To many readers of 
                MusicWeb International the name Zarathustra 
                will perhaps most readily evoke thoughts 
                of Richard Strauss and his symphonic 
                poem Also Sprach Zarathustra 
                of 1894. Strauss’s composition, of course, 
                draws on Nietzsche’s appropriation of 
                Zarathustra in his remarkable text, 
                also entitled Also Sprach Zarathustra, 
                written between 1883 and 1885. 
              
              The historical Zarathustra 
                – sometimes referred to by the Greek 
                form of his name, Zoroaster – was a 
                religious prophet of quite extraordinary 
                importance, the influence of whose ideas 
                has extended, though place and time, 
                to a degree that is nowadays seriously 
                underestimated in most quarters. Actual 
                adherents to the faith he established 
                – usually known in the West as Zoroastrianism 
                – are not especially numerous. There 
                are perhaps 100,000 Zoroastrians in 
                India - especially in Bombay, where 
                they are often referred to as Parsis; 
                there are some 15-20,000 in Iran, notably 
                in and around the desert cities of Yazd 
                and Kirman; there are smaller communities 
                in Pakistan, and in Europe and North 
                America.
              
              Zoroaster lived in 
                Eastern Iran, probably in the 6th 
                century B.C. His teachings have a serious 
                claim to be thought of as the earliest 
                formulation of a monotheistic religion. 
                Certainly his ideas exerted a real influence 
                on later monotheistic creeds such as 
                Judaism, Christianity and Islam, especially 
                as regards ideas about the Last Judgement, 
                Heaven and Hell and the resurrection 
                of the dead. Zoroaster appears to have 
                been the first religious teacher to 
                promulgate such ideas. His ideas, and 
                their expression by his followers, shaped 
                much later religious iconography – notably 
                that of the angels. Central to Zoroastrianism 
                was the idea that the creator Ahura 
                Mazda was opposed by a kind of twin 
                spirit, Angrya Mainyu, a source of violence 
                and evil. Man is free to choose between 
                these two spirits; but Good will eventually 
                triumph. The potential dualism of Zoroaster’s 
                thinking perhaps lay behind such later 
                religious movements as Mithraism and 
                the Manichaeans; perhaps even, through 
                indirect channels, behind such medieval 
                Christian heresies as the Cathars. 
              
              The student of Zoroaster 
                and his - often unacknowledged - influence 
                is reasonably well served by modern 
                scholars. The great English scholar 
                Mary Boyce wrote with both learning 
                and direct experience of the Zoroastrians 
                around Yazd, in a series of publications 
                which included Zoroastrians: Their 
                Religious Beliefs and Practices 
                (1979) and her History of Zoroastrianism 
                (3 volumes: 1975, 1982 and 1991). The 
                opening sentence of the first of these 
                makes what may initially sound like 
                an improbable claim: "Zoroastrianism 
                is the oldest of the revealed world-religions, 
                and it has probably had more influence 
                on mankind, directly and indirectly, 
                than any other single faith". Aspects 
                of Zoroaster’s influence in the West 
                - to leave aside what modern scholars 
                now detect as its influence on modern 
                Buddhism - are discussed in books such 
                as The Image of Zoroaster: The Persian 
                Mage through European Eyes by Jenny 
                Rose (2000), J. Duchesne-Guillemin’s 
                The Western Response to Zoroaster 
                (1958) and, for readers of German, M. 
                Stausberg’s Faszination Zarathustra 
                (1998). A good place to start is Paul 
                Kriwaczek’s excellent In Search of 
                Zarathustra: The First Prophet 
                and the Ideas that Changed the World 
                (2002), an intelligent, well-written 
                and wide-ranging account of a journey 
                of personal discovery (currently available 
                as an Orion paperback). 
              
              Now we have Sina Vodjani’s 
                account – in three media – of his own 
                odyssey towards Zoroaster and Zoroastrianism. 
                Vodjani, son of an Iranian father and 
                a French mother, was born in Iran (in 
                1954), in the beautiful city of Isfahan, 
                and grew up in Tehran, San Francisco 
                and Paris. Now living in Germany, he 
                started his musical career singing pop 
                songs and French chansons. He later 
                studied classical and flamenco guitar. 
                Much interested in religious traditions, 
                he is not only a composer, but also 
                a professional photographer and a widely 
                exhibited painter. His extensive travels 
                have taken him to India and Nepal amongst 
                many other countries. He has made previous 
                CDs on Buddhist themes, fusing oriental 
                materials, including the prayer chants 
                of Buddhist priests, with modern rhythms 
                and sounds. 
              
              Here his music is to 
                be found on both an SACD and as accompaniment 
                to a DVD (each has a playing time of 
                72:05). The titles are as follows:
              
              Prelude [1:33]
              Choupan [6:58]
              Ashem Vohu [6:46]
              Dear Friend [4:57]
              Sacred Fire [5:04]
              Don’t Sleep [6:11]
              Persepolis [6:07]
              Chak Chak [8:09]
              Dashti [5:24]
              Wings of Love [6:45]
              Be the One [1:56]
              Emptiness [1:39]
              Zarathustra [3:04]
              Ahura & The Rising 
                Sun [4:14]
              Asha [3:15]
              
              Both discs are embedded 
                in the inside of the back cover of this 
                very beautifully produced book. Vodjani’s 
                text is relatively brief – and is presented 
                in both German and English. Certainly 
                it is no substitute for any of the kinds 
                of volumes mentioned earlier. It presents 
                a short overview of Zarathustra’s teachings 
                and says something of his significance. 
                It stresses the idea that "Zoroaster 
                did not need to provide evidence of 
                miracles or similar mystic events to 
                spread his message; he appealed directly 
                to the intellect, logic and common sense 
                of his listeners". Emphasis is 
                also placed on the role of ‘Asha’ in 
                Zoroaster’s thought, defined here "that 
                which conforms", a kind of universal 
                law of creation, the principle which 
                unites all things in harmony. Human 
                understanding of ‘Asha’ can be approached 
                through meditation and imagination, 
                but also through obedience to the code 
                of good thoughts, good works, good deeds" 
                – the code which Vodjani’s book carries 
                as its subtitle. 
              
