Kadriye Nurmambet

Kadriye Nurmambet (also spelled in Crimean Tatar as: Qadriye Nurmambet, قَادْرِیَ نُرْمٰومْبَتً, Ҡадрие Нурмамбет and in Romanian as: Cadrie Nurmambet) is a Dobrujan-born Crimean Tatar traditional folk singer and folklorist who has attracted national attention and is known as The Nightingale of Dobruja.[1][2][3][4][5]

Kadriye Nurmambet
Qadriye Nurmambet
قَادْرِیَ نُرْمٰومْبَتً
Ҡадрие Нурмамбет
Cadrie Nurmambet
Birth nameKadriye Nurmambet
Born (1933-08-21) August 21, 1933
Bazargic, Dobruja, Kingdom of Romania (now Dobrich, Bulgaria)
OriginMedgidia, Constanta, Romania
GenresTraditional folk
Occupation(s)Lawyer
InstrumentsVocals
Years active1950present
LabelsElectrecord
Associated actsOrchestra Barbu Lăutarul, Orchestra Florian Economu, Orchestra Toni Iordache, Orchestra Gheorghe Parnica, Orchestra George Marcu, Orchestra Brâuleţul, Radio Romania Antena Satelor, Radio Romania Din folclorul popoarelor, Emil Gavriş, Ştefan Lăzărescu, Lucreția Ciobanu, Maria Lătărețu, Fănică Luca, Ionel Budişteanu, Nicu Stănescu, Dan Moisescu, Grigore Kiazim, Ensemble Karadeniz

Biography

Kadriye was born on 21 August 1933 to Pakize and Ahmet Nurmambet in Bazargic, Dobruja, in the Kingdom of Romania (nowadays Dobrich, Bulgaria). Her father was an officer in the 40th Artillery Regiment, Mărăşeşti 9th Division. When Romania ceded Southern Dobruja to Bulgaria, at the beginning of World War II, her family moved north to Medgidia where her father was appointed commander of a garrison.[1]

She studied law at the University of Bucharest and graduated in 1957. She was the first female Crimean Tatar lawyer in Romania and she served in the Constanta Bar Association.[1][2]

Nurmambet had an interest in folklore and folk music as a child and early on joined Crimean Tatar and Romanian folk groups. Her first stage performance was in 1950 at the Romanian Athenaeum, alongside notable folk singers Emil Gavriş, Ştefan Lăzărescu, Lucreția Ciobanu, Maria Lătărețu and pan flute virtuoso Fănică Luca. They performed with the Barbu Lautarul Orchestra, conducted by Ionel Budişteanu and Nicu Stănescu.[1]

In 1954 professor Tiberiu Alexandru at the National University of Music Bucharest praised her performance and debuted her voice on the radio. Her first disc was released in 1960 at Electrecord, followed by other recordings in 1963, 1974, 1980, 1982, and 1989.[1]

Kadriye learned her first folk songs from her mother, but later she developed a strong interest in collecting traditional songs. She used to travel in the villages of Dobruja looking for people carrying out Crimean, Nogai Tatar, and Turkish folk culture. In 1957 she was invited to record over 90 traditional Tatar and Turkish songs for the Golden Sound Archive of the Ethnography and Folklore Institute of Bucharest. Throughout her life she made prominent efforts to preserve the traditional music of the Turks and Tatars of Romania by teaching and counseling their folklore.[1][2]

Her latest studio album, titled Tatar and Turkish Traditional Folk Songs and recorded by Electrecord, was released in 2009.[4][5]

References

  1. Agi-Amet, Gemal (1999). Dicţionarul personalităţilor turco-tătare din România (in Romanian). Constanta: Metafora. ISBN 9789739340274.
  2. Yusuf Ismail, Gülşen. "Romanya'nın bülbül sesi: Kadriye Nurmambet". Kalgay (in Crimean Tatar). Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
  3. Bocai, Adina (19 October 2009). "Kadriye Nurmambet "pledează", din nou, pentru "Melodii populare tătăreşti şi turceşti"" (in Romanian). Cuget Liber. Cuget Liber. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
  4. Bucinschi, Raluca (2012). Bibliografia Nationala Romana: Documente muzicale tiparite si audiovizuale, Anul XLIV/2011 (PDF) (in Romanian). Bucharest: Editura Bibliotecii Nationale a Romaniei. p. 14.
  5. Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities. "Lansare de CD: Kadriye Nurmambet, "Melodii populare tătăreşti şi turceşti"". ispmn.gov.ro (in Romanian). ISPMN. Retrieved 15 August 2014.

See also

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