Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 2 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 2 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Web References
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1. Nasrat Parsa
www.hamidwaise.4t.com/about.ht - [Cached]Published on: 4/6/2005 Last Visited: 8/17/2006
Parsa's two brothers, Najib and Ahsan Parsa, witnessed the attack.
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Najib Parsa told AFP that at the concert, the three men had become angry when Parsa, who was playing soft music for Mothers' Day, rejected their request to play more dance tunes: "It wasn't a big reason to be upset. But they followed us to the hotel and attacked him. He was standing at the top of concrete and stone stairs. It was like a prepared plan. He fell backward and hit his head."
Parsa left with his family for Pakistan when he was 12. They later moved to India, where he attended music school and took lessons. In Germany, he became a student of Ghulam Ali Khan, who has been called "the Mount Everest" of Indian and Pakistani music. -
2. RADIO FREE EUROPE/ RADIO LIBERTY
www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/ - [Cached]Last Visited: 5/11/2005
Parsa's two brothers, Najib and Ahsan Parsa, witnessed the attack.
...
Najib Parsa told AFP that at the concert, the three men had become angry when Parsa, who was playing soft music for Mothers' Day, rejected their request to play more dance tunes: "It wasn't a big reason to be upset. But they followed us to the hotel and attacked him. He was standing at the top of concrete and stone stairs. It was like a prepared plan. He fell backward and hit his head."
Parsa left with his family for Pakistan when he was 12. They later moved to India, where he attended music school and took lessons. In Germany, he became a student of Ghulam Ali Khan, who has been called "the Mount Everest" of Indian and Pakistani music.
On his website (http://www.nasratparsamusic.com/), clips of Parsa's latest album can be heard -- along with samples of his earliest recordings on Radio Kabul.

