Dawood_Sarkhosh

Dawood Sarkhosh

Dawood Sarkhosh

Hazara singer and musician from Afghanistan


Dawood Sarkhosh (also spelled as Daud Sarkhosh) (Dari-Persian: داوود سرخوش) is an ethnic Hazara singer, musician and poet.

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Early life

Dawood Sarkhosh was born on 26 April 1971 in Urozgan (now Daykundi), Afghanistan. Sarkhosh's inspiration was his older brother Sarwar Sarkhosh, a nationalist and legendary musician of his times who was killed during the civil war.[1] Sarkhosh learned playing dambura and singing from him at the age of seventeen. After the death of his brother Sarkhosh migrated to Pakistan first to Peshawar city then moved to Quetta, Pakistan. [2]

Career

Sarkhosh revived his skills by singing and composing songs inspired by a sense of nationalism and suffering in exile. He did not sing for commercial gain, but out of nostalgia and to convey the feelings about refugee life as experienced by refugees of Afghanistan dispersed throughout the world. They went to his concerts in their thousands, marking Sarkhosh's rise as a singer.[citation needed] It was in Quetta that he mastered the harmonium under the Pakistani composer Arbab Ali Khan.[2]

Personal life

Dawood Sarkhosh is married to Kubra Nekzad and has three children: Saboor, Zulfiqar and Yasir. They now live in Vienna, Austria.[2]

Discography

  • 1998: Sarzamin-e-Man (My Homeland, Dari: سرزمین من).
  • 2000: Parijo (Fairy, Dari: پری جو).
  • 2004: Sapid-o-Siah (Black and White, Dari: سپید و سیاه).
  • 2005: Khana-e-Gilli (Mud House, Dari: خانه گلی).
  • 2007: Oslo Concert
  • 2008: Maryam (Maryam a girl's name, Dari: مریم).
  • 2010: Bazi (Game/play, Dari: بازی).[3][4]
  • 2016: Jang-o-jonoon (War and madness, war and insanity, Dari: جنگ و جنون) released by Sarkhosh Music inc Canada.
  • 2016: concert in the capital cities of Australia.
  • December 2017 concert in the capital cities of Canada
  • 2019: concert in Finland, Austria, Sweden.
  • 2019: Man o To, (Me and You, Dari: من و تو).
  • 2019: concert in the capital cities of Australia and New Zealand.

See also


References

  1. "زندگینامه زنده یاد شهید سرور سرخوش – شهید سرور سرخوش". sarwarsarkhosh.com (in Persian). Archived from the original on 23 August 2019. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
  2. "Biography of Dawood Sarkhosh". Sarkhosh's Official Site. Archived from the original on 26 July 2013. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  3. "Dawood Sarkhosh's Albums". Afghan 123 (Afghan Music Portal). Archived from the original on 26 December 2012. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  4. "Albums". Dawood Sarkhosh's Official Site. Archived from the original on 26 July 2013. Retrieved 30 April 2012.

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