Bangkok Post

Jordan’s veteran musicians revive Arab song

- MUSSA HATTAR

A group of musicians are causing a sensation in Jordan by reviving the golden age of Arab song — and not one of them is under the age of 50.

“I would give you anything for the feast, my angel.”

Beshara Rabadi, 62, sang the line to an enthusiast­ic crowd at a concert hall in central Amman. Many instantly recognised the song of famous Iraqi singer, Nazem al-Ghazali, responding with applause and singing the rest of the phrase: “But you have everything. Should I give you bracelets? I don’t want to tie your hands.”

Beit al-Ruwwad (The House of Pioneers), founded in 2008, celebrates the golden era of Arab music represente­d by Ghazali and legendary Egyptian diva Umm Kulthum as well as Jordanian folklore songs.

The singers, some of them in their 80s, wear dark suits and in some cases sunglasses as they play a wide range of instrument­s: oud (Arabian lute), flute, drums and accordion.

Each Tuesday, they give a free concert at Amman’s Al Hussein Cultural Center.

“Our goal is to preserve classical Jordanian and Arab music and provide a comfortabl­e social space that supports original art and artists,” said the group’s founder and leader Sakher Hattar, 54.

A buzz spread throughout the audience as the group performed another well-known song about a girl leaving her family home to get married.

The group’s fans include people from across Jordanian society and the concerts always have a family atmosphere, said Hattar, who is also an oud teacher and head of the Arabic music department at Jordan’s National Music Conservato­ry.

He likes to talk of how the group was formed. He had met officials at the culture ministry to discuss having veteran musicians perform individual­ly at the annual Jerash Festival, which brings artists from across the Arab world.

“They were rejected on the basis that they weren’t able to perform,” he said.

“That idea hurt, and it gave me the idea of setting up the band.”

He set about gathering a group of musicians in their later years, including singers Mohamed Wahib, 84, Salwa al-Aas, 74, and Fuad Hijazi, 70.

“These artists still have a lot to give, they have a really high standard of musiciansh­ip,” he said.

In May, 10 years since the group was founded, King Abdullah presented Hattar with an award for the band’s role in supporting pioneering musicians.

Singer Wahib said the group had “brought together pioneers who gave a lot to Jordanian and Arab art”.

“I’ve been passionate about music since my childhood,” he said, adding that he launched his career as a singer on Radio Ramallah in 1958.

The octogenari­an, a contempora­ry of Arab greats such as Mohammad Abdelwahha­b and Farid al-Atrash, credits Beit al-Ruwwad with giving him the desire to continue.

“We try to create a link between old and new songs,” said sexagenari­an singer Osama Jabbur.

 ??  ?? Salwa al-Aas, a 74-year-old Jordanian singer of Palestinia­n origin, performs during a concert with the Beit al-Rowwad ensemble.
Salwa al-Aas, a 74-year-old Jordanian singer of Palestinia­n origin, performs during a concert with the Beit al-Rowwad ensemble.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand