Умар Димаев

Umar Dimaev (Chechen: Умар Димаев; October 1, 1908 – 1972) was a Chechen accordionist and folk musician who was active in the Soviet era. His sons, Ali, Valid, and Said, are professional Chechen musicians. Dimayev was born into a family of peasant farmers on October 1, 1908 in Urus-Martan. Despite their relative lack of wealth, the Dimayev family had traditionally been educated in music, as all of Umar's brothers and sisters played the accordion, and Umar would later recall that his younger sister Aruzha would be the one who supported and cultivated his musical abilities. Although their father discouraged Dimayev from playing the accordion, saying it discouraged the development of his son's masculinity, Aruzha gave away her own instrument to Dimayev and taught him how to play the accordion. By the age of fifteen, neighbors routinely invited Umar to play at their family celebrations, including weddings, and at bedsides, since they felt that his music helped cure people. A small radio station opened in Urus-Martan in 1924, and young Umar started playing in local radio broadcasts. Five years later, in 1929, Umar gave a solo performance with the orchestra of the National Theater, to underline his growing popularity in Chechnya. He eventually became the soloist at Gronzy's Chechen-Ingush Dramatic Theatre. He would then work alongside the renowned Russian composer Alexander Alexandrov, who would teach Umar music composition. Several of Umar's compositions during this early period of his career are still played in Chechnya, such as "The Chechen Waltz" of the stage production "The Red Citadel," and a song based on "Bela", a frame story of Mikhail Lermontov's A Hero of Our Time. By the 1930s, Umar had gained wide recognition throughout the Chechen-Ingush ASSR. He then served as soloist of the folk band of the Chechen-Ingush radio company, and he won second prize at the first All-Union Folk Musicians contest. By 1934, Dimayev was a well-established Soviet folk musician, becoming a soloist for the Republican Radio Committee and competing in the first nationwide folk music competition in 1939. During the Great Patriotic War (i.e. World War II), Dimayev became involved in the Soviet war effort, writing patriotic works and giving concerts at the front and military hospitals. However, the lives of the entire Chechen and Ingush people would be dramatically affected by the forced deportation to Central Asia on February 23, 1944, and Umar was deported to Kazakhstan with his entire family. His son Ali Dimayev would be born in exile in 1953. After initially doing factory work, he joined the Chechen-Ingush Song and Dance Ensemble as a soloist in 1954. He soon began to give performances on Kazakhstan's radio stations, notably in Almaty in 1956. Although the radio transmissions would last barely fifteen minutes, the exiled Chechens would gather at the homes of radio owners to listen to Umar's broadcasts. His folk songs reminded the Chechen people of their lost homeland, which the bereaved Chechens longed to return to. At the end of the transmission, the men would hide their wet eyes, and the mothers cried quietly. Upon his return to Chechnya in 1957, Dimayev was declared “Honoured Artist of the Chechen-Ingush ASSR”. His career flourished from 1960-1972, with Dimayev giving concerts, performing on radio and television, and making recordings. Some of his best work includes "A Dance For Makhmoud Esambayev", after the renowned Chechen dancer, and "A Song of Chechen-Ukrainian Friendship" (Similar to the Chechen deportations, millions of Ukrainians had died due to the Soviet-directed Holodomor in the 1930s, but thousands of Ukrainians had then been saved from starvation by Chechens), and a dancing tune called "Two Friends". He would also be one of the founders of the "Vainakh" dance company. After severe and prolonged illness, Dimayev died on December 26, 1972. He left behind his three musically inclined sons, Said, Ali, and Amarbek, along with “some 30 compositions for the accordion and hundreds of recordings of folk music”. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

chechen traditional accordion Caucasian caucasian folk



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Султан Магомедов

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Рамзан Паскаев

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Имран Усманов

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Валид Дагаев

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Шуточная танцевальная
Кавказская народная лезгинка
Танец Шамсуддина
У родника
Танец Юсупа
Ингушская танцевальная песня
Горская лезгинка
Танец стариков
Утренняя танцевальная
Колхозная лезгинка
Ингушский танец
Танец Авалу
Шовдан йисттехь (У родника)
Танец чабана
Староюртовский танец
Беноюртовский танец
Хаза йоӀ (Красивая девушка)
Бено-Юртан хелхаран йиш (Бени-Юртовская танцевальная)
Забаре хелхаран йиш (Шуточная танцевальная)
Танец Дакашева
Партизанская песня
Красивая девушка
Танец Эсамбаева (музыка У.Димаева)
Зондакский цветок
Девичья мелодия
Мелодия для слушания
Долгая ночь
Танец друзей (музыка У.Димаева)
Аружа (музыка У.Димаева)
Чечено-Ингушский марш (музыка У.Димаева)
Горячий привет
Грустная мелодия
Ингушская мелодия для слушания
Восход солнца
Мы одногодки
Не хочешь, не приходи
Бени-Юртовская танцевальная
Айза
Родная мать
Песня о Матери
Мелодия Хаси
Хороша любовь
Не разлучайте с любимыми
Капитан Маташ Мазаев
Звёзды
Мелодия
Хорошая любовь
Солнце
Танец Эсамбаева
Танец друзей

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