The BBC Musical Nomad
Posts Tagged barren plain
Day 37 – Timeless songs for the next generation
Posted by Musical Nomad in Daily Blog on September 3, 1997
I almost didn’t meet Aygul. As soon as I arrived in the village of Saty I was told of a dombra player I simply must hear. “Not another dombra player” went the cry. What a wonderful surprise then to meet a young girl of thirteen with such talent and charisma.
The Musical Nomad project is all about discovery. Finding out through the universal language of music about a people and their culture. On our penultimate day we left our campsite with very little hope of finding musicians. We headed for a town called Saty (meaning steps in Kazak) about 30 minutes drive away. We came out of the fertile tributary valley and into the wide, barren plain of the silty Charyn river. On our way smoke could be seen billowing from the grassy forested areas of the valley peaks. Occasionally a flame would explode, twenty or thirty feet high. The long hot summer is taking its toll and forest fires burn freely and naturally. In the long brown grasslands horses and cattle barely move in the midday heat. Suddenly the dusty road turns into the town.
With very little to signify a transition, a row of houses appear. The town stretches for about a mile, the wide road lined on each side by wooden farm and administrative building. Next to a large yellow school a wooden hut doubles as the main store. We approached and bought drinks. We asked the shopkeeper if there are any local musicians. Moldira, our interpreter, scribbled down three names. One is an old man who apparently sings. We went to his house. A mad wolf-like dog attacked me. I then learned that the old man is ill and cannot be seen. I suspected the other contacts would prove as fruitless. It was now the hottest part of the day and we were trying to track down the second contact. Local people in the street seemed to point in the same direction when we ask. A group of teenagers passed us with a guitar. The guitar has a skull etched into the back and the boys also pointed in the same direction.
We followed a road through the dusty, cattle infested streets. There was an air of sleepiness about the town. Occasionally a wagon filled with hay to dangerous levels careered carelessly through the narrow roads. We stopped near a large metal gate. Moldira peered over the top and confronted an old lady. After a short conversation I found out that this is a musical home. The whole family play dombra and sing. The daughter has won competitions and the eldest brother, currently working in the field, plays weddings and is well known to everyone in the village. We told the old lady, Salima about our project and who we are. She seemed almost expectant of our arrival. She invited the whole team with full equipment into her garden, her house, her world. A small girl in school uniform skipped towards the house. The garden is large. There are stables, small orchards and white clay ovens for cooking and bread making. This family like many others in this area are self sufficient. Salima asked us to take our shoes off and come into the house.
Inside the house we were shown around by Salima and introduced to her daughter, Aygul. Looking like any thirteen year old just back from school she greeted us politely. It was only a little later we discovered that she was the star musician of the family.
The traditional village house is small and simple, but very homely. The entrance way is wood panelled on the outside giving a very ‘alpine’ feel and metal clad on the inside. This looked, rather disconcertingly, like the inside of a spaceship with resonance’s of Shaykh Kushkarov’s centre. See day 20. Presumably this had some functional value of which we were not aware. Certainly the house was very cool. Within ten minutes Aygul was changing into national costume. She assumed an extraordinary presence as soon as she took the dombra into her hands. Seeing so many musicians in such a short space of time can cause the palette to become jaded. Aygul’s fresh and direct voice has a poignancy and honesty that is rare among performers of any age. All of us were touched by her performance. Aygul has recently won a music competition and so is no stranger to performing. She appeared on Kazak TV as a result. This might explain her natural manner in front of cameras and microphones. The fact that her family are all musical may also contribute. Whatever the reason it was noticeable that neither Aygul, or her brother Nurlan seemed in the slightest bit perturbed by our presence.
People arrived at the house, watched, drank tea and left as if it was all completely normal. This was good for us as we didn’t feel we were putting them through an ordeal. Nurlan has an unusually strong and intense voice with an energetic style of dombra playing. He has been a school music teacher but now works the fields. He performs professionally at weddings (toys) and on public holidays. He’s been playing since childhood. It seems that both he and his brother have helped Aygul to learn to play, but they stress the fact that she had a desire to learn.
