Showing posts with label Pop Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pop Music. Show all posts

5/27/2012

The Singing Rose: A Tribute to Warda Al-Ghazaieryah.

Greets from Egypt.

The Sphinx: Egypt's symbol.
Warda's death still resonates with sadness at the loss of one of the "columns of Arabic music" around the Arab world, and yesterday her obituary was formally announced at Al-Shazilyah Al-Hamedyah mosque at the Muhandiseen district in Cairo, Egypt by her long-time producer and friend Muhsen Jaber head of A'alam Al-Fan for music production and the C.E.O. of Mazzika Group.

Warda Al-Ghazaieryah.
Her death was reason enough to get me to write her an Obit-Post a few days ago, but that wasn't enough for her. She was one of the best Arab singers and a very much loved woman who left a wide array of beautiful Tarab recordings.
Warda: Al-Maoued
Magazine 1973.
Here, and in this newer post, you're going to get some more of her albums and songs in good audio-quality, plus a mini-biography of her life to continue what we've begun at the previous post along with some of her rarest pictures as a remembrance for her and her great voice.


Warda Al-Ghazaieryah (also spelled Wardah Ijaziria/ El-Djazariya - وردة الـجـزائـرية:
The Rose of Tarab: Warda.
Her obituary on Saturday 26th of this month was heavy with tears, high-sounding sighs, and then again smiles. She was loved by most of those Egyptian artists and singers attending her last farewells-giving at that famous mosque in Cairo. But, unlike earlier in her life, Warda was hated by a lot of envious singers and artists most of whom wished her death a long time before it finally took place ten days ago on the 17th of May, 2012. Let's invite Warda to kick in her story, shall we?
Warda kick-starting a footie match in Lebanon, late 50's.

With her brother and his wife.
The story is a bit sad, but one should really leave bygones to stay bygones. Her story started in 22nd July, 1932 (most websites refer to that date as either 1938/1939, or 1940 all of which are wrong dates for her birthday). She was born in Puteaux; a French town where her parents took refuge at from the Second World War erupting at their homeland Algiers. Her father was an Algerian expatriate (Si Mohammed Fotouki, also named El-Hadj Fotouki), who was born in Souk Al-Ahras region that borders Tunis. Amazighs call this town Taggast.
Singing in Syria, circa 1958.
He fought against the French occupation of Algiers and her mother who's a Moroccan-Jew (she wasn't Lebanese and that family 'Yemout' that most say she belonged to was a fake pseudo-name the family decided upon in order to stay in Lebanon when they fled there in 1955). Starting at the very early age of ten, singing revolutionary songs at her father's club Tum-Tum in the Latin quarter in Paris, a Tunisian producer named Ahmad Al-Tijani heard her voice and took her to the French-speaking radio (which was run by the colonialist French who didn't like her songs at all, later forcing her family to leave France alltogether in 1958).
In Algiers singing live mid-50's.
Tijani trained her for two years in a children's talent program under the auspice of another Tunisian artist and composer Al-Sadeq Thuriya who taught her how to sing one famous Umm-Kalthoum tune 'Salo Qalbi' written by Riyadh Assunbathi. She progressed very well in the singing arena so much that Ahmad Hachlaf manager of the Arabic EMI company in France was so interested in recording the young girl, and later invited her to their studios in France to record her first ever song 'Ya Ummi Ya Ummi' (My Mother, My Mother, included at the Early Warda album) in 1952.

