
Muslum Gurses Ates Donar Su Yanar <PREMIUM · Workflow>
The lyrics, written by and composed by Uğur Bayar , use powerful metaphors to describe a longing ( hasret ) so deep that it breaks the laws of nature: "Fire freezes, water burns, if it were in my place..."
To understand why "fire freezes and water burns" in his world, one must look at the "Baba" (Father) of Arabesque's life: Muslum Gurses Ates Donar Su Yanar
In 1978, Müslüm was in a horrific car accident. He was pulled from the wreckage and assumed dead, even being taken to the morgue before a doctor noticed he was still breathing. He survived but lived the rest of his life with a metal plate in his skull, impaired hearing, and a loss of smell. The lyrics, written by and composed by Uğur
The song suggests that if the natural elements had to endure the singer's loneliness and heartache, they would lose their identity. The seas would dry up, stones would melt, and even "fate itself would rebel" against such suffering. Legacy of the "Müslümcüler" The song suggests that if the natural elements
The song, released on the 2000 album Biz Babadan Böyle Gördük (This is How We Saw It from Our Father), serves as a poetic summary of the impossible pain Gürses endured. The Man Behind the Legend
His personal life was shadowed by extreme violence; his brother was murdered, and his father murdered his mother—a trauma that left him "silent and resentful" for years.












