistan”

  1. JamesGaith says:

    The atmosphere of this terpene shade – blue dream terps is really good and ingenuous, not too strong but mollify clear-cut in the overcome way. It blends smoothly and adds a much beat flavor diagram without compelling all things else. Orderly a close amount makes a argument, which says a a mountain around the quality. The packaging was healthy, shipping was rakish, and the mainly happening felt reliable. Really decent outcome and a certain I’d cheerfully uncalled-for again.

  2. Clear, concise, and effective.

  3. I really enjoyed the perspective in “The Past and the Future of Qawali in Pakistan” — particularly the reflection on how the Sabri Brothers and Aziz Mian shaped urban audiences’ appetite for Qawali in Urdu. It reminds me how much Afzal Sabri and his live performances at Qawali Night in Pakistan continue that legacy — bringing new ears to a tradition that once seemed at risk of fading. It would be wonderful to see a revival of that energy, where Qawali Night programmes spotlight both classic voices and emerging talent.

  4. A fantastic voice of USTAD NUSRAT FATHE ALI KHAN ,After listen the qawalis of nusrat i fell relax and my wish to listen again and again Many Pakistan generation from Indonesia . We love Nusrat fatteh Ali Khan the great voice in the world muslim people.This is great i really miss nusrat.All the qawalies of IS THis person best admipation of ALLAH,which realizes me that ALLAH is one and omnipresent,
    Thanks.