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Gavriel Mullokandov

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Gavriel Aronovich Mullokandov
Born(1900-04-08)April 8, 1900
Samarkand, Emirate of Bukhara (present-day Uzbekistan)
DiedFebruary 6, 1972(1972-02-06) (aged 71)
Samarkand, Uzbek SSR, Soviet Union
Other namesGavriėl Aron ŭghli Mulloqandov
OccupationSinger

Gavriel Aronovich Mullokandov[a] (8 April 1900 – 6 February 1972) is regarded as the greatest Bukharian Jewish singer and musician.[1][2] He was the People's Artist of Uzbekistan.

Biography

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Gavriel Mullokandov was born on 8 April 1900 in Samarkand to a family of music lovers. His great-great-grandfather on his father's side was a Yemenite Jew, a Kohen who came to Samarkand as a merchant in the 18th century and stayed there. Mullokandov got much of his musical training and experience from his older brothers and from the age of nine began to sing in synagogue. At the age of 11 Gavriel was already singing at weddings and concerts and the public loved him. From his childhood, he learned about the shashmaqam music style and could play a number of instruments, including the doira.

During the 1920s Gavriel worked with his brother Mikhael, who was also one of the greatest singers and musicians in Central Asia.[3] In 1925–26 they were joined by Levi Bobokhanov, who once was a court musician of Emir of Bukhara. Bobokhanov was the tutor and mentor of the musician Mikhael Tolmasov, who later performed with Mullokandov at the Bukharian Jewish theatre Tarbut.[4]

In the 1930s Gavriel and Mikhael Mullokandov, together with other Bukharian activists, organized and received a commission to form the Bukharan Jewish Musical Drama Theater in Samarkand. In it, they were joined by outstanding Bukharian Jewish performers such as Aron Saidov, Murduhai Bachaev and Bahor Kandhorov. After 1934, the theatre performed in Stalinabad (present-day Dushanbe) where a small community of Bukharian Jews lived; some joined as new performers in the troupe. However, due to repressive policies and Stalinist purges, the theatre closed in 1940. The Bukharan Jewish Musical Drama Theater opened in Israel years later and continued performing musicals in the Bukharian language.

In 1936 Gavriel and Mikhael became the first Bukharian Jews awarded the title of People's Artist of Uzbekistan. In the following years Gavriel was awarded with many other government awards. In 1940 he was elected to the City Council of Samarkand. During the Second World War, Mullokandov was among the artists of Bukharian Jewish Theater, who traveled around the USSR performing in support of the war effort. Mullokandov was active in efforts to promote Bukharian Jewish culture. Songs that he sang and music that he played are saved in the archives of Uzbek and Tajik radio and television. In the late 1960s, Mullokandov established the ensemble 'Shashmaqom' that included musicians from several musical dynastic families, including Tolmasov. The group was honored with the 'People's Ensemble' title in 1973 and invited to perform as part of an academic study on Uzbek folk music.

Political life

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Mullokandov was elected to public office in Samarkand in 1940 and headed the Bukhara region's art department.[4] He had been elected to the Supreme Soviet of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic in 1938 and remained until 1946.

Personal life

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Mullokandov had seven children, including Nison and Roshel Mullokandov who became performers of traditional Bukharian music and opera singing, respectively.

Mullokandov was also known for his friendship with Gʻafur Gʻulom, both of whom who supported peaceful relations between Jews, Uzbeks, and Tajiks.

Mullokandov died on 6 February 1972. In 1976 the Central Committee of Uzbekistan renamed Eastern Street in Samarkand, where he was born and lived most of his life, in his honor.

Notes

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  1. ^ Uzbek: Гавриэл Арон ўғли Муллоқандов, romanized: Gavriėl Aron ŭghli Mulloqandov; Russian: Гавриэль Аронович Муллокандов, romanizedGavriel Aronovich Mullokandov

References

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  1. ^ Sturman, Janet (26 February 2019). The SAGE International Encyclopedia of Music and Culture. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-1-5063-5338-8.
  2. ^ Levin, Mitchell (5 February 2017). "This Day, February 6, In Jewish History". Cleveland Jewish News. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  3. ^ Studies in Caucasian, Georgian, and Bukharan Jewry : historical, sociological and cultural aspects. Golda Akhiezer, Reuven Enoch, Sergei Weinstein, גולדה. אחיעזר, ראובן. אנוך, סרגיי. וינשטיין. Ariʼel. 2014. ISBN 978-965-91944-8-3. OCLC 899217100.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  4. ^ a b (Temin), Elena Reikher (2009). "Bukharan Jews in the Art Music of Central Asia". Musica Judaica. 19: 131–164. ISSN 0147-7536. JSTOR 26454530.