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ISLAMABAD, Apr 21 (APP):
Subcontinent’s great and Pride of Performance ghazal, thumri and classical
singer Iqbal Bano died in Lahore in local hospital after brief illness. She was
74, a private TV channel reported.
Bano was born in Delhi in 1935.
She won the Tamgha-e-Imtiaz (Pride of Performance) medal in 1974 for her
contributions to the world of Pakistani music.
She was musically talented,
with a sweet and appealing voice. From a young age, Bano developed a love for
music.
In Delhi, she studied under
Ustad Chaand Khan of the Delhi Gharana, an expert in all kinds of pure classical
and light classical forms of vocal music.
He instructed her in pure
classical music and light classical music within the framework of classical
forms of thumri and dadra. She was duly initiated Gaandaabandh shagird of her
Ustad. He forwarded her to All India Radio, Delhi, where she sang on the radio.
Iqbal Bano was invited by Radio
Pakistan for performances, she being an accomplished artist. Her debut public
concert was in 1957, at Lahore Arts Council, before an elite crowd.
Music lovers feted her beyond
imagination. With each recital, she generated more and more public appeal.
She was considered a specialist
in singing the works of Faiz Ahmed Faiz. She has given such musical relevance
to the ghazals of Faiz, that Bano and Faiz are apparently inseparable in popular
imagination.
Because of Faiz’s imprisonment
and hatred of the Pakistani Government towards him, Bano roused a
strong crowd of 50,000 people in Lahore by singing his passionate Urdu nazm, “Hum
Dekhenge.”
Iqbal Bano can sing Persian
ghazals with the same fluency as Urdu. She is always applauded in Iran and
Afghanistan for her Persian ghazals.
Her recitals stick to the old
classical style that lays more stress on the raag purity. Basically a ghazal
singer, Iqbal Bano has also sung many memorable Pakistani film songs.
She has provided soundtrack
songs for famous Urdu films like Gumnaam (1954), Qatil (1955), Inteqaam
(1955), Sarfarosh (1956), Ishq-e-Laila (1957), and Nagin (1959).
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