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Lamentations and Dance: Songs for the Children of Kaveh Ahangar

Date
Sat February 28th 2026, 7:00 - 8:15pm
Event Sponsor
Hamid and Christina Moghadam Program in Iranian Studies
Event is open to
Everyone
Experience Type
In-Person
Location
In person at Stanford

Join us for an evening of music with Maestro Ali Akbar Moradi, joined by Arash Moradi, Mehdi Bagheri, and Kourosh Moradi.

Doors open 6:15 pm, concert begins at 7:00 pm.  If you are on the waitlist, you are welcome to join the standby line at the venue for any remaining unclaimed seats by 6:50 pm.

About the Musicians

Ali Akbar Moradi began playing the tanbour at the age of seven and learned not only the music but the Kurdish maqam repertoire. He has won awards, recorded several albums, and performed in Europe, the United States, and Canada with singers like Shahram Nazeri and at the Royal Festival Hall in London. In addition to teaching the tanbour in Tehran and his hometown of Kermanshah, Ali Akbar is a dedicated scholar of the tanbour and continues to develop the legacy of the instrument and the regional Kurdish music.

Arash Moradi is the eldest son of Aliakbar Moradi. Arash started learning tanbūr at an early age from his father whom he later accompanied in numerous concert and festivals throughout Iran and Europe. Arash lives in London where he teaches tanbūr, runs workshops on Persian and Kurdish music and collaborates with musicians from around the world.

Mehdi Bagheri has become one of the most renowned practitioners of the Persian kamancheh of his generation. A composer and multi-instrumentalist born in Kermanshah, Kurdish provinces in Iran. Mehdi received his master’s degree from the Arak University in 2004, studying with luminaries of traditional Iranian music, while simultaneously pursuing a degree in dramatic theater. He has performed at festivals worldwide and continues to pursue his work in various fields such as music of the film, eclectic music and Iranian classical music inside Iran and abroad.

Kourosh Moradi studied tanbour with his father, Ali Akbar Moradi, studied daf with master Sufis of the Yarsan Order and tombak with Master Hamid Moghadam while growing up in Kurdistan. Kourosh has recorded and performed around the world continuing the family legacy of the tanbour with many esteemed masters of Kurdish/Iranian music. He continues to perform in conjunction with his father and carry on the family legacy of sharing the music with audiences around the world. He now lives and teaches in Southern California.

Coordinated by Ashkan Nazari, a Stanford PhD student in ethnomusicology. 

Part of the Stanford Festival of Iranian Arts

Stanford is committed to ensuring its facilities, programs and services are accessible to everyone. To request access information and/or accommodations for this event, please complete https://tinyurl.com/AccessStanford at the latest one week before the event.