maikadah bhi apna hai
Maikadah Vol 15 — Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan Sufi Qawwali MP3
Maikadah — the tavern — is one of the central images of Persian and Urdu sufi poetry. Ali Da Malang, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan's most internationally famous qawwali, uses this imagery. The maikadah is the place where the wine of divine love is served, presided over by the pir or the tavern keeper as a symbol for the spiritual guide. Every element of the tavern image — the wine, the drunken state, the beloved who pours, the companions who drink together — maps onto the sufi understanding of the devotional community and its relationship to the divine.
The Literary History of the Maikadah Image
The maikadah appears throughout Persian sufi literature — in Hafiz, in Rumi, in Omar Khayyam's Rubaiyat (which Western readers often take as literal but which functions in the sufi interpretive tradition as allegory). Nusrat had all qawwali in audio video formats and has participated in and won many qawwali competitions — and his engagement with this material reflects a performer who understood the literary history behind the image, not just its surface meaning. iRulz has enormously arranged a huge collection of all his famous qawwali across multiple series and albums.
The Best of Nusrat Fatheh Ali Khan Vol 1, Abida Parveen and Aziz Mian are all available for comparison in the iRulz library across the shared territory of the maikadah tradition.
Download or Stream Free
Maikadah Vol 15 is available on iRulz for free streaming and urdu qawwali mp3 download. The complete Nusrat collection is accessible in the same place.
FAQ
What is the maikadah in sufi literature? The tavern — used as a metaphor for the sufi gathering place where the spiritual guide serves the wine of divine knowledge to devoted seekers. Not a literal drinking establishment.
Is the maikadah image controversial in Islamic terms? It has been debated for centuries. Mainstream Islamic scholarship generally treats it as permissible metaphor within sufi poetry; more literalist traditions reject it as inappropriate. The sufi tradition maintains that the metaphor is both necessary and appropriate.
Does Vol 15 contain different material than earlier volumes? Yes — the series draws from different performance sessions. Each volume is a distinct recording event with its own track listing.
You may also enjoy the qawwali of Best of Nusrat Vol 1, Abida Parveen, and Aziz Mian. Listen to more qawwali of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.