Veranstaltungsinfos
Line-Up:
Mahan Mirarab: Guitar & Fretless Guitar
Bernhard Schimpelsberger: Percussion
Special guest:
Shannon Barnett: Trombone
Links:
www.mahanmirarab.com
https://www.instagram.com/mahanmirarab/
https://www.facebook.com/mirarab.mahan/
Short Bio:
Songs like “Haj Ghorban” and “A Week of Moonlight” dazzle with Mirarab’s enigmatic, transcendent guitar playing, fusing Middle Eastern textures with traditional jazz rhythms.
"All About Jazz"
Mahan Mirarab is a musician, composer, and educator based in Vienna. He teaches at the Anton Bruckner Private University in Linz and the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna (MDW). Beyond his academic work, he has written and arranged music for Opera Roma Baron (Vienna Straussfest), Beyond the Roots Orchestra in Cologne, Female Voices of Iran Orchestra, Impossible Stage in Berkeley, California, and NAWA Orchestra, among others.
He has released six albums and produced music for artists such as Alim Qasimov, Sakina Teyna, and Basma Jabr. His collaborations include projects with the NDR Bigband, Tonkünstler Orchester, Vision String Quartet, Aynur Doğan, and Anthony Braxton, and he has collaborated with leading record labels including ACT, ECM, and Warner Classics, among others.
Rooted in Tehran and based in Vienna, Mirarab’s multi-neck guitar speaks an honest and intimate language—one that transcends words, weaving together stories of migration, memory, and belonging. His music brings together European chamber textures and the fluidity of contemporary jazz, opening new pathways into the heart of Iranian classical traditions. These are not mere fusions but reimaginings: soundscapes where heritage and innovation move freely and reshape one another.
Mirarab belongs to a generation of young migrant artists in Europe who are redefining the borders of sound. With a commitment to dialogue, diversity, and collective creativity, he seeks to craft new narratives around Middle Eastern cultures and jazz. His approach results in a musical language that is both intricate and disarmingly accessible—inviting listeners to think deeply, feel openly, and move with the pulse of the music.
As a composer and arranger, Mirarab draws from a rich and expansive musical vocabulary. His rhythmic and harmonic language reflects journeys across jazz, experimental and electronic music, acoustic traditions, and the worlds of film, dance, and theatre. His work avoids cliché; instead, it expands the possibilities of how traditions can meet, challenge, and transform one another.
In Mirarab’s music, tradition is not preserved—it is reborn. The interplay of European chamber music and West Asian art music elements evokes reflection as much as movement. His music is dynamic and spacious, leaving room for breath and imagination, yet it can groove and dance with unmistakable energy. It can descend into darkness and rise suddenly into brightness and joy. His compositions draw on lived experience, shaping a sound world that spans an unusually wide emotional range. “Music can be played softly and still groove,” he notes. “For me, silence defines the notes I play.”
A restless and versatile spirit, he moves fluidly between European, Iranian, Arabic, and Kurdish classical music. His collaborations span continents: from the Vision String Quartet, Tonkünstler Orchester, and Berlin Metropolitan Orchestra to the NDR Bigband and Anthony Braxton Orchestra; from Kurdish music with Aynur Doğan and Sakina Teyna to Azerbaijani and Turkish traditions with Alim Qasimov and Erkan Oğur; and to Iranian and Arabic classical forms with artists such as Golnar Shahyar, Misagh Joolaee, and Kinan Azmeh.
Mahan Mirarab: Guitar & Fretless Guitar
Bernhard Schimpelsberger: Percussion
Special guest:
Shannon Barnett: Trombone
Links:
www.mahanmirarab.com
https://www.instagram.com/mahanmirarab/
https://www.facebook.com/mirarab.mahan/
Short Bio:
Songs like “Haj Ghorban” and “A Week of Moonlight” dazzle with Mirarab’s enigmatic, transcendent guitar playing, fusing Middle Eastern textures with traditional jazz rhythms.
"All About Jazz"
Mahan Mirarab is a musician, composer, and educator based in Vienna. He teaches at the Anton Bruckner Private University in Linz and the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna (MDW). Beyond his academic work, he has written and arranged music for Opera Roma Baron (Vienna Straussfest), Beyond the Roots Orchestra in Cologne, Female Voices of Iran Orchestra, Impossible Stage in Berkeley, California, and NAWA Orchestra, among others.
He has released six albums and produced music for artists such as Alim Qasimov, Sakina Teyna, and Basma Jabr. His collaborations include projects with the NDR Bigband, Tonkünstler Orchester, Vision String Quartet, Aynur Doğan, and Anthony Braxton, and he has collaborated with leading record labels including ACT, ECM, and Warner Classics, among others.
