Spring
1999 (7.1)
Page
26
Oil Boom Period
in Azerbaijan
(1880s
- 1918)
Mikayil
Mushfig
(1908-1939)
Mushfig left
his mark on Azerbaijani literature despite his short life. He
was one of the gifted intellectuals from Azerbaijan who were
killed during Stalin's repression.
One of his most famous poems, entitled "Sing Tar, Sing!"
defines the controversy that surrounded music when the Bolsheviks
established Moscow's power in Baku. Some people wanted to replace
the traditional stringed instrument with Western orchestral instruments
and genres. Mushfig wrote a poem giving tribute to the enormous
capacity that this instrument has to make listeners both joyous
and mournful. In the end, music giants like Uzeyir Hajibeyov
found a brilliant way to synthesize the tar into orchestral pieces,
thus integrating both East and West. He neither rejected the
traditional heritage of centuries nor totally embraced the Russian
styles, which were gaining prestige. The final lines of Mushfig's
poem read:
"Sing Tar,
sing Tar, sing!
Who can forget you once they've heard you sing?!
Life of the people, joy of their hearts,
Here is their wonderful, fiery art!"
Heartbeat
My heartbeat said:
"There's luck ahead. . .
Great, glorious days
That brace and daze
Are yet to come!"
There's more
ahead. . .
My heartbeat said:
"Noble work, no fret,
Toil's pearly sweat-
Are yet to come!"
My contemporaries
define:
"Past times were fine". . .
These words I hate,
My heart says: "Wait!
The sun's hot rays,
Cool springs, bright days
Are yet to come!"
Translated
by Olga Moisseyenko and published in "Azerbaijanian Poetry:
Classic, Modern, Traditional," edited by Mirza Ibrahimov.
Moscow: Progress Publishers. No date [probably late 1970s], page
282.
From
Azerbaijan
International
(7.1) Spring 1999.
© Azerbaijan International 1999. All rights reserved.
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