Shimul Zaman
Shimul Zaman | |
|---|---|
| Native name | শিমুল জামান |
| Born | Bogra, Bangladesh |
| Origin | New York, United States |
| Genres | Classical |
| Occupation(s) | Singer |
| Instruments | Vocal, harmonium, keyboard |
Shimul Zaman is a Bangladeshi Rabindra Sangeet singer. She was born in Bogra, Bangladesh. Her mother, Tahmina Begumm, is a retired school teacher. Her father, Sultan Ali (1935–2007) was a banker under whose tutelage Shimul Zaman's acquaintance with music began at a very early age. She learned Eastern Classical and then branched into Nazrul Sangeet and later into Rabindra Sangeet. On the way, she received numerous accolades (for example, a National Award in Nazrul Sangeet and an award in "Jatiyo Rabindra Sangeet Sammelan").
After moving to North America, she got involved in the efforts for the continuation of our cultural heritage by running a Bengali School (Ekusher Patshala) in Raleigh, North Carolina. She took lessons from eminent Rabindra Sangeet singer Banani Ghosh while in Cleveland, OH. After moving to North Carolina, she took lessons on Hindustani Classical. Now in St. Louis, MO, she is fortunate to have Ustad Imrat Khan as a teacher for sitar and vocal. Despite her initial love for Nazrul Sangeet and Rabindra Sangeet, she is currently more attuned to Modern Bengali Song. She is now singing and writing her own songs.[1] She is one of the artists of the complete Rabindra Sangeet album "Shrutigitobitan" (in Bengali: "শ্রুতি গীতবিতান") published from Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Music albums
1. "Ami rupay tomaay volabo na" (আমি রুপে তোমায় ভোলাব না): A Rabindra Sangeet album released by 'agniveena'-music from Dhaka, Bangladesh.[2]
2. One song in Shrutigitobitan, the multi-volume audio/DVD album containing a complete collection of Tagore's songs (Rabindra Sangeet) published from Dhaka, Bangladesh. "[3]"
3. Trio: An album of Rabindra Sangeet. Released by “G-Series Music Production Studio” of Dhaka, Bangladesh.
References
- ↑ NABLCC, North American Bangla Literature and Culture Convention Archived July 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ "The New Nation". Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved August 3, 2021.
- ↑ Shrutigitobitan Archived 2015-02-25 at the Wayback Machine
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