Saieen Zahoor Ahmed or Saeen Zahur Ahmad is a leading Sufi musician from Pakistan. He has spent most of his life singing in Sufi shrines, and didn't produce a record until 2006, when he was nominated for the BBC World Music awards based on word of mouth. He emerged as the "best BBC voice of the year 2006", Saieen is not his first name but a Sindhihonorific title and is also spelled as Sain.
Early life and career
Born in Sulaimanki, a village in Depalpur Tehsil of Okara district in the province of Punjab, Zahoor Ahmad was the youngest child in a rural peasant family. He is said to have started singing at the age of Seven, and from that early age, he had dreamt of a hand beckoning him towards a shrine. roaming the Sufi shrines of Sindh, Punjab, making a living through singing. Zahoor claims that as he was walking past a small shrine in the south Punjab town of Uch Sharif, when "someone waved at me with his hand, inviting me in, and I suddenly realised that it was this hand which I saw in my dream. For some time, he studied music under Raunka Ali of Patiala Gharana, whom he met at Bulleh Shah's dargah, and who became his first teacher for Sufi verses. He also studied music with other Uch Sharif-based musicians. Although not literate, Zahoor is known for his memory of song lyrics; mostly he sings compositions of the major Sufi poets, Bulleh Shah, Shah Badakhshi, Muhammad Qadiri, Sultan Bahu and others. Sain is famous for his performances at Coke Studio. His upcoming Projects are in Australia and New Zealand in October & November 2014. In 2009, he performed at the folk music festivalarranged by the Rafi Peer Theatre Workshop in Lahore and was reportedly a crowd puller.
Musical style
For most of his life Zahoor performed mainly in dargahs and festivals, and in the streets. He adopted the folk instrumentEktara, in its three-stringed version called Tumbi, as his main instrument. Like some traditions of Sufi music, he has a passionate, high-energy style of singing, often dancing in a frenzied style with the tassels on his instrument whirling around him. His typical outfit includes embroidered, beads, tightly bound turban, as well as ghungroos. His voice has an earthy tone, almost cracking at the edges, but capable of a wide vocal and emotional range. "His piercing chiseled features are a regular sight on Pakistani TV and he has been the subject of at least one documentary." In 1989, he performed on a concert stage for the first time at the All Pakistan Music Conference, which brought him into musical prominence. Subsequently he has emerged as a leading performer in Pakistan, frequently appearing on TV and in concerts. Zahoor has also given concerts in UK, Japan, Ireland, Canada and Norway. Sufi singing is focused on poetry with themes of devotional love, which shares much with Persian mystic poets like Rumi and with other South Asian traditions such as the Bhakti cult. Some argue that Sufi traditions highlight a softer, multi-cultural aspect of Islam, which counters "the extremism of the mullahs who use the mosques to spread ill-will" against other cultural groups, according to some organizers of Saieen Zahoor's concerts. In 2006 Zahoor released an album titled Awazay through Matteela Records. In 2007 he helped produce the soundtrack to the Pakistani filmKhuda Ke Liye. He sang an ost in 2011 for West Is West a British comedy-drama film, which is a sequel to the 1999 comedy East Is East. He also acted and appeared in the film.