Gilded
Serpent presents...
Om
Kalthoum
The Voice of Egypt
by
Yasmin
Taken
from the liner notes of the Sands of Time album Cry to the Moon
She
was called the “Voice of Egypt”. She was without contest the most
well-known singer of the Arab world. She was also the most influential
woman of her time in the Middle East.
Through
her songs she helped bring about Egypt’s liberation from British
colonial rule and open the door to Egyptian self-governance.
Nothing in
Om Kalthoum’s poor rural roots would have predicted
such a fate - unless you consider that her maternal bloodline
is said to trace back to the Prophet Mohammed himself. Perhaps
this was why her father named his third child after the Prophet’s
third daughter.
Her extraordinary
talent did not take long to manifest itself. By the age of seven
she was already singing religious songs with her male relatives
for local village gatherings. She dressed as a bedouin boy, complete
with headress and coat, in the name of modesty, so that she could
perform in public.
By age thirteen,
word of “Thuma’s” tremendous voice had spread to the music greats
in Cairo. A few traveled to her home in the Delta to hear her
sing. None were disappointed. Several became her mentors and teachers.
They guided her when she moved to Cairo to further her career,
and they wrote poetry and composed music for her so that her songs
would be as beautiful as her voice.
Om Kalthoum’s
religious schooling and her ability to chant the Quran set her
aside from the other popular singers of her time. True to classical
Arabic music tradition, she set a high importance on interpreting
the underlying meaning of her songs, not only with clear diction
and proper phrasing, but also with vocal coloring that gave her
words emotion. She became known as a traditional artist, one that
upheld and practiced pure Arabic musicality. This was at a time
when upholding Arabic tradition was a statement against the overbearing
British colonial forces. Om Kalthoum’s audiences looked up to
her for her patriotism and she did not disappoint them.
The
development of mass media during the 1900s greatly affected
Om Kalthoum’s notoriety. She was as intelligent as she was gifted
and used each new media to her best advantage.
From records,
to radio, to cinema and then to television, she entered each new
media on the ground floor and used it to increase access to her
fans. Radio was especially kind to her. Her monthly “first Thursday”
broadcasts are remembered fondly, even today, as a time when the
Arabic speaking world came to a halt, and every man, woman and
child listened to Om Kalthoum sing.
Sadly her
personal life was not as rich as her professional one. Although
she had many offers of marriage, she did not choose a husband
until late in life. She wed the first, a musician, as a reflex
reaction when the royal family rejected her engagement to King
Faruk’s uncle. Her union with this musician lasted only days.
Her second husband was one of her doctors, whom she relied upon
heavily as her health deteriorated in her fifties. She did not
have any children. It is curious that the Prophet’s third daughter
also had two husbands and no children.
Om Kalthoum
dedicated her life to her art. Music was her true love and the
songs she created were her offspring. When she passed away they
inherited her soul for safe keeping.
Timeline
of her Life
- 1904 :
Born May 4 in the Delta town of Tammay al-Zahayra
- 1909 -
1912 : Studied at the Quranic school
- 1911 :
First public performance
- 1919 :
First performance in Cairo
- 1920 :
She moved to Cairo
- 1923 :
First recording contract with Odeon Records
- 1926 :
A Year of Great ChangeChanged recording companies to Gramaphone
Records
- Changed her style of dress, from bedouin coat and headdress
to elegant but modest gowns.
- Replaced her family back-up chorus to a takht ensemble
of musicians.
- Added popular (vs. religious and classical) songs to her repertoire.
- Purchased land and improved her family’s social standing.
- 1934 :
Began singing every other Thursday on the radio.
- 1935 :
Filmed Widad, the first of her 6 films.
- 1937 :
Began live broadcasts of her concerts on the radio, her famous
monthly “First Thursday” concerts that brought life in Egypt
to a halt.
- Fell ill with the first of her health problems; liver and
gall bladder ailments.
- 1942 :
A Year of Great Pain
- Diagnosis of a thyroid problem. She was treated at Bethesda
Naval Hospital near Washington DC for this, at the suggestion
of the American Ambassador to Egypt. Her prolonged stay in the
United States and the possibility that she might have to retire,
plus the events below, sent her into a severe depression.
- Chronic inflammation of the eyes.
- Sharif Sabri Pasha, uncle to King
Farouk, proposed marriage to her, but the union was
forbidden by the royal family.
- Hasty marriage to a fellow musician which was annulled within
days.
- 1947 :
Her mother and only brother Khalid died.
- 1949 -
1952 : Goiter ailment and treatment. She drastically cut back
her work and appearances.
- 1952 :
The Egyptian Revolution. No more British rule.
- 1954 :
Married one of her doctors and long time admirers, Dr. Hassan
al-Hifnawi.
- 1956 -
1957 : A Renewal Period. After her health improved she changed
composers for new songs.
- Switched record companies to Misrophone.
- 1960 :
Participated in the opening of the new government television
station.
- 1964 :
Released first song composed for her by Mohammed Abd
al-Wahab, “Enta Omri.”
- 1967 :
Olympia concert in Paris, the only concert she ever gave outside
the Arab world.
- 1971 :
Her health declined drastically. She suffered a gall bladder
attack and a kidney infection.
- 1973 -
1974 : Traveled to Europe and the US for medical treatments.
- 1975 :
Severe kidney attack that lead to her death.
- 3 February
1975 : Om Kalthoum died of heart failure at the age of seventy.
Om Kalthoum
was honored with an enormous state funeral. Her bereaved fans
overcame the pall bearers at one point and carried her casket
themselves through Cairo’s mourning streets. She was after all
the Voice of Egypt. She recorded over 300 songs during her sixty
year career. Her First Thursday concerts halted presidents and
ditch diggers alike. She was asil, authentic, a daughter
of the countryside, and the true sound of the Gift of the Nile.
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