Ferhat Tunç
Ferhat Tunç | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Ferhat Tunç Yoslun |
Born | Ovacık, Tunceli, Turkey | 14 March 1964
Origin | Kurdish |
Genres | Turkish folk music, Kurdish folk music, Alevite folk music, Protest songs |
Occupation(s) | Singer, Songwriter, Musician |
Instruments | Bağlama, Vocal |
Associated acts | Ahmet Kaya, Yusuf Hayaloglu |
Website | www |
Ferhat Tunç Yoslun (born 14 March 1964) is a Turkish singer of Kurdish descent.[1]
Ferhat Tunç was born in 1964 in the city of Tunceli in Turkey's eastern province of Tunceli. With twelve years he stood for the first time on stage as a singer. In the late 1970s with sixteen years, he followed his father to Germany. He returned to Turkey in 1985 and began to engage himself in favor of Kurdish rights.[2]
Legal prosecution[]
In June 2012 he was sentenced to 2 years in prison for terror related charges because during a speech in Dersim on 1 May 2011 Tunç said: “I greet you all in the revolutionary spirit of Deniz Gezmiş, Mahir Çayan and İbrahim Kaypakkaya.” All three he greeted are Turkish leftist. [3] On the 20 December 2012 the sentence was turned into a three year ban to speak about the same theme.[4]
On the 25 September 2018 he was sentenced to 1 year 11 months and 11 days in prison for terror propaganda on behalf on the YPG, PKK and KCK due to his social media posts during the fighting between ISIL and Kurdish fighters in Kobanî in 2014 and 2015.[5]
In March 2019 he declared on Twitter that he was leaving Turkey due to the ongoing legal prosecution against him.[6]
Discography[]
- "Kızılırmak" in Germany (1982)
- "Bu Yürek Bu Sevda Var İken" in Germany (1984)
- "Vurgunum Hasretine" (1986)
- "Ay Işığı Yana Yana" (1987)
- "Yaşam Direnmektir" (1988)
- "İstanbul Konserleri-1" (1988)
- "Vuruldu" (1989)
- "Gül Vatan" (1990)
- "Ateş Gibi" (1991)
- "İstanbul Konserleri-2" (1992)
- "Firari Sevdam" (1993)
- "Özlemin Dağ Rüzgarı" (1994)
- "Kanı Susturun" (1995)
- "Kayıp" (1997)
- "Kavgamın Çiçeği" (1999)
- "Her Mevsim Bahardır" (2000)
- "Şarkılarım Tanıktır" (2002)
- "Nerdesin Ey Kardeşlik" (2003)
- "Sevmek Bir Eylemdir" (2005)
- "Ateşte Sınandık" (2006)
- "Çığlıklar Ülkesi" (2009)
- "Listen to the Banned" (2010)
- "Kobanî" (2016)
Honor[]
- 3 March World Freemusic Award winner by Censorship of music- in London's Royal Institute of British Architects, 25 March 2010
References[]
- ^ "Ferhat Tunç: Sanatçı özgürlükten vazgeçemez". Bianet (in Turkish). 27 October 2020. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
- ^ "Musik - Ferhat Tunç vereint alles, was der türkische Staat bekämpft". Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen (SRF) (in German). 4 April 2016. Retrieved 9 March 2019.
- ^ support, EYWA. "Turkey: Ferhat Tunc sentenced to two years in prison". Freemuse. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
- ^ support, EYWA. "Turkey: Ferhat Tunc". Freemuse. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
- ^ TM. "Singer Ferhat Tunç sentenced to 2 years in prison for terrorism propaganda - Turkish Minute". Retrieved 14 January 2019.
- ^ "Government attacks prompt Kurdish folk singer to leave Turkey". Ahval. Retrieved 9 March 2019.
External links[]
- 1964 births
- Living people
- People from Ovacık, Tunceli
- Alevi singers
- Turkish people of Kurdish descent
- Kurdish musicians
- German male musicians
- German people of Turkish descent
- German people of Kurdish descent