The manager of Iranian band Arian, which has collaborated with de Burgh, said last year the concerts would be the first time since the 1979 revolution that an Iranian pop band had performed with a Western singer in the Islamic Republic.
Manager Mohsen Rajabpour said in his comments in December the concerts were planned for June or July at a
"I have been invited to go. Again, I know there are people who do not agree with this but I must tell those people ... we are not -- my friends and I -- politically naive," de Burgh told English-language satellite channel Al-Jazeera.
"We know the situation there. We know both sides of it. We are not going there to change the world, the culture. I am going to sing for people not leaders," he told the Doha-based channel.
"Just to show people that we are serious about this, we are going to make a trip at the end of May, for a few days, just to see what the situation is and then make a call on whether we can do the shows there or not," de Burgh said.
De Burgh, born of British parents and brought up in
Western pop songs with lyrics are banned by
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