At her early days.
Warda in the 50's.
During that time and in the mid-50s, her father's anti-French activities were ousted by French intelligence who withdrew the French nationalities of both his and the rest of the family, and expelled them outside France to Lebanon (he couldn't come back to his original homeland Algiers being a wanted revolutionary there). Warda went traveling with her family to east Beirut at Aliyah district, and started singing at the famous Tanius nightclub in Mahalat Al-Zaytoun the same revolutionary songs which again weren't what the carefree Lebanese people wanted to hear, and saw herself and the family in Damascus after she was invited by a Syrian composer (Mohammed Mouhsen, and later Abdel-Fatah Sukkar who also wrote music for her), to sing her revolutionist songs there.
Rare picture of her in Cairo.
She sang for one Jamilah Bouhreid a tune about this Algerian mujahidah who was killed later by the French army, written by Michel Tameh and composed by Afif Ridwan. That song became a hit in Damascus... every composer rushed to write her his tunes, and among those was Filmon Wehbi: a very revolutionary composer who wrote many pro-commie songs about revolutionaries like Che Guevara at that time. In Damascus, another 'Warda' sang there and that's why the managers of the stage insisted at calling her 'Al-Ghazaieryah' to distinguish her from that other Syrian less-scintillating starlet. She admitted to never liking that moniker at all, because it stigmatized her as only Algerian and not pan-Arabic.
With Riyadh Assunbathi: her first mentor. Crying?
Warda (second R) with some friends
in Cairo, around the early 70's.
Earlier, and around the beginning of the 50's when she was just 17 she was invited to sing at Cairo for Farid Al-Atrache who liked her young voice but asked her parents to wait until it got more mature. This happened when Lebanese producer Hilmi Raffleh invited her to Cairo to act at one of his films where a bouquet of roses was awaiting her at the lobby of the hotel where she stayed in Cairo sent by Assunbathi himself who composed to her 'Al-Jazayer' poem which she sang, and then Mohammed El-Mouji who gave her one of Saleh Al-Hazaki's nationalistic poems. Both of those composers were foreknown as Umm-Kalthoum's best, and in no time... Warda became a huge star in Egypt.
With Sabah (L) and Shadia (R),
the Rose sits in the middle.
At Al-Watan Al-Akbar's rehearsals,
with Sabah.
Her date with fame and fortune came when she sang at Al-Watan Al-Akbar operette in 1958 which was written by Ahmad Shafiq, and composed by Mohammed Abdelwahab. In it, she sang side by side with Abdel Halim Hafez, Shadia, Fayda Kamel, Najat Assaghierah, and Sabah. President Jamal Abdel-Nasser invited her again in 22th of November, 1962 to sing at Adwa'a Al-Madinah festival in Damascus and there she sang her song about 'Kulouna Jamilah' (We All Are Jamilah) to a deafening standing-O. During her short film-career in Cairo in which she acted in two films 'Almaz' directed by Raffleh himself and filmed in 1962 starring next to Adel Mamoun, and in 1963, Amirat Al-Arab with Egyptian star Rushdi Abazah she met her first husband; a military Algerian man named Jamal Qasiri whom she married and went back with him to Algiers in 1963.
Abdel Halim, Shadia, Warda, Fayza Ahmad 1962.


With her son Riyadh.
At her wedding with
her 1st husband Qasiri.
For the next nine years she stayed silent as her husband asked her never to sing again dimming her lights for a good decade, but her life blossomed during that time with two smaller 'wardas', or roses: her children Riyadh (named after her first mentor Riyadh Assunbathi), and Widad. In 1972, she came back to Cairo at the same time when Umm-Kalthoum was an old woman, Layla Murad wasn't active, Souad Mohammed was a married mother, Shadia and Sabah were busy with films, Fayza Ahmad was still burrowing her pathway in the singing concerts around Cairo, and Najat was solemn in her moody songs. As a female tarab singer, her place was beckoning her awaiting for her voice to come back singing two songs: El-Eioun Essoud 'The Black Eyes', and Wallah Zaman 'It's Been So Long', followed by her third film Sawt El-Houb (Sound of Love) which was filmed in 1973.

The Youm Kippour War was a loss to both sides, Egypt (above), and Israel (below).