She learnt naturally – in other words she’s largely self taught. Aygul has been surrounded by music from a young age. Both have extraordinary voices which they describe as ‘coming from nature.’ For such a musical family it seemed strange to us that they don’t perform together. They possess only one working dombra, and they explained that ‘each person has their own voice’. This means presumably that they have different vocal ranges, but perhaps also different ways of expressing a song. Theirs is a solo singing tradition.Aygul sang a love song called ‘Altynai’. This song is addressed to a girl whose name means golden moon. These kinds of songs seem quite typical. Nurlan’s song ‘Karagymai’ was also a love song “Sweetheart, life without you is nothing”
Last night’s campsite had little to commend it, previous incumbents had left a trail of empty beer bottles and cigarette ends. We decided to move on and spend our last night on the steppe somewhere we wished to remember. Only twenty minutes drive found us further down the valley with a cleaner site and a clearer river.
I decided to light a fire, to gather one last time around the ancient embers – to reflect. With singers like Aygul and Nurlan the tradition is in safe hands and some timeless songs will probably pass to the next generation. Tomorrow we journey 8 hours back to Almaty. The Musical Nomad project nears an end. Please join us as we, the Nomad team share our personal reflections on a journey that has changed us all.
Afghan music, Aygul, barren plain, Charyn river, cleaner site, Day, dombra, dombra player, Dombura, Entertainment_Culture, family, forest fires, group of teenagers, house, interpreter, Kyrgyz music, large metal gate, local musicians, long hot summer, mad wolf, Moldira, music, musical nomad, musician, nomad project, Nurlan, road, Salima, Saty, school, school music teacher, shopkeeper, Tajik music, town, tributary valley, Uzbekistani music, village
Live Daily Journal
- Day 0 - Through the telling of stories we try and make sense of our world
- Day 1 - We disembark with a sense of foreboding
- Day 2 - I didn't realise it would happen on the second day!
- Day 3 - Communication happens in many ways
- Day 4 - Let the music and musical instruments be the bridge between the peoples of the World
- Day 5 - When I play it seems that I understand the Shamanic tradition
- Day 6 - On the aircraft it's bedlam and as people push and fight for the seats
- Day 7 - "My soul was taking flight" Navai
- Day 8 - The Land of Lutes
- Day 9 - Red Tape Hell, Musical Heaven
- Day 10 - Seven Heavens Beneath a Waterfall
- Day 11 - A great deal of what we see depends on what we are looking for
- Day 12 - Bukhara - holy city. 2500 years of written history, 6000 years of mythology
- Day 13 - a satellite beams from Bukhara
- Day 14 - To succeed this project must be interactive
- Day 15 - Bukhara to Baysun, into the mountains at last
- Day 16 - Let us hear your voice
- Day 17 - Ten Second Tornadoes on the Road to Samarkand
- Day 18 - Market Shares in Aladdin's Cave
- Day 19 - Culture is a Living Thing
- Day 20 - If I ask for paradise, kill me!
- Day 21 - the person who arrives is not the one who left
- Day 22 - Angels of Fire, Tashkent to Kokand
- Day 23 - Everyone's free in Uzbekistan to live however they want
- Day 24 - The Elusive Shaman
- Day 25 - The Pulse of the Maternal Heart
- Day 26 - Vultures Circle Looking for Musical Nomads?
- Day 27 - Two Weddings and a Satellite
- Day 28 - Even the Wind Sings
- Day 29 - Home Cooking on the Road to Issyk-Kul
- Day 30 - we try and make sense of our world Pt II
- Day 31 - When we travel there is no past or future. We engage with the moment
- Day 32 - Where there is spirit there is usually music
- Day 33 - another half-ready kobuz nestled like a hibernating wild animal
- Day 34 - Take the first left on the A351
- Day 35 - as words fail Diana dies on the Kazak Steppe
- Day 36 - Mad ride to music lesson
- Day 37 - Timeless songs for the next generation
- Day 38 - This journey is only the beginning
- Day 39 - Home again
- Day 40 - This journey is only the beginning
Archive
- September 1997 (6)
- August 1997 (31)
- July 1997 (4)