              The greater part of 
                Vodjani’s book is taken up by some quite 
                magnificent photographs of many aspects 
                of Iranian life – photographs of people 
                and buildings, including mosques as 
                well as Zoroastrian buildings, photographs 
                of the often stunning landscape, mountains 
                and lakes, salt deserts and meadows; 
                there are images of bazaars and bakeries 
                and many aspects of Iranian life. By 
                including pictures of Islamic life and 
                buildings, Vodjani perhaps intends to 
                make the point that beneath the obvious 
                Islamicisation of Iranian life there 
                is a substratum of Zoroastrian tradition 
                and mindset – Zoroastrianism was, after 
                all, the official religion of the great 
                empire of ancient Persia – which survive 
                still, and which even now condition 
                many dimensions of life in Iran, helping 
                to define and create its people’s sense 
                of their national identity. That, at 
                least, is the impression I have carried 
                away from the time I have spent in Iran.
              
              Vodjani’s photographs 
                are often magnificent – indeed they 
                are perhaps the best reason for getting 
                hold of the book. There are large-scale 
                shots of landscapes, and beautifully 
                detailed studies of architectural or 
                decorative details; there are gorgeous 
                pictures of flower meadows and unpretentious 
                pictures of bakers at work. 
              
              About Vodjani’s music 
                I have slightly more mixed feelings. 
                At times it is little more than mood 
                music and sometimes the insistent sounds 
                of synthesiser and (politely) rockish 
                beats rather overwhelm any very fully 
                Iranian feeling. Yet there are some 
                lovely passages played on the ney 
                (the traditional Iranian flute) and 
                the oud (ancestor of the lute). 
                There are passages from the gathas 
                (the Zoroastrian hymns). As is evidently 
                Vodjani’s method all are fused and laid 
                on top of one another; there are moments 
                when Persian words and English words 
                are sung almost simultaneously – so 
                that neither is fully audible. Vodjani 
                is obviously a musician of considerable 
                talent – but for my tastes I would have 
                preferred to have heard his musical 
                ideas, his musical impressions, separate 
                from the traditional sounds and elements, 
                rather than fused in this way. Still, 
                I have no wish to deny that there are 
                some beautiful and attractive moments. 
                The music works especially well as soundtrack 
                to the DVD. The musicians involved should 
                certainly be credited. They are: Mobed 
                Mehraban Firouzgary, Mobed Sirus Hormazdi 
                (Avesta Prayer Recitation); Roma Majumdar 
                (bansouri flute); Pasha Hanjani (ney 
                flute); Ali Pajuheshgar (oud); Shahriar 
                Monazami (komancheh); Hamid Saeik Bahai 
                (daf); Sina Vodjani (guitars, sitar, 
                tar, setar, piano, bass). The whole 
                was mixed and engineered by Vodjani, 
                also using Persian vocals from samples 
                provided by the Iran Music association.
              
              The images which this 
                music accompanies on the DVD are often 
                very beautiful and always very interesting. 
                There is, though, one significant drawback. 
                There are not – or if they are there 
                I couldn’t find them – captions of any 
                sort, so that much remains unidentified 
                and unexplained. I am fortunate enough 
                to have travelled fairly widely in Iran, 
                and to have a wife who grew up in Kirman, 
                one of the Zoroastrian centres in Iran. 
                I was, therefore, able to identify and 
                put a name to much of what I saw, in 
                terms of places and buildings, and to 
                recognise the significance of some of 
                the activities filmed. But not all viewers 
                will be able to do so, and it is a shame 
                that what is, in so many ways, a striking 
                panorama of Iranian life and landscape 
                – concentrating on the Zoroastrian thread, 
                but showing much else too – should leave 
                some viewers puzzled rather than informed. 
                All viewers will surely enjoy the visual 
                feast put before them – whether in looking 
                at the fabulous decorative patterns 
                on the mosques of Isfahan - one of them, 
                though this isn’t mentioned, built on 
                the site of an earlier fire-temple - 
                or getting a rare glimpse inside an 
                active Zoroastrian fire-temple and the 
                streets and corners of the Zoroastrian 
                quarter of Yazd; the great bridges of 
                Isfahan, the Sī 
                o SéPol and the Pol-é 
                Khājū; 
                the glorious central meidūn 
                (or square) of Isfahan - though the 
                city is nowhere identified on the DVD; 
                tea-houses, wild-life, flowers, craftsmen 
                at work, superb landscapes and much, 
                much else. The whole DVD is richly enjoyable.
              
              Sian Vodjani’s Zarathustra 
                offers an introduction to Zoroaster 
                and Zoroastrianism which may well whet 
                readers’ and viewers’ appetites for 
                more. Those whose interest is stirred 
                will certainly want to read more, so 
                as to get beyond the necessarily simplified 
                view which Vodjani’s brief text has 
                to settle for. But his evocation – especially 
                visually, in the photographs and the 
                images on the DVD, and in the best of 
                the music on the SACD – of a world very 
                unfamiliar to most in the west and increasingly 
                demonised and falsely represented by 
                those in power in the west, can be warmly 
                recommended.
              Glyn Pursglove