Bayan (Zehra) Bilir, Bulbul #1

Audio Recording

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MGK Collection

Name/Title

Bayan (Zehra) Bilir, Bulbul #1

Description

"Bayan Bilir", who was Zehra Bilir, was born on 26 March 1913 in Arapgir. While for much of her public life she was known simply as a pioneering Turkish folk‐song artist, her origins trace to an Armenian family: many sources record her birth name as Eliza (or Eliza Olçuyan / Surhantakyan) and note that her father was an Armenian named Harutyun. Her early childhood was shadowed by upheaval: her father went to serve in World War I and never returned. Her mother later married a Turkish man and relocated the family, which contributed to Zehra’s upbringing within a mixed cultural environment. Although she often identified publicly as Turkish and Muslim—saying in a later interview: “I am originally from Elazığ. I don’t remember my father. He was an Armenian… I am Turkish and a Muslim.”—her Armenian ancestry remained part of her personal history, though rarely accentuated in her public persona. Zehra’s artistic journey began in Istanbul when she moved there via Elazığ and Kayseri for her schooling and early career. At first she worked outside music—for example as a milliner’s assistant—but soon transitioned into performance, including ballet and operetta work, before turning to folk song. Her music education included solfège and notation lessons from the Armenian musician Artaki Candan‑Terziyan, which attests to her Armenian‑connected network within Istanbul’s musical life. By the 1940s she had established herself as one of the first major female soloists of Turkish folk music (Türk Halk Müziği). Her stage persona—often wearing traditional regional costume, singing with a handkerchief, and conveying rural Anatolian emotional landscapes—made her a distinctive figure. While mainstream memory credits her as purely a Turkish folk artist, the Armenian‑heritage angle adds a layer of complexity: her identity operated at an intersection of Armenian origin, Turkish public culture, and the societal pressures of her time. Despite her Armenian roots, Zehra rarely publicly embraced or emphasized her Armenian ethnicity during her career; some observers describe her as a “hidden Armenian” within Turkish cultural life. On the other hand, within the Armenian community and among scholars of minority culture in Turkey, her background has become increasingly recognized and discussed. Her musical repertoire drew deeply on Anatolian folk traditions, and she recorded numerous songs, among them “Tiridine Bandım” and “Cemo Gül Açanda Gel.” She also served as a figure of inspiration for women performers in folk music and as a repository of regional song traditions. She passed away on 28 June 2007 in Istanbul and was buried in the Zincirlikuyu Cemetery.

Audio Format

78 RPM Record

Recording Type

Music

Category

Vinyl Record

Album Detail

Contributor

Zehra Bilir

Record Label

Istanbul Records

Release Date

circa 1950

Place Recorded

* Untyped Place Recorded

Istanbul

Track Details

Title

Domourjik (Tomurcuk) Gul

Track Contributors

Contributor

Zehra Bilir

Created By

garenkazanc@hotmail.com

Create Date

November 10, 2025

Updated By

garenkazanc@hotmail.com

Update Date

November 10, 2025