In seven decades, Umm Kulthoum moved from
being a normal poor country girl to
a true
legend. Her millions of fans all over the
Arab world gave her many names.
They called her the Star of the
Orient, Mistress of Arab Singing and
Toomeh, but the most famous was Al Sitt.
Her mere appearance on the stage, holding
her famous
kerchief,was enough to
captivate millions of her fans throughout
the Arab World.
Like all females born in the Egyptian
Countryside, her background was a typical
one, but she was not a typical girl. Her
father, al-Shaykh Ibrahim al-Sayyid al-Baltaji
was the imam of the local mosque, and the
most reliable study confirms that her
birthday is May 4, 1904, in a small
village called Tammay al-Zahayrah, Al
Daqhaliya Province.According
to Umm Kulthum’s description, her
village was "… a
humble village.
The highest building in it did not exceed
two stories. The greatest
display of
wealth was the umdah's (Mayor) carriage
pulled by one horse. And there
was only
one street in the whole village wide
enough for that carriage. I sang in the
neighboring villages, all of which were
small. I thought that city of al-Sinbillawayn
(the closest city to the village) was the
biggest city in the world and I used to
listen
to news about it the same way one
would listen to news about New York or
London
or Paris."
Her father augmented his tiny income as an
imam by singing religious songs
in weddings and other celebrations of
religious nature in his own and
neighboring
villages. At the age of five
she joined other girls in the mosque’s
Kuttab, where she learnt sections of the
Holy Quran by heart and excelled in
reading its verses.
Umm Kulthum learned to sing from her
father. She overheard him teaching songs
to her brother, who used to accompany his
father at the celebrations, for which
al-Sheikh Ibrahim sang. Umm Kulthum
learned the songs by rote. When the
father
discovered and heard the unusual strength
of her voice, he asked her to
replace her
brother on an occasion when he fell ill.
In no time Umm Kulthum became the star of
the small family band. The earnings
rose
quickly from one Rupee per performance to
25 Rupees. By 1920, the band
was charging
10 Egyptian Pounds per evening. Around
that time, a famous singer
& composer,
Abu al-ila Muhammad heard the young singer
by coincidence and
realized immediately
the potentials of her strong voice. He
succeeded where
others failed, and
convinced the father to move to the
capital, Cairo.
She set out to improve her skills in all
areas. Her father hired music teachers,
and Abu al-ila introduced her to poet
Ahmad Rami who taught her poetry and
improved her command of literary Arabic.
She emulated the dress and manners of
the
elite ladies in whose homes she sang and
even became personal friends with a
few of
them.
When Umm Kulthum began singing in Cairo,
she used at the beginning to sing
the same
songs performed by her father before, in
addition to a few popular songs
that she
had learned along the way. Her father's
repertory was customarily, that
sung by a
solo vocalist accompanied by a chorus of
two to four men. But in
the twenties, this
style of performance was viewed as
old-fashioned; even the
older singers,
were accompanied by an instrumental takht (musical band).
The young singer adapted quickly to the
new tastes, and in no time hired
accomplished and prestigious
instrumentalists for her own takht.
Her religious
qasa'id
(classical poetry) and tawashih
(religious lyrics) gave way to new and
modern love songs composed especially for
her. This change, together with her
elegant personal style, thrust her into
direct competition with the city's leading
singers. She climber the ladder of fame
ten steps at a time, and by 1928, rose to
the top of the ranks of Cairo's
professional singers. And later on, when
the National
Radio was established in
1934, she became its favourite singer;
thus expanding her
base of fans to many
millions all over the Arab World.
Health
problems, however, plagued
Umm Kulthum
every few years for much
of her life
beginning in the thirties.
She became ill
resulting from some sort
of problem with
the liver and gall bladder
in the late
summer of 1937. She also
suffered from the
thyroid and
Respiratory System most of her
life.
In keeping with changing popular
taste as
well as her own artistic
inclinations, in
the early 1940s she
requested songs from
composer
Zakariya Ahmad and colloquial
poet
Bayram al-Tunisi. This represented a
dramatic departure from the modernist
romantic songs of the 1930s. The result
was populist songs that had lasting appeal
for the Egyptian audience. Later in the
decade, Umm Kulthum engaged the
young
composer Riyad al-Sunbati to set a number
of qasa'id by Ahmad Shawqi.
