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Artist
Ostad Ali Asghar Bahari (b. 1905, Tehran, Iran – 10 June 1995; Farsi: علیاصغر بهاری, also spelled Ali-Asghar Bahari or Aliasghar Bahari) was a distinguished Iranian kamancheh player, considered one of the great Iranian traditional musicians. Besides performing on the kamancheh, he also composed a repertoire of pieces for the instrument. Bahari studied Iranian classical music at Tehran University and the Iranian Music Institute with teachers such as his grandfather, Mir Ali Khan, and Reza Khan, Akbar Khan, his uncle Hassan Khan, Roknodin Khan, and violinist Reza Mahjoubi, whose instrument is related to his in many ways. Bahari's music is based on modal systems that date back to ancient Greece, and in the Persian form is called dastgah, utilizing different modes or dastgah systems with names such as Segah, Shour, Afshari, Bayat-e Tork, Esfahan, and Abouata. Performing from these dastgah requires not only a mastery of the modal scale, but the ability to musically extrapolate meaningful improvisations from the mode's basis. When Bahari began playing over Radio Iran in 1952, the kamancheh had generally fallen out of public favor, and it was in many ways his extensive concertizing and broadcasting that created a renewal in the instrument's status in classical Iranian music. His invitation to go to France to record for national radio in 1966 was an appropriate tribute to the virtuoso talents he had developed by the time he was in his '60s. These recordings were released as part