Rooted in Tehran and based in Vienna, Mirarab’s multi-neck guitar speaks an honest and intimate language—one that transcends words, weaving together stories of migration, memory, and belonging. His music brings together European chamber textures and the fluidity of contemporary jazz, opening new pathways into the heart of Iranian classical traditions. These are not mere fusions but reimaginings: soundscapes where heritage and innovation move freely and reshape one another.
Mirarab belongs to a generation of young migrant artists in Europe who are redefining the borders of sound. With a commitment to dialogue, diversity, and collective creativity, he seeks to craft new narratives around Middle Eastern cultures and jazz. His approach results in a musical language that is both intricate and disarmingly accessible—inviting listeners to think deeply, feel openly, and move with the pulse of the music.
As a composer and arranger, Mirarab draws from a rich and expansive musical vocabulary. His rhythmic and harmonic language reflects journeys across jazz, experimental and electronic music, acoustic traditions, and the worlds of film, dance, and theatre. His work avoids cliché; instead, it expands the possibilities of how traditions can meet, challenge, and transform one another.
In Mirarab’s music, tradition is not preserved—it is reborn. The interplay of European chamber music and West Asian art music elements evokes reflection as much as movement. His music is dynamic and spacious, leaving room for breath and imagination, yet it can groove and dance with unmistakable energy. It can descend into darkness and rise suddenly into brightness and joy. His compositions draw on lived experience, shaping a sound world that spans an unusually wide emotional range. “Music can be played softly and still groove,” he notes. “For me, silence defines the notes I play.”
A restless and versatile spirit, he moves fluidly between European, Iranian, Arabic, and Kurdish classical music. His collaborations span continents: from the Vision String Quartet, Tonkünstler Orchester, and Berlin Metropolitan Orchestra to the NDR Bigband and Anthony Braxton Orchestra; from Kurdish music with Aynur Doğan and Sakina Teyna to Azerbaijani and Turkish traditions with Alim Qasimov and Erkan Oğur; and to Iranian and Arabic classical forms with artists such as Golnar Shahyar, Misagh Joolaee, and Kinan Azmeh.
Ort der Veranstaltung
In einer ehemaligen Eisenwarenlagerhalle, mitten in der historischen Altstadt Osnabrücks, existiert seit den 70er Jahren eine Kulturinstitution, die sich selbst als Soziokulturelles Zentrum versteht und somit auf die Förderung von künstlerischem Austausch und der Integration verschiedener sozialer Schichten, Nationalitäten und Altersgruppen ausgelegt ist.
Programmvielfalt ist hier mit Sicherheit kein Fremdwort: Es gibt Musik, Theater, Kabarett, Kleinkunst, Veranstaltungen für Kinder und sogar ein Filmkunstkino, das bereits mit dem Kinoprogrammpreis Niedersachsen/Bremen ausgezeichnet wurde. Darüber hinaus wird auch einiges für kulturelle und politische Bildung getan: Verschiedene Projekte, Vorträge oder Workshops mit unterschiedlichen Themen und Schwerpunkten ermöglichen eine aktive Teilnahme. So kommt die Lagerhalle auf insgesamt 500 Veranstaltungen im Jahr und zählt mehr als 160.000 Besucher aus Osnabrück und der Region. Die Räumlichkeiten des Gebäudes bestehen aus einem 200 m² großen Saal der je nach Bestuhlung zwischen 250 und 450 Personen aufnehmen kann sowie dem „Spitzboden“, der Empore, einem Werkraum und sechs Seminarräumen.
Hier gilt: Kultur für Alle! Egal ob Jung oder Alt, Groß oder Klein, Arm oder Reich,… in der Lagerhalle in Osnabrück ist jeder Mensch willkommen.
Programmvielfalt ist hier mit Sicherheit kein Fremdwort: Es gibt Musik, Theater, Kabarett, Kleinkunst, Veranstaltungen für Kinder und sogar ein Filmkunstkino, das bereits mit dem Kinoprogrammpreis Niedersachsen/Bremen ausgezeichnet wurde. Darüber hinaus wird auch einiges für kulturelle und politische Bildung getan: Verschiedene Projekte, Vorträge oder Workshops mit unterschiedlichen Themen und Schwerpunkten ermöglichen eine aktive Teilnahme. So kommt die Lagerhalle auf insgesamt 500 Veranstaltungen im Jahr und zählt mehr als 160.000 Besucher aus Osnabrück und der Region. Die Räumlichkeiten des Gebäudes bestehen aus einem 200 m² großen Saal der je nach Bestuhlung zwischen 250 und 450 Personen aufnehmen kann sowie dem „Spitzboden“, der Empore, einem Werkraum und sechs Seminarräumen.
Hier gilt: Kultur für Alle! Egal ob Jung oder Alt, Groß oder Klein, Arm oder Reich,… in der Lagerhalle in Osnabrück ist jeder Mensch willkommen.