The result was
different from Zakariya and Bayram's songs
but as neo-classical
works that were very
well received. These songs established al-Sunbati
as the
foremost composer of qasa'id of his
generation.
Like many of her compatriots, Umm Kulthum
welcomed the Egyptian Revolution
of 1952
with enthusiasm. The Revolutionary
Government demonstrated eagerness
to
continue public entertainments, especially
radio broadcasting, in an
uninterrupted
manner. Her improved health enabled her to
resume her normal
schedule of appearances
in about 1955. At the same time, Umm
Kulthum sought
new modern love songs from
the younger generation of composers.
Her cultivation
of this new modernity
culminated in collaboration with premier
composer Muhammad
abd al-Wahab. In 1964,
they produced the very popular song,
"Inta Umri," which
was the first
of ten by abd al-Wahab for Umm Kulthum.
She
advocated governmental support of |
Arabic
music and musicians |
The relation between the two was not in
fact very cordial. In the early thirties
they competed to win more fans. Some
historians claim that Umm Kulthum would
not have considered the cinema as an
option if Muhammad abd al-Wahab had
not
become active in that field. Consequently,
she starred in six films between
1935-1945
as a counter-measure against Muhammad abd
al-Wahab’s six films in
the same period.
Cooperation of Umm Kulthum and Muhammad
abd al-Wahab would have
remained a dream
without the personal intervention of the
President Jamal
Abdul Nasser, who brought
the two together and compelled them to
cooperate.
In her golden era, thousands of her
devoted fans used to attend her
regular
appearances, the first Thursday of every
month, where she used to sing
a new song
in Al Azbakia garden theater. Most of the
newer generations that
watch now her
recordings at that era wonder how she used
to perform so far
from the microphones,
and yet everyone among the huge crowd
present heard
her clearly.
In addition to her various artistic
endeavors, Umm Kulthum consolidated her
authority in the entertainment business
during the 1940s by joining the Listening
Committee, which selected the music
appropriate for radio broadcasting, and by
assuming presidency of the Musician's
Union. She proved to be the best public
relations agent that she could have for
herself. She methodically and patiently
built a wide base of friends in the media,
kept a frequent appearance in influential
newspapers, the radio and later on, The
television
She
cultivated the position of spokeswoman for
various causes. She advocated governmental
support of Arabic music and musicians, she
endowed a charitable foundation and, most
importantly, after the defeat in the 1967
war, she began a series of domestic and
international concerts for Egypt. She
traveled throughout Egypt and the Arab
world, collecting contributions and
donating the proceeds of
her performances to the government. These
concerts were much publicized and
took on the character of state visits. Umm
Kulthum was entertained by heads of state,
she toured cultural monuments, and, in
interviews, repeated her views concerning
the importance of support for indigenous
Arab culture. More than a musician, she
became "the voice and face of
Egypt".
Her health problems worsened as she aged.
Her eyes remained hypersensitive
to light
and in her later years, she wore dark
glasses almost all the time. Beginning
in
1971, Umm Kulthum's health deteriorated
dramatically. In March of that year,
she
suffered a gall bladder attack, which
resulted in the postponement of her
March
and April concerts. The following winter,
she was struck with a serious
kidney
infection that forced the cancellation of
two more concerts in February
and March of
1972.
The song "Hakam alayna al-hawa"
was scheduled for premiere in the spring
of
1973. As was her custom, Umm Kulthum
planned to record it before its first
performance. She did so with great
difficulty on March 13, 1973. The
recording
went on for twelve hours. And
for the first time, she sang while sitting
in a chair,
quietly brought to her by a
recording engineer who saw that she was
too weak to
remain standing. The concert
at which the song was to have been
premiered
was cancelled and the recording
was released. That song became actually
the
only one that Umm Kulthum did not
perform for a live audience. On January
21, 1975,
she suffered the final kidney
attack that led to her death on February
3.
Millions of mourners came to Cairo from
all over Egypt to participate in her
funeral. In fact, the only other funeral
that had more mourners in the history of
Egypt was that of Nasser himself.
Many thousands as well came from
other Arab countries to see off the
greatest Arab Diva of modern times.
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