That same year was devastating to most Arab singers. It was hailed as a "victory year" by communist Arab governments after the collateral Arab armies won the 'bottle-neck' Sinai Desert war (Youm Kippour) against Israel. All songs became stupid, repetitive, sham-jingoistic commie popaganda tunes. Warda's career was saved by the genie-in-a-bottle and her second husband Baligh Hamdy after she divorced her first one back in Algiers' when she broke the silence after Algiers president at that time Houari Bou-Medien asked her to sing at the tenth anniversary of Algiers' independence.
The best musical duo that came from Egypt: Warda & Baligh.
Their first meeting in a Cairo studio came at loggerheads during the recording sesh that ended with both accusing each other of being so selfish. Warda didn't like Baligh at all in her words: she even said in an interview that she hated him. But, this hate turned into a passionate love affair causing the divorce of her first husband Qasiri gaining her freedom at long deserving last (Note: she married a third man in secrecy, but maybe this is just 'gossipoisie' nonsense even when the sources are credible. She spent almost half of her life fighting gossip and was said that she even formed an anti-gossip society around Cairo in the late-70's!).
The genie Baligh Hamdy:
Warda's second husband.
Happyily married couple.
The love birds got married in 1972 (some say their marriage lasted for only one year, and others say it lasted until 1979, which makes sense but nothing is sure here). Baligh Hamdy took her under his wing even if his career was a fledgling one itself. Among many tunes that he has composed for her was a theatre musical called Tamr Hinna in 1975, followed by many songs and some T.V. appearances in a series called Awraq Al-Ward (Rose's Petals) in 1979. Another T.V. appearance was filmed at Dubai's T.V. at a variety show (Jadid Fe Jadid: All That's New), with the famous song that Baligh had written for her Binlif, N'lif, N'lif (We Turn, Turn, Turn - You can hear this wonderful song as a bonus in the downloads below), singing at that show with the old-school giants like Layla Murad, and new ones like Moroccan pop singer Samira Said (Baligh used to write Samira's early stuff, and his purported extramarital affair with her had cost them their marriage, unfortunately).
With her famous lower-lip bite... with Mohammed Abdel-Wahab.
Wahab, his wife, and Warda, 1957.
Warda was so easily recognized for her musical talent by other music geniuses such as Al-Mosiqar Mohammed Abdelwahab who spotted her so early on in her career (they met in the late 50's in Lebanon as she sang without knowing of his presence). This other genius gave her a tremendous opportunity to prove herself among those earliest giants of Tarab singers and she staid close to him and faithful until his very last hours before he died in 4th May, 1991 crying in her car for three hours parked in front of his house. She sang Bawada'ak (I Say Goodbye To You) especially for him before he finally died, knowing that she's going to lose him for good. She used to call him Baba or Father, and he made 50% of her personality along the way. In the late 80's, a new singing style for most Tarab singers was the norm whereas songs became shorter after averaging almost hour-long-plus "pieces" in the 70's. Tarab music changed forever, and it was an omen of the death of Romanticism in the Arab popular music circles after the passing of Abdel Halim, Umm-Kalthoum, Farid, and Abdel Wahab.
Warda with composer Mohammed El-Mouji.
Omar Baticha, Warda, & Sharnoubi
in a studio in the early 90's.
Baligh & Warda in a
studio, late 80's.
Warda had collaborated in the late-80's with new composers like Ammar Al-Sharaei who wrote for her many tunes, Mohammed El-Mouji (he worked with her for the album Zahabyat Warda, or her Golden hits remade in the mid-90s), then finally Salah Al-Sharnoubi who wrote 'Batwanness Beek' (With You, I Am Not Alone), and 'Harramt Ahebbak' (I Vowed Never To Love You Again), among many other wonderful neo-romantic songs, composing most of her sixth film's music (Lieh Ya Dunya - 1994), only for them two to fall at odds in 1996 and just like the case was with her ex-husband Baligh, they got back the next year to work together for her 1997 album 'Hubbak Mawasem' (Your Love Is Like The Seasons). Well, her career was pretty much like the seasons: always changing and finding herself hopping from this composer to that one until she stopped singing after her last album in 2001 (Ana Liea Mien Gherak) because she felt a bit ill, coming back only in the same year to sing a cassette written to her by Jamilah Bouhreid's brother (she used to sing about her in the 50's) falling into a musical coma again after an open-heart surgery followed by a liver-transplant surgery in the same year that has left her very weak.

In her latter days, 2011.
She went back to Algiers to recuperate and came back to T.V. in 2004 to be honoured by some Arab pop singers like the Kuwaiti Abdallah Al-Ruweishid, and Egyptian pop singers Angham, and Ihab Tewfic in a Lebanese satellite channel programme called Nawart El-Dar where she was filmed in her Algerian home taking care of her garden, kittens, and a pet parrot she nicknamed Pavarotti. After a strenuous bout in a musical wedding party for Amir Abdel-Migeed's wedding (a well-known composer) in one of Cairo's biggest five-star hotels, she fell seriously ill and was diagnosed with liver cancer. Admitted later to a hospital in Paris she went under chemo-therapy for months, but she stopped it because she lost almost 35 kilos of her body weight and most of her hair, and was forced to apologize from singing live at many festivals during her therapy and treatment phase because she grew weaker, and was unable to withstand the pressure of the stage act anymore, in addition to her looks after the chemo. Her career was signaling its last days, sadly... still she was optimistic and never was seen during those gruesome days without her pretty smile.
Warda: the Rose of Arabic Popular Music and Tarab's best.
Warda died after giving 40 years of her life straight out for nothing but music. She's to be remembered for this alone and will forever be regarded as one of the Arab world's best female singers who entertained millions (and still does, trust me...) for half a decade. Her career was if anything... the stuff of true legends. She sang at the Olympia theatre in Paris with Charles Aznavour 'La Bohéme' and after that she sang in 1995 at the Palais de Congres de Paris where many Egyptian and Arabic singers also had their epitome careers' moments at this old theatre's stage. Her life was a personification of that word, and she was known never to sleep the night before any concert. Also, one thing that was known about her was her infatuation with cats: she had all kinds of these moggies! Ces't La Vie de Bohéme.

Warda singing on T.V. in the 70's.

Her Career:

Her career can be divvied up into four stages: 1952-1955, 1955-1963, 1972-1992, and 1992-2010. Today we're going to get a listening opportunity to some of her best works from each of these four stages in (wait it) twenty two albums! and one bonus plus two singles that are all available to download from the links below. This is nothing compared to her extensive discography which I shall add more in future posts into this blog as time allows it. In the meantime, enjoy DL-ing these songs by the Arab world's Rose: Warda Al-Ghazaieryah (or, Al-Arabiyah as she might have liked it better).

Rest in beautiful peace, Warda.

Enjoy.

The Music:

Arabic Calligraphy art with her name in A-Thuluth script.

