Müslüm Gürses

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Müslüm Gürses
Birth nameMüslüm Akbaş
Also known asMüslüm Baba
Born(1953-07-05)5 July 1953
, Halfeti, Şanlıurfa, Turkey
Died3 March 2013(2013-03-03) (aged 59)
Istanbul, Turkey
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Singer
  • Lyricist
  • Composer
  • Actor
InstrumentsBağlama, piano
Years active1968–2013
Labels
Associated actsMurathan Mungan, Teoman, Duman, Ibrahim Tatlises
Websitewww.muslumgurses.com.tr

Müslüm Gürses (pronounced [mysˈlym ɟyɾˈses]; 5 July 1953 – 3 March 2013), born Müslüm Akbaş and called Müslüm Baba (literally: Father Müslüm), was a popular Turkish arabesque singer and actor.[1]

Personal life[]

He was born on 7 May 1953 in an adobe hut at Fıstıközü village in Halfeti district of Şanlıurfa Province, southeastern Turkey. His mother was Emine, his father Mehmet, a farmer. Müslüm was only three years old when the family migrated to Adana due to financial problems.[2]

At the age of 13, Müslüm was singing in the cotton fields he was working in. In his childhood, he also worked as a tailor's and a cobbler's apprentice. In 1967, he participated and won the title of a song contest organized by Adana Family-friendly Tea Garden. He then began to perform at Radio Çukurova. During this time, he adopted the surname Gürses, which means literally "stentorian voice".[2]

In 1978, during a trip from Tarsus, Mersin to Adana, he got involved in a car accident. The crash scene was so terrible that he was assumed dead as he was pulled off the wreck, and therefore taken to the morgue instead of the hospital. After discovered by chance that he was alive, he was treated and underwent cranioplasty, getting a metal plate implemented for skull repair.[2]

Another tragedy he experienced was that in addition to his brother's murder, his father murdered his mother. Mehmet Akbaş remarried after he was released from prison. However, Müslüm Gürses remained all the time silent and resentful because of his father's doing.[2]

In 1980, Müslüm Gürses was on a concert tour in Malatya, where Muhterem Nur (1932–2020) already a well-known movie actress and singer, shared the stage with him. They started a quarrel during the evening. This became the beginning of the ever-lasting love between the two. The couple got married following after four years in 1986.[2] He was her second husband.

Career[]

From 1967 on, he performed live türkü, Turkish folk songs, regularly on Saturdays within the state-owned radio station of TRT Adana-Çukurova. His debut record single "Emmioğlu/Ovada Taşa Basma" was released in 1968. The next year in 1969, he already landed a hit record titled "Sevda Yüklü Kervanlar/Vurma Güzel Vurma" released by Palandöken Records in Istanbul, which sold 300,000 copies.[2]

After completing his conscription, he returned to Istanbul and successfully continued to record folk songs. He had 13 singles by label Palandöken, four by Bestefon, 15 by Hülya Records and finally two by Çin Çin Records. Müslüm Gürses stepped into Yeşilçam in the heyday of fanciful arabesque music, and starred in 38 movies singing songs in most of them.[2]

Later in his life, Gürses's interest started to shift toward other musical genres. He included pop and rock music to his repertory, singing such titles as "Olmadı Yar" of Nilüfer, "Paramparça" of Teoman and "İkimizin Yerine" of Tarkan.[2]

Müslüm Gürses mainly sang Turkish folk and Ottoman classical music in arabesque style. In his songs, he primarily expressed sorrow and painful feelings. He is considered a cult figure of Turkish folk music, and has a very dedicated group of fans, most of whom being young, low-income urban people, who call him "Müslüm Baba'" ("Papa Müslüm") affectionately.

Gürses had maybe the most interesting audience. At a time, his fans used to cut and bleed themselves using razor blades during his concerts. This phenomenon led to Müslüm Gürses becoming a subject of scientific research at universities. For this reason, even intellectuals began to take an interest in him during the late 1990s.[2]

Health issues[]

In November 2012, it was announced that Gürses was in critical condition following a heart bypass surgery he had undergone recently.[3] On 3 March 2013 at 10:30, he died due to complications with his surgery and declining health during post-operative care. He had been in the intensive care unit continuously since his surgery.[4] After a memorial ceremony held at the Cemal Reşit Rey Concert Hall the next day and subsequent religious funeral in the Teşvikiye Mosque, he was buried at the Zincirlikuyu Cemetery.[5]

Works[]

Filmography[]

  • – 1979
  • – 1980
  • – 1980
  • – 1980
  • – 1980
  • – 1980
  • – 1981
  • – 1983
  • – 1984
  • – 1984
  • – 1984
  • – 1984
  • – 1984
  • – 1985
  •  [tr] – 1985
  • – 1985
  • – 1985
  • – 1986
  • – 1986
  • – 1986
  • – 1986
  • – 1986
  • – 1986
  • – 1986
  • – 1986
  • – 1987
  • – 1987
  • – 1988
  • – 1988
  • – 1990
  • – 1990
  • – 2002
  • – 2002
  • – 2002
  • – 2005
  • Amerikalılar Karadeniz'de 2 – 2006
  • – 2008
  • – 2011

Composer[]

  • Ağır abi (2011)
  • Yaşlı Gözlerin Üstadı – Kul (2013)

Discography[]

Year Title Production Notes
1975 Çınçın Plak
1976
1977
1978
1979
1979 Saner Plak
1980 Emre Plak
1981 Modern Plak
1982 Akdeniz Plak
1982 Uzay Plak
1983 Kale Plakçılık
1984 Elenor Müzik
1985
1986
1986
1986
1986 Bayar Müzik
1987 Elenor Müzik
1988 Özbir Plak
1988 Elenor Müzik
1988
1988 Sedef Müzik
1989 Akdeniz Plak
1989 Sarp Müzik
1989 Elenor Müzik
1989 Live album
1990
1990 Disco Plak
1990 Uğur Plak
1990 Bayar Müzik
1991
1991
1991 Sarp Müzik
1991 Elenor Müzik
1991
1992
1993
1994
1994 Uğur Plak
1995 Elenor Müzik
1995
1996
1997 İdobay
1997 Elenor Müzik
1997
1998
1999
1999
1999 Ulus Müzik
2000
2000 Elenor Müzik
2001
2001
2001 Özdemir Plak
2001 Universal
2002 Live album
2002 Live album
2002 Live album
2002 Universal
2002 Bayar Müzik
2003
2003 Dirlik Müzik
2004 Kadırga Müzik
2005 Görüntüevi
2005 Sun Müzik
2006 Seyhan Müzik
2006 Pasaj Müzik
2009
2010
2013 Kadırga Müzik

References[]

  1. ^ Armbrust, Walter (19 September 2000). Mass mediations: new approaches to popular culture in the Middle East and beyond. University of California Press. p. 233. ISBN 978-0-520-21926-7. Retrieved 15 April 2011.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i "Müslüm Gürses Bir Yaşam Öyküsü". Hürriyet Daily News (in Turkish). 4 March 2013. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  3. ^ "Müslüm Gürses'in durumu kritik". CNN Türk. 1 March 2013.
  4. ^ "Müslüm Gürses vefat etti". Milliyet. 3 March 2013.
  5. ^ ""Müslüm Baba"ya veda". Hürriyet Daily News (in Turkish). 4 March 2013. Retrieved 4 March 2013.

External links[]

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