Salman Shukur

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Salman Shukur was born in 1921 in

Sherif Muheddin Haydar at the Baghdad Conservatory.[2] Later, he became Professor of oud and the head of the Oriental Music Department at the Institute founded by Sharif Muheddin, and held that post for 30 years. He was also Artistic Advisor for the Iraqi Ministry of Information
. He performed frequently for Iraqi radio and television, and performed in concert in China, Iran, Egypt, Germany, England, and the United States. He has performed publicly as recently as 1997. He made only one full-length recording, for
Rosslyn Hill Chapel in London in 1976 by James Mallinson and Stanley Gooddall, notes by John Haywood, released in 1977, and a brief excerpt of his solo oud performance in Rast Iraq can be heard on the Tangent Record series Music
In The World Of Islam: Lutes (re-issued by Topic Records).

For this recording, Salman Shukur used an oud built by the son of

Jamil Bashir he tuned the instrument very high - from G to G - instead of the traditional C to C.[3]
It has a traditional glued-to-the-face bridge, to which the strings are tied. Like many students of Sherif Muheddin Haydar, Salman Shukur uses a plectrum some of the time, and all four fingers of his right hand some of the time, when playing.

References

  1. ^ "IRAQ: An "oud" to better times". LA Times. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  2. . Retrieved 14 July 2011.
  3. ^ Beckles Willson, Rachel and Karim Othman-Hassan. "Salman Shukur's oud". Oudmigrations.