Dear blawggers: Again, this is just a small glimpse at one of the most prolific music careers in the Arab world. All these albums and cassettes were chosen from different periods of her musical creativity; albeit covering her whole career that spanned more than 40 years. For example, you got her early rare stuff that she sang in either Algerian or in her thick Lebanese accent in the mini-album that I myself collected for your listening pleasures as an archive of her earliest known records.

Warda in the mid-80's.
Bonuses are two single songs uploaded individually because they resemble important milestones in her career: (Koulinah) Jamilah (We All Are Jamilah) that she sang live in 1962 in Damascus' Officer's Club at the invitation of Jamal Abdel-Nasser and got her first fame across the Arab world, and the other one is Binlif, N'lif, N'lif sang with Baligh Hamdy live on Dubai T.V. in 1979 at the end of her relationship with him which ushered in her more pop-ish songs (Note: huge thanks must go to Yazeed@ yazeed.net for the headsup on this one. You can also watch it on his wonderful weblog).

The Symbol of Arab Music at her best.
At the end of this obit-post, I shall conclude by quoting one comment at an Arabic music forum; its words were laden with sadness, yet were so rosy just like Warda herself was. The writer said, "maybe the rose is gone, but her scent is still among us." He means her music. Yes, in all honesty she cannot die or wither away like any rose: Warda was one of those singers who were meant to sing, and live forever in a song. May her soul find its lasting peace in the hands of God. Amen.

Warda the 'old' Rose.

That's my tribute for Warda Al-Ghazaieryah guys... I hope you will enjoy it as much as I did myself.

If you need more of her stuff, you can click the link below for some of her films (full versions watchable on the 'Tube), and some of her best songs caught live on video. Dig.

Singing live, late 70's.

-Films And Videos:
-Watch all of her Films here.


Thank you for your time.


See ya soon.

H.H.

4/17/2012

Intermission - Lebanese 80's: Lubnanyat Compilation - لبنانيات الثمانينات.

Hi and welcome to the last part of our Intermission, 'ere at The Audiotopia.

Writing an interblog won't make anyone a 'weblebrity' by the longest scratchin' chalk-mark, because this is unreal, and whatever's on the Interwebs stays there as mere, cold duff. The Internet is like this huge cache of moving memorabilia... a fantasmic world full of nothingness to use but an oxymoron.

I'm doing this scratching right in the back of my mind these days, sayin': is it worth it; truly commendable? or, maybe someone somewhere might deem this as important? Hmm, it's that I still am baby-steppin' in this world of Globlogs. After all, it's all done for the music. Music lives and transcends this pile of pixellated angst bunnies, power-trippers, and no-brow end-'lusers' that want to find some self-worth amongst this e-rabble. 


Hellooo, Beirut.
This artwork was created by, Mo Kalache.
(Sternpidly stupe peops aside, music it is then... les' begin by calling Beirut).
 

Lubnanyat Athamaninat - لبـنـانيات الـثمانينات:
Today's so special for music, 'cus we're about to hear some beautiful tunes straight from one Middle-Eastern country that never got any deserving airing before; songs, bands, and artists who sang their hearts out for their beloved (and very beautiful) Lebanon (Arabic: لبنان pronounced Libnan/Libnayn).

A debka band behind the ruins of Baalebk, 60's Postcard.
This country is small, but big when it comes to art and music. The capital city of Lebanon (Beirut - بيروت) is so beautiful and very unique so much that it was called the 'Paris of Arabs', and the 'Switzerland of The Arab World' for its sheer beauty, and varied weather patterns: it has many different climates that range from Mediterranean subtropical meadows to Alpine, all-year snow-capped mountains, right to dry, Bedouin-inhabited deserts. Lebanese people are known as free-thinkers, get-goers, somnabitches who really don't give. They know how to live and enjoy their life to the max, even when Israeli bomb shells were falling down by the truck-load in Harb Tammuz (The Second Lebanon War), in October, 2006.
From crowded dance-halls to warring crowds: 70's Lebanon.
A belly dancer, 1961.
Lebanon and, Beirut in particular, has always been an attraction site for tourists from all over the world, and the wealthy Arab millionaire's playground who went there to spend his mils throwin' a coupla thous at some belly-dancer's feet... gamblin' in the world-famous Casino du Liban, which gave it a cosmopolitan tint that witnessed its height in the early 70's before the Civil War (1975) tore that city into two warring halves and forced most of the population (almost one-third of the entire Lebanese population left, and that included most musicians), to flee to nearby Jordan and Syria and chose these countries as safe havens for their art and music.
Casino du Liban in the early 70's: Beirut's heart and hub of life.
Ali Chalhoub on a New-Year's
Eve party poster early 80's.
Some artists decided to go elsewhere other than neighbouring Arab countries taking their music along with them: it's how Lebanese singers always were trying so hard to become International stars and in faraway western countries like the U.S., the U.K., Australia, Brazil, and France. But, few had any success there except for playing at a handful of schmaltzy New Year parties, or pay-per-night 'personal' concerts in the mahjar (Arabic for expat country or diaspora), and nary made it in terms of record sales. One has to know that in the Arab world, there are no real 'Hits-Charts', or Billboard-like record sales. Neyt. All there's are some made-up lists of this month or that top-five stars, or an impromptu, end-of-year, pick-your-favourite-star phone-athons. Also, around Beirut, underground music wasn't born until the mid-90's. (Check this site, and this one here to get the 411 on the latest Lebanese underground artists).

