Early life and a young Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (biting his finger) pictured at a
Pashtun wedding in
Jalandhar, December 1961 Khan was born into a
Punjabi Muslim family in
Lyallpur in 1948. Khan's family belonged to
Jalandhar. His ancestors learned music and singing there and adopted it as a profession. He was the fifth child and first son of
Fateh Ali Khan, a musicologist, vocalist, instrumentalist, and
qawwal. Nusrat, who had four older sisters and a younger brother,
Farrukh Fateh Ali Khan, grew up in central Faisalabad. The tradition of qawwali in the family has been passed down through successive generations for almost 600 years. Initially, his father did not want Khan to follow the family's vocation. He had his heart set on Nusrat choosing a much more respectable career path and becoming a doctor or engineer because he felt qawwali artists had low social status. However, Khan showed such an aptitude for and interest in qawwali, that his father finally relented.
Early career In his youth, Nusrat joined his father's qawwali party as a tabla player whilst continuing to learn the intricacies of singing. When Ustad Munawar Ali Khan, son of legendary classical vocalist Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, visited Pakistan from India to perform, Nusrat accompanied him on tabla. Munawar Ali Khan's enthusiastic praise for Nusrat's playing helped convince his father to stop pressuring him to become a doctor. The party also included Mujahid Mubarak Ali Khan, the son of Mubarak and the cousin of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. As Nusrat's prominence grew, the party eventually became recognised as Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan & Party. The performance drew praise from legends such as Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, Umid Ali Khan, Roshan Ara Begum, and Amanat Ali Khan. The lyrics to
Ni Main Jana Jogi De Naal were written by
Bulleh Shah, a 17th century Sufi poet. Another of Khan's early hits in
Pakistan was the qawwali
Haq Ali Ali which featured restrained use of his
sargam improvisations.
1980s Throughout the 1980s, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan delivered a plethora of acclaimed qawwalis that highlighted his extraordinary vocal prowess and innovative approach to the traditional Sufi devotional genre, helping to introduce it to wider international audiences. Another notable hit was the introspective ghazal-qawwali
Sochta Hoon Ke Woh Kitne Masoom Thay, originally written and composed by Nusrat, with live performances dating back to the late 1970s but officially recorded by Oriental Star Agencies Ltd in 1985. Nusrat also composed the popular
Mast Nazron Se Allah Bachaye, written by Purnam Allahabadi, Nusrat and his brother Farrukh Fateh Ali Khan. A further highlight was the Punjabi qawwali
Nit Khair Manga, primarily penned by the poet Badar Ali Ansari with additional lyrics written by Nusrat. It was composed by Nusrat, although some have mistakenly attributed the composition to Badar. These works underscore Nusrat's pivotal role in elevating qawwali to global audiences during this transformative era. He performed in Paris in 1985 and 1988. He first visited Japan in 1987 at the invitation of the
Japan Foundation. He performed at the 5th Asian Traditional Performing Art Festival in Japan. He also performed at the
Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York, in 1989, earning him admiration from the American audience. In 1988, Khan teamed up with
Peter Gabriel on the
soundtrack to
The Last Temptation of Christ, which led to Khan being signed to Gabriel's
Real World label. In 1989, commissioned by Oriental Star Agencies Ltd in Birmingham, UK, Khan collaborated at Zella Recording Studios with composer Andrew Kristy and producer
Johnny Haynes on a series of 'fusion' tracks that propelled Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Party into the Channel 4 Christmas Special of "
Big World Café." While in the UK in 1989, Khan and his party performed Sikh devotional music at a Sikh Gurdwara in Slough, continuing a tradition of Muslims performing hymns at Sikh temples.
1990s Following this, in 1990, the BBC devoted a programme of its series
Network East to this collaboration, and Big World Café invited Khan, Andrew Kristy, and violinist
Nigel Kennedy to perform Allah Hoo live on the show. A UK tour performing these new fusion tracks happened in 1990. In the 1992 -1993 academic year, Khan was a visiting artist in the
Ethnomusicology department at the
University of Washington,
Seattle,
Washington, United States. Khan released five albums of traditional qawwali through Real World, along with the more experimental albums
Mustt Mustt (1990),
Night Song (1996), and the posthumous remix album
Star Rise (1997). Notable qawwalis among Khan’s 1990s hits included
Man Atkeya Beparwah De Naal (lyrics by
Shah Hussain, composed by Khan),
Jani Door Gaye (lyrics by Anwar Hussain Jogi, composed by Khan), and
Tum Ek Gorakh Dhanda Ho (lyrics by
Naz Khialvi, composed by Khan). Khan's experimental work for Real World, which featured his collaborations with the Canadian guitarist
Michael Brook, led to several further collaborations with other Western composers and rock musicians. One of these collaborations occurred in 1995, when Khan teamed up with
Pearl Jam's lead singer
Eddie Vedder on two songs for the soundtrack to
Dead Man Walking. Khan also provided vocals for
The Prayer Cycle, which was put together by
Jonathan Elias, but died before the tracks could be completed.
Alanis Morissette was brought in to sing alongside his unfinished vocals. In 2002, Gabriel included Khan's vocals on the track "Signal to Noise" on his album
Up. Khan was the main performer at
Imran Khan's charity appeal concert at the
InterContinental London Park Lane Hotel on December 3, 1992 to raise funds for
Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital and Research Centre, a cancer hospital built in Imran's mother's name which provides free services. The audience included
Peter Gabriel,
Elizabeth Hurley,
Mick Jagger, and
Amitabh Bachchan. Khan contributed the song "Gurus of Peace" to the 1997 album
Vande Mataram, composed by
A. R. Rahman, and released to celebrate the 50th anniversary of India's independence. As a posthumous tribute, Rahman later released an album titled
Gurus of Peace which included "Allah Hoo" by Khan. Rahman's 2007 song "
Tere Bina" for the film
Guru was also composed as a tribute to Khan. Khan contributed songs to, and performed in, several
Pakistani films. Shortly before his death, he composed music for three
Bollywood films, which include the film
Aur Pyaar Ho Gaya, in which he also sang "Koi Jaane Koi Na Jaane" on-screen with the lead pair, and "Zindagi Jhoom Kar." He also composed music for
Kartoos, where he sang for "Ishq Da Rutba" and "Bahaa Na Aansoo" alongside
Udit Narayan. He died shortly before the movie's release. His final
music composition for Bollywood was for the movie
Kachche Dhaage, where he sang "Iss Shaan-E-Karam Ka Kya Kehna." The movie was released in 1999, two years after his death.
Asha Bhosle and
Lata Mangeshkar performed the songs he composed in his brief stint in Bollywood. He also sang "Saya Bhi Saath Jab Chhod Jaye" for
Sunny Deol's movie
Dillagi. The song was released in 1999, two years after Khan's death. He also sang "Dulhe Ka Sehra" from the Bollywood movie
Dhadkan, which was released in 2000. ==Death==