In South Asia, semi-classical music (Hindi: अर्ध शास्त्रीय संगीत, Urdu: نیم کلاسیکی موسیقی; neem klaseeki moseeqi) is derived from Hindustani classical music that is often combined with filmi music.[1] Bhojpuri music genres like Thumari, Chaiti, Hori, Kajari are part of semi classical Hindustani Music.[2]

It aired on Pakistan Television from 1964 (its establishment) to the late 1980s. Although, this music is still produced, it is not as frequent.

Historical background

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After the Indian Rebellion of 1857 or sometimes also called the First war of independence from the British rule, most Mughal court musicians moved from Delhi to the relative peace and safety of smaller towns after the failure of the 1857 rebellion.[3][4]

Thumri and Dadra

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In those smaller towns, a new musical movement gained momentum which sought relaxation from the structural limitations of the khayal form of music to allow singers to express themselves with lighter music. This new trend resulted in the development of two closely related music genres, the thumri and the dadra.[3][4]

After the independence of Pakistan in 1947, this musical heritage and many of the musicians shifted to Pakistan. Thumri and dadra have been and still are popular among contemporary classical vocalists in Pakistan.[3]

Semi-classical singers

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Other music

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Pakistani pop music, despite starting as completely westernized music, has been heavily influenced by semi-classical by the passage of time.

References

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  1. ^ Semi-classical music -- Magik India
  2. ^ "Semi classical music".
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Semi-Classical Music of Pakistan Travel & Culture (travel-culture.com) website, Retrieved 2 July 2019
  4. ^ a b Amjad Parvez (16 October 2016). "The evolution of subcontinental music". Dawn (newspaper). Retrieved 2 July 2019.
  5. ^ 8 Pakistani Classical Singers Who Proved That Music Knows No Boundaries STORYPICK.com website, Published 25 June 2015, Retrieved 2 July 2019