Singer Tony Hannah, 70's.
Anyways, flashback to the early 70's we still can see the wealthy, Arab-American expats who visited Lebanon on their summer vacations for example, as a great source of encouragement for fledgling Lebanese artists as they paid them quite well in coo' cash for their parties, and in turn some singers went to play in America, staying there for many years before deciding to come back to Lebanon after the war was over in 1990. Most of these singers became American citizens. Some are still there singing for the expat Lebanese community around L.A. and S.F. like our very own 'legendary' moustachioed singer, Tony Hannah.

Israeli troops withdrawal in 1982.
The Lebanese Civil War (El-Harb El-Ahliye El-Libnaniye - الحرب الأهلية اللبنانية) erupted when Muslim Palestinian guerrillas led by Yasser Arafat, tried to take over Beirut backed by Russian intelligence (who were again, backed by the C.I.A.), only for the Christian militias to fight them back, and bam! Israel came butting by, backing some militias to add to the chaos. (Note: there's none other than Filmon Wehbi's song 'Kalashnikov' to best depict this SNAFU, which you'll find in the comp). Israel tried again in 1982 to invade Beirut (power tactics as usual), but their troops withdrew back to the border.

Christian militia fighters (left), and Muslim guerrillas in Beirut mid-80's. 

Then, and to add stink to the the already-pilin' shit-heap... America deployed 1,800 Marines in the same year only for them to get their collective asses handed back to them in the October, 1983 bombing which forced the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Beirut (Uh, America's Israeli's cash-cow and 'neyways they invaded Nicaragua in less than a month afterwards these mofotastic lamericunts!). These wars are a deeply-engraved scar in each and every Lebanese psyche: some recall their country's past thirty or so years as, an "always destroyed country, but the excellent mood, 'kief' remains" (Arabic: البلد خربان, و الكيف تمام). They just don't care!

Singer Mohammed Jamal on T.V. 70's.
Studio El-Fin '86.
All and all, the 'shituation' in Lebanon was dire, and music-retardant. T.V. came to the fore ever since the late 70's. The singers who fled outside of Lebanon got a better chance: Jordanian and Syrian T.V.s gave important air-time to those stars that went there fleeing the war. Television in Lebanon, meanwhile, played an important role in selling these singers that stayed around, and one Lebanese T.V. (Sharikat Television Libnan) was started from a merger of two already-established, older T.V. stations in 1976. This new T.V. station gave the few singers that chose to stay in Lebanon the 'silver screen' star status in the early 80's and multiple music shows were aired; most notably the star-factory Studio El-Fin ('Art Studio' started earlier in 1972 by Rimon Lahoud and Simon Asmar, but was stopped during the war), which gave birth to what became truly the real base for today's Lebanese singers and stars such as Ragheb Alameh who sang there aged only 16 who's now a world-famous singer co-hosting the Arab Idol T.V. sing-offs in April, 2012 along with some other Arab singers.
Ragheb Alameh, singing on Studio El-Fin, 1983.
Other newer, early 90's shows spewed a plethora of 'female' singers who in the mid-90's overcame the male ones until there weren't any 'good' male singers in the pop music scene starting from the mid-90's onwards. Today's Lebanese pop music scene is beyond pathetic (to say the least), where well over 1000 female singers who don't know how to sing are trying to become the Next-Monroe! Singers like Haifa Wehbi, Alissa, Nancy Ajram, Dominique, etc... aren't singing: they're gossip-fighting with each other trading out so much 'meh-you-suck' instead of 'music'. They all suck big time. 
Mansour Rahbani:
The father of Classics.
Fairuz in the dark:
in one of the Rahbani musicals.
Well, this timespan of almost 25 years of intermittent war and peace (1975-1990), is what really matters here to us. Most of the songs that were made during that period of time became classics whereas their style and musical arrangements had nothing to do with classical Lebanese musicians such as Fairuz (Fairuzyat); the Rahbani Brothers (Mansour and Assi Rahbani's Rahbanyat), Zaki Nasif (Nasifiyat), Nasri Shams Eddien (Nasriyat), Wadeh El-Safi (Wadehiyat), etc... . It's still, though what most Lebanese and Arab people refer to in a loving way as The Golden Days of Lebanese Music, or Zahabyat - ذهبيات, Lubnanyat - لبنانيات, Beirutyat - بيروتيات.

