The death of virtuoso Mohammad Reza Lotfi marks the end of an era.
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| Shajarian and Lotfi, Shiraz Art Festival, 1976 | 
by 
The
 recent death of Iranian master musician Mohammad Reza Lotfi (1947-2014)
 on May 2 at the age of 68 marks a crucial turning point in the history 
of classical Persian music and its spectacular rise and fall as a 
performing public art. 
Lotfi
 was a Tar and Setar virtuoso who had collaborated with prominent 
Iranian vocalists Mohammad Reza Shajarian, Shahram Nazeri, and others 
and along with a handful of other master musicians of his generation had
 transformed Persian music from its slumbering, sedate and secluded 
courtly and mystical milieu into a massive scale public and vastly 
popular art form. It is impossible to imagine the social history of Iran
 of the last half a century and through the thick and thin of a 
cataclysmic revolution and a bloody war without thinking of the 
definitive presence of classical Persian music as reconceived by Lotfi's
 generation of master musicians. 
Mohammad
 Reza Lotfi was part of a generation of classical musicians who 
exponentially expanded the public sphere upon which Persian classical 
music found and performed itself. This proud possession of a rich and 
diversified culture entered the public sphere in earnest in the course 
of the Constitutional revolution of 1906-1911, and with the 
establishment of Tehran Radio in 1940s and subsequently Iranian National
 television in 1960s and the Shiraz Art Festival in the 1970s reached 
its spectacular zenith.
Today
 lovers of Persian music remember the young Lotfi and Shajarian and 
their fellow musician Naser Farhangfar's confident and ambitious visages
 from their legendary performance
 of the tasking Rast Panjgah scale in Shiraz Art Festival in 1975. From 
that iconic moment at the mausoleum of Hafez in Shiraz Persian classical
 music began a long and loving rendezvous with contemporary Iranian 
social history.
Persian music into public limelight
Lotfi
 and his fellow masters Parviz Meshkatian (1955-2009) and Hossein 
Alizadeh (born 1951) were chiefly responsible for pulling classical 
Persian music out of its secluded and mysterious hideouts into public 
limelight. Under their innovative and daring musicianship, vocalists 
Mohammad Reza Shajarian and Shahram Nazeri dominated the scene of 
classical Persian music like the Luciano Pavarotti and Placido Domingo 
of Iran. They were all the troubadours mapping and measuring the 
emerging topography of Iranian cultural history. 
It
 was during the Iranian revolution of 1977-1979 that through the 
instrumental role of musicians like Mohammad Reza Lotfi and his ensemble
 classical music joined the revolutionary cause. During the stormy days 
of the Iranian revolution of 1977-1979, Lotfi took the classical Persian
 music directly into the heartbeat of the cataclysmic event and his by 
now legendary "Shabnavard" became a hallmark of the revolution. 
Lotfi
 was also there during the Iran-Iraq war when his collaboration with 
another towering vocalist, the young Shahram Nazeri, produced a musical 
jeremiad for those bloody eight years of wasted lives. From the Shiraz 
Art Festival of the 1970s through the Iranian revolution at the end of 
the same decade and culminating in the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s 
classical Persian music was narrowly interwoven into an ever-expansive 
public domain. 
At
 the same time, Lotfi and his fellow musicians were responsible for 
turning the capabilities of Persian classical music to the iconoclastic 
poetry of Nima Yushij (1895-1960) - an exceptionally difficult task. 
Nima had pulled classical Persian poetry through a radical revolution in
 its received prosody. Persian music had gone through no such formal 
revolution. Politically progressive, socially conscious, and 
artistically gifted musicians like Lotfi were eager and rising to meet 
the challenge. 
When in 1990 the leading Iranian poet Ahmad Shamlou (1925-2000) severely ridiculed and categorically dismissed Persian classical music, Lotfi defended it and the debate actually brought the classical music into the main domain of public debate. 
Lotfi
 left Iran in 1986 and spent almost two decades of his life in the US. 
He returned to Iran in 2006 but his return eventually dwindled into 
irrelevance. Iran had drastically changed during these two decades and 
Lotfi's public disapproval of his former colleague Shajarian (who was 
now vastly popular across a wide spectrum of Iranians in and out of 
their country) did not help his popularity. 
Lotfi's musicianship
Meanwhile
 his own cohorts, such as the other master musician Parviz Meshkatian, 
openly expressed their disappointment of Lotfi's musicianship. Such 
musicians as Alizadeh, Meshkatian, and Shajarian grew in their 
popularity, while Lotfi never regained the magic of his earlier presence
 after his return.
The disintegration of this generation of classical musicians was coterminous with a decidedly hostile environment the ruling regime had created for Iranian musicians. The Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Khamenei, is known for being critical of joyous and playful music from his juridical perspective, now made into the inhibitive mandates trying to legislate a rich and effervescent musical tradition.
The disintegration of this generation of classical musicians was coterminous with a decidedly hostile environment the ruling regime had created for Iranian musicians. The Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Khamenei, is known for being critical of joyous and playful music from his juridical perspective, now made into the inhibitive mandates trying to legislate a rich and effervescent musical tradition.
Under
 these circumstances many musicians left Iran and quite a number of them
 ended up in Los Angeles catering to the whims of an expat community 
increasingly indulgent in its nostalgias for a homeland that was no 
more. Many serious musicians stayed in Iran, endured the calamities of 
the censorial policies and performed in what ever capacity they could. 
They would occasionally come out of Iran and perform with relative 
freedom for the enthused expat gatherings. 
Iranians
 continue to love their musicians and keep the fluttering flame of a 
magnificent aspect of their cultural heritage alive. But the death of 
Lotfi marks the end of a palpable, effervescent and engaged musical 
interlude when master musicians and an admiring public shared 
unforgettable memories of their homeland in tumult. That esprit de corps
 is no more. Inside Iran, the tightly controlled public sphere does not 
allow for that spirit to return (or even for female vocalists to sing 
freely) except under its own supervision and for its own propaganda 
purposes. 
Outside
 Iran, Persian music is staged either as an ornamental museum piece for 
the Oriental fantasies of foreigners and their "ethnomusicologists" or 
else for the expat nostalgia of bygone years. 
The
 younger generation is drawn to the subversive pleasures of a new 
generation of musicians like Mohsen Namjoo and Shahin Najafi. Banned 
inside their own homeland, unconditionally loved or severely criticised 
by their detractors, these younger musicians mark a vastly different era
 when the simulacrum of the public sphere in the virtual space offers a 
mere simulation of the real forces of history. 
Via 
Related Link: Mohammad Reza Lotfi 

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