A practical tip from me is: Make your mouth go wide, from side to side It naturally sets more attention on the positioning of all parts. Makes you hear the difference with different positions of your lips.
Wa alaikum assalaam ... great question. You're right there's a difference between kasrah and a long yaa. What I'm referring to is not the length of stretching but the "quality" of the sound ... listen @4:50 regarding the word "maaliki" ... the idea isn't to stretch so that it becomes "maaleekee" but rather to keep the kasrah at it's proper length while ensuring that it has the proper quality of a kasrah, rather than just a lazy attempt at a kasrah.
Masha Allah brother....may Allah reward you infinetly in duniya and akhirah for such a beautiful explanation.plz do keep up this work as in today's times there is a big shortage of tajweed teachers.people in India learn to recite Quran but not the correct way and most of them read incorrectly entire life. plz keep up ur work masha Allah.
I am really so glad I came across your channel, I have very nad pronounciation, I am hoping that I can improve using these videos. Its is really rare to come across where the speaker knows his stuff, and is able to communicate as well.
MASHALLAH VERY NICE WORK. WILL U PLEASE UPLOAD ONE MORE VIDEO ABOUT KEEPING OUR THROAT CLEAN AND CLEAR TO BETTER SOUND?........ALSO MORE ABOUT WHAT DO DRINK AND EAT? WHAT KIND OF THINGS WE SHOULD ABSTAIN FROM?
It would be great if you made a video on how to read quran slowly because I am in a habit if reading fast and because of that I stummer a lot so if you could help...
salaam aleikom warahmatullahi wa barakatu thank you for this video i have learned allot just from this one, i hope inshaAllah i can see more of your vids. may Allah AllMighty bless you more. salaam aleikom
Jazakallahum khair, love this videos. Is there an diffrence between woman and man recieting? I feel like my voice is just weigh too heigh I know I can not reciet like a man, but I would like to have that calm flow somehow. Greetings ftom germany
Wa iyyakum. Sisters generally speaking have a higher-pitched voice than brothers. But regardless if it's a brother or sister, you need to center your recitation around your normal, comfortable speaking voice, and that way you'll stay grounded in what is comfortable for you. With some people their issue is that when they begin to recite, they start way too high in a way that is neither natural nor comfortable for them. Everyone has their middle comfortable range so embrace that. Hope this helps!
I think microphone should be close to you. There is a lot of echo and voice is not clear for tajweed purpose. We need to listen clearly. JazakAllah Khair.
Can you tech me how to stop recite quran by nose . I cant hear what is problem with my voice , but every one say you are reading by nose. Can you say this in simple words .plz
muhammed baasil see these two videos I did on nasality: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-6ztNd1sYsAc.html and also part 2: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_IsEkJDczvA.html
MASHA ALLAH , Brother may Allah reward you for this but I've a question .... Based on my knowledge of the Kasrah if there's a sukun or Shaddah on the next letter in the word I think one should pronounced it Lightly .. what I mean is in ( Fa Bi Aye Alla) .... there's hidden sukun on the Alif ( Hamzay ) so I think one should pronounce it like Fa " Bi " instead of Fa " bee " .... Please sort me out. .. jzk
As salaamu Alaikum. Jazakallahu Khairan for the video. But I must ask. When you explained Kasrah, it sounded like it was too much "ee". In your ebook, on page 12, you referred to some videos of recitors such as Shaikh Sudais, Shaikh Saad Nomani, and Shaikh Abdullah Basfar. Even Shaikh Abdullah Basfar, when he recited Surah Fatiha, he pronounced it as Siraatal not seeraatal. And I always thought it was Siraatal because I thought there's a difference between Kasrah and the long yaa, like aalamEEn.
wa alaikum assalaam, in the most common reading (riwayat hafs and other readings) it would always be r-awe. In riwayat warsh (recitation common in Morocco for example) you would sometimes have it as r-aaa if that 2nd sentence doesn't fully make sense to you then just go with the first line - it's always gonna be r-awe
The brother uses US English sounds which is kinda different to British English. The pronunciation of the word 'Man' in US English is different to the UK English. Gets confusing.
It's a good video but I think he has to emphasise his English examples for North Americans. The Awe/Awful is pronounced differently in British English.
@@123LoveArsenal123 It is very helpful for people the way this guy teaches. You can use this way and teach others and it is a very easy way of teaching
i listened too many qaris but i cant hear them say the fatah sound like the 'a' in man. and honestyl i coulndt hear it when u said "maaliki'. Need your help brother. jazakmullah.
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS COMMENT: I asked someone else and they told me it's because THE SAWD (w/ kasrah) in siratal is the first letter in the world so it might have a different rule whereas maliki .. the kasrah is in the middle of the word... nevertheless, the recitor recites it as siratal not seeratal... please help me out.
You should get a Quran Teacher if you aren't sure and follow what the Quran teacher says because their are difference in Tajweed and you aren't sure so you should get a teacher
As salamu 'alaykum! I understand the fatha and 'aa' sound, and how it should differ for those six letters; but what about ر (raa')? I have heard it pronounced like the special six sometimes and normally sometimes... JazakAllahu khair :)
yes ra is a special case - sometimes heavy, sometimes light. If it is connected to fatha or dhamma it will be heavy, but if it is connected to kasra it will be light. There's more to the rule but that's the gist of it.
Urdu speaking pronounce kasrah like the short vowel i...e.g. bin, pin...very few recitations have kasrah pronounced as long e...e.g. see. Most recite it like the i in sin
best thing in that case would be to recite to a teacher who can demonstrate it for you and correct you. The fatha/alif sound should be like it is in the English words man, ban, can, etc.