Debke troupe, Baalebk Festival, 1971.
Joseph Azar, 70's
and a debke dance.
Today, we're not going to feature any single song by these classic musicians, and instead will focus on the ones that sang either classical Lebanese music in a popular style heavily influenced by the masters, or songs purely of an eastern-western style (call it 'Weastern'). Moreover, we shall give a huge tribute to debke music and songs here in this compilation, in addition to the 'usual-suspect' forms of Lebanese popular singing styles and dances like dalouna - دلعونة: a form of debke which was how Armenian house-builders used to join hands, and 'stomp' their feet on rooftops to make it even that originated from Armenia in the 1800s, and as they did so, they called on God for help, or tha el-oun (ذا العون - The Almighty Helper. Note to reader: very few Arabs know the origin of this word); a'taba - عتابا: melodic, sad tunes sung in remorse or a'atab (عتب), for those who went and left their lovers and country; mijana - ميجانا: a shouting welcome for guests sung in the most high octaves ever conceivable by human voice where the songs always start with the line of Ya Min Jana: "Oh those who came visiting us!"; mawal - موال sharki - شرقي: a generic form of Middle-eastern dance, belly-dance music, funk, pop-rock, and other folklore-influenced pop styles of the late 70's and 80's.

Raja Zahr, live on stage, 70's.
Lebanese singers depended so much on composers to write their music. Besides the Rahbani Brothers who were strictly folk-inclined and gave budding singers like Ghassan Salibah, Melhem Barakat, Hoda Haddad, Ronza, Joseph Nasif, Joseph Azar, Raja Badr, Abdo Yaghi, Marwan Mahfouz, the list is endless... their first singing tickets, Raja Zahr was certainly the first of these to fuse western pop songs into Arabic ones, and later composed music in the 80's for singers like Rabe'a El-Khouli and Walid Toufic. Other well-known and influential composers were Ehsan El-Munzir, Filmon Wehbi (he sang his own songs, some of which are featured here today), plus some few composers from Egypt writing music for Lebanese singers to sing in their Egyptian accent, all the way contributing to the mainstream styles.

Ziad Rahbani in concert, early 80's.
Then came the late 80's that gave birth to two totally different styles in Lebanon that had nothing to do with the place where they came from: first is 'Khaliji' music (Arabic: خليجي), which most Lebanese singers who were down on their luck and those who couldn't find any place to sell their records (or, even sign any record contract because the civil-war and then the Israeli invasion laid to waste almost 70% of Beirut's buildings), went to oil-rich Arabian Gulf countries to try and sing their songs in laughable Khaliji accents (called Aghany Khalijyah til this very day, with singers like Diana Haddad still shitting in high cotton in the oil-choked Emirate Dubai singing this odd-ball style. She even married an Emirati who owns Al-Nojoum music satellite channel, but got divorced in 2009). The second? Well, they tried their hands at the avant-garde! Free-form "oriental" jazz, quasi-bebop, and samba music played by Fairuz' son Ziad Rahbani who's the leader in this field (check this 'Yoube link for some of his live concerts), plus maybe few others like Makhoul Kassouf (مخول قاصوف) who played proto-fusion, and acoustic folk music. Ziad's first two albums however, were made with only belly-dance tunes, and Kassouf started in a beat rock band.
Bellydance: Lebanon's main asset.

At the end, one should realise that, 80's hit-songs were a mere continuation of older 60's and 70's music with added western instruments like the electric guitar and the drums. The two eras have no differences between them other than the way the 'same' music was rearranged into a more International style. Also, and in a turn of chronological tides, late-90's and 00's singers took the 80's songs and remade them again in newer pop-ish arrangements. Today, there's a huge 'tunestalgia' for these 'middle-ground' songs of the eighties that were and still are the true essence of all that is Lebanese music because they conjoin the past with the future.
The Bendalis playing in Jordan
Dora Bendali singing, early 80's.
As for the comp itself, I am sure you all will like and dig these tunes right here. The themes are enormous. Mostly, the singers sang about their love for their country, the hardships of the war, the economic crunch after the war, etc. The Bendali Family (عائلة/عيلة بندلي), for instance have some cool songs that really paint well this scene in Lebanon around the late 70's while they were giving concerts elsewhere in Jordan, Syria, Egypt, the U.S., and Australia. You will find 60 songs by this twelve-member band featured in the compilation: a whoppin' tote, making them the most-covered band/artist in the entire comp. They also sang about having to leave Lebanon, or going back and/or the need to be back home for good (ghourbeh: expatriation; which is such a recurrent theme in all Arabic Pop songs), and of course songs about beauty and love, marriages, folk dances, sahriye (سهرية - night gathering), children's songs, and many more. Some of their songs were covers of ahem, disco songs by say, Boney M. still they had this eastern-flavour that's cute, and funny all on its own. In future posts, I shall upload all of their cassettes: rare, lost audio gems of beautiful Leb-pop music. Be sure of that.

