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Associated Press

Live music returns to Tehran amidst fragile ceasefire

4:30pm
Musician Atena Kharyaband plays the oud during a performance dubbed Sounds of the South, featuring music from southern Iran, at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art in Tehran, Iran, Thursday, May 21, 2026.

Bands and orchestras have begun returning to the stage in Tehran, where musicians have struggled to find work since war with the US and Israel broke out in late February.

The tenuous ceasefire in effect since April 8 has given Iranians a chance to attend concerts and other social gatherings. Yesterday, more than 300 people turned out for a concert at the Tehran Contemporary Art Museum dubbed Sounds of the South, featuring music from southern Iran.

People watch a music performance dubbed Sounds of the South, featuring music from southern Iran, at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art in Tehran, Iran, Thursday, May 21, 2026.

"We were cut off from music for a long time," said Hadi Alimohammadi, who attended the museum concert. "But recently things are changing."

The concert featured about 50 musicians playing a range of instruments including bagpipes, saxophones, guitars and percussion instruments. The program was organised by Mohsen Sharifian, a prominent Iranian bagpipe player.

Musicians play kudu horns during a performance dubbed Sounds of the South, featuring music from southern Iran, at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art in Tehran, Iran, Thursday, May 21, 2026.

"People's overall mood naturally isn't good," Sharifian said. "Given the wartime conditions and the lack of peace, what we as artists can offer is, first and foremost, to bring people together."

The performers included eight women. And one of the musical pieces featured a woman singing for an audience of both men and woman — something that is typically barred by Iran's theocracy.

Musicians play kudu horns during a performance dubbed Sounds of the South, featuring music from southern Iran, at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art in Tehran, Iran, Thursday, May 21, 2026.

"I think as we move forward, God willing, this space will become more open," said Saleheh Zorehvand, one of the female singers performing, "and women in different fields of singing and musicianship will be able to give stronger performances and better present their art".

Even before the war began, concerts had become scarce in Iran after anti-government protests that started in December were met with a harsh crackdown by Iranian security forces.

Musician Sadegh Hosseinpour plays percussion during a performance dubbed Sounds of the South, featuring music from southern Iran, as people watch and film with their smartphones at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art in Tehran, Iran, Thursday, May 21, 2026.

The return of live music is seen in part as an effort by Iranian cultural authorities to restore public spirit. It also addresses concerns by Iran’s musicians, some of whom have said they planned to sell their instruments if they couldn't find paying work soon.

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