The greatest show on Earth — for kids who need it most
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The greatest show on Earth — for kids who need it most

TED Fellow and composer Sahba Aminikia brings the healing power of dance, storytelling, music and performance to some of the most dangerous places on Earth. By celebrating children and their communities with beauty and joy, he shows how to cultivate hope, connection and love — even in conflict zones. "The ultimate power is in unity," Aminikia says.

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Interview with Sahba Aminikia
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Interview with Sahba Aminikia

His musical compositions have been widely performed around the world by ensembles including the Kronos Quartet, Brooklyn Youth Chorus, Carnegie Hall Ensemble Connect, Minnesota Philharmonic Orchestra, Symphony Parnassus, San Francisco Conservatory of Music New Music Ensemble, Mobius Trio, Delphi Trio, Amaranth Quartet, The Living Earth Show, Verdigris Ensemble, Music Of Remembrance, One Found Sound, and the Afghanistan National Institute Of Music. Phonetic Planet is so grateful to the inspirational Sahba Aminikia for sharing his positive energy with us in a recent interview! 

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BBC Persian Coverage of Qaqnus (Phoenix) World Premiere in Seattle (in Farsi)
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BBC Persian Coverage of Qaqnus (Phoenix) World Premiere in Seattle (in Farsi)

"Iranian women experience discrimination through law and custom that profoundly impacts their lives, especially concerning marriage, divorce, and child custody. Since the 1979 revolution, laws forcing women to wear Islamic hijab restrict every moment of their lives in public, and also stand symbolically for a much larger realm of inequality. 

In September 2022, Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian woman died in hospital while under the custody of Iranian “morality police” who had arrested her for not wearing proper hijab. Her death sparked widespread public protests across Iran and further arrests, including that of 16-year-old Nika Shakarami. Ten days after Nika disappeared, her family was informed of her death, under suspicious circumstances believed to involve violence by security forces. The protests continued for months. After harshly repressive measures, they have ended, for now, but the issues remain alive. 

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Interview on KALW Revolutions Per Minute
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Interview on KALW Revolutions Per Minute

Last Sunday, January 15th, 2023, I had the honor of being on Revolutions Per Minute on KALW San Francisco, 91.7 FM, Sundays 6 to 8 pm with dear Sarah Cahill and we dedicated the program to women’s voices from Iran including the music of Haydeh, Googosh, Ghamar-ol-molook Vaziri , Pari Zangeneh, Mahsa Vahdat, Delkash, Evlin Baghtcheban, Afsaneh Rasai and Homa Niknam. You can listen to it here:

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Creative Dissonances: Sahba Aminikia @CCA
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Creative Dissonances: Sahba Aminikia @CCA

On Monday, November 15, 2021, Sahba Aminikia, an Iranian-American contemporary music composer, artistic director, performer, and educator discussed how his life-experiences of personal, cultural, and political conflicts are transformed into his work and how music in general helps us live through challenging times. The talk is part of a course “Dissonance - Music and Conflict,” one of the Upper Division Interdisciplinary Studio courses at California College of the Arts, which helps students incorporate our experiences of conflicts in our creative making practices learning from how music transcends borders and unites us regardless of the conflicts that exist.

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Iranian American composer Sahba Aminikia on music as an 'organic response' to pain
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Iranian American composer Sahba Aminikia on music as an 'organic response' to pain

When Iranian American composer Sahba Aminikia was 19, he left Iran for Russia to study at the St. Petersburg State Conservatory under Boris Ivanovich Tishchenko, a former student of the famous classical music composer Dmitri Shostakovich.

Aminikia says he admires Shostakovich so much that he was inspired to go into classical music.

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Sahba Aminikia Tells Timeless Stories Through Music
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Sahba Aminikia Tells Timeless Stories Through Music

The music of Iranian-American composer Sahba Aminikia is analogous to water. Variably complex or simple, it flows in gentle, naturally syncopated rhythms and structures reminiscent of light rain falling amid sunshine on a rooftop in one work, while another piece’s metronomic regularity is like a steadily dripping faucet. A third piece arrives fully orchestrated with the torrential swoosh of a downpour.

Bearing the imprint of his classical music training and vastly diverse source material — Persian poetry and traditional music, European and Western classical music, jazz, the music of Pink Floyd, Beatles, Queen, and many other contemporary and world music ensembles — overall the San Francisco-based musician’s work serves up a baseline elixir infused with multiple flavors. Lately, his compositional output includes works featuring crowd-sourced human voices obtained through social media. These works transform the sound of young voices reproducing bird calls or the (forbidden) singing of Iranian women or the chanting of the name of a political prisoner into nearly overwhelming tsunamis of pain and wave-like declarations of liberation and beauty.

Aminikia’s music has been widely performed and he has had a long and productive relationship with the Kronos Quartet. During a conversation about composing, the talk turns to the Flying Carpet Children Music Festival of which he is founder/director. In a comment that might surprise his followers, he says, “I can see myself giving up music one day, but I can’t see myself giving up the children I work with. My life energy is inspired by the energy of those children. It keeps me going. It’s such powerful emotion and force that children carry.”