Singer Hoda Haddad,
with Melhem Barakat.
The language these songs were sung in vary from formal Arabic qasida and Andalusian love songs or muwashah, to some that are sung in Egyptian and Khaliji accents. The rest are sung in traditional Lebanese tongue known to be the sweetest, suavest, most charming way to speak Arabic. There's also one song sung in Armenian by Hoda Haddad. She's my friend Mutasim's favourite Lebanese singer (he's the collector I told you about in the previous post). Hoda's nickname was 'Yasminit Esham' ('The Jasmine of The Levant') in the 70's. Want to know something special about Hoda Haddad? She was (wait it...) Fairuz' middle sister! To wit, Hoda was another Fairuz casualty as I call most 'unsung' female Lebanese singers: her older sister stole the limelight from her, when in all honesty, Hoda's voice, looks, poise, and prestige were far better than Fairuz' by streets and miles. Not just that: adding insult to injury? Another Hoda Haddad came to the scene in the late 80's and that latter was more famous than her! Such injustices, really. And so, to him — and her I dedicate this comp's first song: Bayni We Baynak ('Between You And Me'), which whenever Mutasim started to listen to... he'd close his eyes, say nothing and just smile. This entire comp would put a huge smile on his face, I'm posit 'bout it. Live long and listen strong, Mo'!


⇪ Download Twelve Albums plus Bonus ⇪.

The Compilation:

In 12 Volumes, 125+ artists/bands and more than 500 songs... this compilation is an extensive look at the late 70's, and 80's pop scene in Lebanon. There aren't any comps to be found like this one here, trust me. This is actually nothing, because in future posts you're going to see this comp as a dwarf when most of these artists and bands would get their own separate posts 'ere at The Audiotopia. Yeah!

'Nuff said? Now, dig it.


Sammy Clark in a kids' party, late 80's.
Note: Lebanese garage and beat bands like The Sea-Ders, The News, The Kool Kats, etc... belong to the 60's and early 70's and will sure get a very detailed, separate post-spot on their own. Do not miss it! Also, noteworthy is the fact that some of the artists who got featured at the earlier post like Sammy Clark, Salwa Al-Katrib, Elie Choueiri, Samir Yezbeck, Samira Tawfic, Issam Rajji, and Azar Habib has got a few songs that are to be found in this comp, too.

Lebanese-Armenian rock band The News, early 70's.
To wax nostalgic now, I remember making small houses with my earliest Lebanese audio-cassettes collection that I used to shwinx from my elder brothers, and sisters way back in 1987. As an Arab, I feel proud 'bout knowing this music. Now it's all yours. Guess that's reason enough to blog about music, amirite? Music is funtastic!

Lebanese pop music is above all brave and entertaining. Lebanese people are free, and fun-loving. Their music is very sweet, and great to listen to. Here in hopes that you'd enjoy the 500+ songs that I, tirelessly, for the last two weeks or so, have been compiling for your listening pleasures.
One of the oldest known pictures for a debke band.
This was taken in Bint Jbeil, Nabatiya. Year, 1898.

(Bonus? I added another album smaller than the rest as a bonus for you guys. Funjoy it! There's a link that has a good collection of Lebanese music videos mostly belonging to the 70's/80's era. The titles are all in Arabic, so keep a Goo'-Trans handy JIC. Have fun).

Knock yerselves out!


Featured Artists/Bands:

Hoda Haddad (هدى حداد), Edgar Semaan (إدغار سمعان), Adonis Aqel (أدونيس عقل), Mohammed Hejazi (محمد حجازي), Ghaleb Antar (غالب عنتر), Melhem Barakat (ملحم بركات), Joseph Abu-Malhab (جوزيف أبي ملهب), Sobhi Murad (صبحي مراد), Farid Iskander (فريد إسكندر), Ghassan Salibah (غسان صليبا), Ahmad Doughan (أحمد دوغان), Nadim Berberi (نديم بربري), The Bendali Family (عيلة بندلي), Filmon Wehbi (فيلمون وهبي), Fouad Ghazy (فؤاد غازي - originally Syrian), Georgette Sayegh (جورجيت صايغ), Madonna (مادونا), Maya Yezbeck (مايا يزبك), Mohammed Jamal (محمد جمال), Osama Rahbani (أسامة الرحباني), Rana (رنـا), Nichola El-Ustah (نيكولا الإسطة), Samir Hannah (سمير حنـا), Mohammed Mara'i (محمد مرعي), Ronza (رونـزا), Mohammed Al-Abid (محمد العبد), Fariq Al-Liqa (فريق اللقاء), Milad Ghareeb (ميلاد غريب), Immad Sabagh (عماد صباغ), Mohammed Iskander (محمد أسكندر), Joseph Namnam (جوزيـف نمنم), George Karam (جورج كرم), Hadi Aziz (هـادي عزيـز), Abdo Yaghi (عبدو داغر), Joseph Sakr (جوزيـف صقر), Samir Yezbeck (سمير يزبـك), Khalil Hallak (خليل حلاق), Le Petite Prince (Al-Amir Al-Saghir - الأمير الصغير)), Cho Chou (شوشو), Mazin El-Bayea'a (مازن البياع), Afif Shyaa (عفيف شيـا), Muna Maraashli (منى مرعشلـي), Jacquline (جاكليـن), Misaed Radwan (مسعد رضوان), Robert Shama'a (روبير شمـا), Walid Toufic (وليد توفيق), Mustapha Uzbatchi (Lead singer of The Magical Fingertips Band, or '
Ferqat Al-Anamil Al-Sehryah' - مصطفى أوزباشي و فرقة الأنامل السحرية), Odette Kaedeh (أوديـت كعدة), Raja Badr (رجـا بدر), Sammy Clark (سـامي كلارك), Nihad Tarabyeh (نـهاد طربية), Khedir Naser Eddin (خضر نصرالدين), Dalida Rahmeh (داليدا رحمة), Joseph Nasif (جوزيـف ناصيف), Najah Salam (نجاح سلام), Nazieh El-Moughrabi (نزيه المغربي), Fahd Akiki (فهد عقيقي), Ayman Kafrouni (أيمن كفروني), Mazin Bayea'a (مازن البياع), Ragheb Aalameh (راغب علامة), Khaled Ali (خـالد علي), Douha El-Sabagh (دعاء الصباغ), Mazin El-Sawaf (مازن الصواف), George Wassouf (جورج وسـوف), Minem Freiheh (منعم فـريحة), Laura Hatim (لـورا حاتم), Joseph Azar (جـوزيف عازار), Sary El-Badiya (سـاري البادية), Hikmat Wahbi (حكمت وهـبي), Nihad Fatouh (نهـاد فتـوح), Jiselle Nasr (جزيل نصر), Azar Habib (عـازار حبيب), Rabe'a El-Khouli (ربيع الخولـي), Hoda Rouhana (هدى روحـانا), Marwan Adham (مروان أدهم), Marwan Mahfouz (مروان محفوظ), Samir Hannah (سمير حنـا), Tony Hannah (طوني حنـا), Samira Tawfic (سميرة توفيق), Diab Mash'hor (دياب مشهـور), Hiyam Youness (هيام يونـس), Adnan Fakher Eddine (عدنان فخرالدين), Fareeq Lana (فريق لـنـا), Elie Choueiri (إيلي شويري), Salem El-Hajj (سليم الحاج), Mohammed Sharif (محمد شريف), Jadd Nakhleh (جـاد نخلة), Boughos (بوغص), Sabah (صباح), Al-Amira Al-Saghira (الأميرة الصغيرة), Hadi Hazim (هادي هزيـم), Aiydah Chalhoub (عايدة شلهـوب), Pascal Sakr (باسكـال صقر), Taroub (طـروب - originally Syrian), Yousef Shamil (يوسف شامـل), Souad Hashim (سعـاد هاشم), Ridwan Sermini (رضوان سرميني), Carl S. (كارل س), Fadwa Obied (فدوى عبـيد), Albert Farhan (ألبير فرحـان), Fareeq Al-Liqa (فريق اللقاء), Nour El-Hadi (نـور الهدى), Majda El-Roumi (ماجدة الرومي), Ali Chalhoub (علي شلهوب), Majdly (مـجدلي), Adib Abu-Antoine (أديب أبوأنطوان), Antoinette Fares (أنطوانيت فارس), Fouad El-Hakim (فؤاد الحكيم), Nabil Harfoush (نبيل حرفوش), Salwa Al-Katrib (سلوى القطريب), Samir Samra (سمير سمرة), Amir Yezbeck (أمير يزبـك), Hiyam Saadah (هيام سعادة), Mishka (مـيشكا), Ziad Ghusoun (زياد غصـن), Farid Sakr (فريد صقر), Tareq Hilwani (طـارق حلواني), Mohammed Hussien (محمد حسـين), Randa Shemoun (رندا شمعون), Laura Khalil (لورا خليل), Umaima Khalil (أميمة خليل), Ihsan Sadiq (إحسان صـادق), Marwan Rahbani (مروان رحباني), Saad El-Husseini (سعد الحسيني), Issam Rajji (عصـام رجـي), Nadim Barbara (نديم بربرا), Houeyda (هـويدا), Patrick Simson.



*phews!*


Remember: this is jus' the beginning.

AMF!


H.H.