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5 Questions to Sahba Aminikia (Founder, Flying Carpet Festival)
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5 Questions to Sahba Aminikia (Founder, Flying Carpet Festival)

Sahba Aminikia is an Iranian-American composer, pianist, and educator born in post-revolutionary wartime in Iran. Aminikia first explored immersive, visceral music in a successful performance career before pivoting to artistic direction of Flying Carpet Festival, an international music festival serving refugee children in Turkey. At time of writing, Aminikia’s birth country Iran is experiencing significant and violent upheaval. ICIYL offers particular thanks to Sahba for his generous work and shares hope for peace and restoration in Iran, Turkey, and its neighboring region.

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Sahba Aminikia’s Flying Carpet Children Festival
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Sahba Aminikia’s Flying Carpet Children Festival

Two years ago, 38-year old Iranian-born composer Sahba Aminikia ’13 decided to leave a secure teaching job in San Francisco and, by kismet or intention, join the circus. He has not looked back on his decision to become artistic director of the Flying Carpet Children Festival in war-torn Mardin, Turkey, an ancient city in southeastern Turkey that is currently home to some 5,000 child refugees.

The festival brings together distinguished international performers and composers, including several of Aminikia’s teachers and fellow students from SFCM, circus artists, multi-media producers, trance dancers, as well as traditional Kurdish musicians as part of an effort started by Sirkhane (Circus House), a Turkish non-profit offering free music classes and social circus workshops to children in schools and refugee camps. Founded in 2012 by visual artist and social worker Pinar Demiral, Sirkhane’s mission is “to serve as a catalyst for positive change in the lives of vulnerable children.”

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Sahba Aminikia's Flying Carpet Festival Brings Music to Refugee Children in Turkey
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Sahba Aminikia's Flying Carpet Festival Brings Music to Refugee Children in Turkey

Sahba Aminikia hadn’t planned on dancing when he stopped by Club Deluxe in the Haight to unwind and hear a little jazz three years ago. But the band was swinging, and before long, he found himself boogieing with a young Italian woman. The Iranian-born composer was in a very good place in his career, teaching at the Academy of Art University while writing music performed by top-flight ensembles around the world, including Kronos Quartet.

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Bay Area Beats: Sahba Aminikia
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Bay Area Beats: Sahba Aminikia

Contemporary classical composer Sahba Aminikia came to San Francisco as a refugee. Born and raised in Iran in the '80s, he left as a young man to study music in Russia, and was a graduate student at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music.

The music he composes is deeply tied to his Iranian roots — he’s written pieces inspired by traditional work songs of Persian carpet weavers, or incorporating the voices of Iranian women whose singing has been stifled by religious restrictions. 

Aminikia came into KALW’s studio to talk about his music and where it comes from, in this edition of Bay Area Beats.

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SAHBA AMINIKIA COMPOSES FOR THESE TIMES
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SAHBA AMINIKIA COMPOSES FOR THESE TIMES

Sahba Aminikia was called by the San Francisco Chronicle “an artist singularly equipped to provide a soundtrack to these unsettling times". Aminikia lives in the United States, but his family is from Iran. Early this month, his work was part of a festival by the world-famous Kronos Quartet, for whom Aminikia is writer-in-residence. His mother, a U.S. green card holder who is in Tehran, was caught in the travel ban issued by President Trump, so she missed the early February festival at SFJazz that included her son’s music.

Aminikia’s compositions are haunting and ethereal and combine elements from both eastern and western musical traditions to create sounds that are as exotic as they are familiar.

Welum caught up with the 35- year-old composer to ask about his music and how beauty and ethics are taken into account in his artistic creations and in his life.

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New Podcast – Kronos Quartet – Warp and Weft
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New Podcast – Kronos Quartet – Warp and Weft

Tar o Pood (Persian for warp and weft) is a collaboration between Kronos Quartet and Iranian-Canadian Sabha Aminikia. We interview violinist and Kronos Quartet founder David Harrington, ahead of the performance at San Francisco’s Switchboard Festival, on how their work is centred on a politics heavily informed by the group’s feelings about their own country’s foreign policy (Australia) and treatment of minorities. Sahba Aminikia has featured before on 6 Pillars. The first piece we heard of his was ‘Threnody for Those Who Remain’ in 2010, dedicated to Aminikia’s father. For Tar o Pood, Sahba spent months trundling around Iran recording weaving processes. During the performance the players wear headphones, playing along with work songs sung by Iranian weavers. The audience hear the weaving interspersed with the piece. Aminikia’s grandparents were carpet weavers from Kāshān and his grandmother’s singing was also used in the third movement of the piece.

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یک گروه موسیقی آمریکایی با الهام از فرش ایرانی نواختند
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یک گروه موسیقی آمریکایی با الهام از فرش ایرانی نواختند

قالی های ایرانی مهمان جشنواره ای در آمریکا. گروه کرونوس کوارتت، یکی از مشهورترین گروه های موسیقی کلاسیک جهان، شنبه شب، قطعه تار و پود ساخته یک آهنگ ساز جوان ایرانی را به روی صحنه برد. این قطعه داستان قالی های ایرانی را به زبان موسیقی بیان می کند.

محمدرضا کاظمی گزارش می دهد.

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