Eastern music has become increasingly popular in Israel and the
International Oud Festival
held earlier this month in Jerusalem included a tribute to the famous
Egyptian composer Muhammad al-Qasabgi and an evening devoted to Umm
Kulthum, the "Queen of the Nile".
Umm Kulthum's songs were
performed by four contemporary Arab singers - Mustafa Dakhleh, Khalil
Abu Nikola, Lubna Salameh and Riham Mustafa - accompanied by the
Alfarabi Orchestra, founded in 1993 by its conductor and musical
director Sami Khsheibun. The orchestra has appeared at international
festivals including the annual Arab Musical Congress at the Cairo Opera
House and in a variety of television programs.
Al-Qasabgi wrote
hundreds of songs for Egyptian singers. While the lion's share going to
Umm Kulthum, he also composed for other classical Arabic singers such as
Layla Mourad, Asmahan, Munira al-Mahdiyya, Salah Abd al-Hay and others.
In his later years, al-Qasabgi accompanied Umm Kulthum on the oud.
Al-Qasabgi's songs, which remain popular to this day, were performed at
the festival in a special tribute by the Tarshiha Orchestra.
The Orchestra
has been in existence for 25 years, and has performed twice at the Cairo Opera House. Its
conductor, Nasim Dakwar, from Tarshiha in the Galilee, began his
musical career as a 12-year-old oud player at weddings. He later studied
Western classical music at the Jerusalem Academy of Music and went on
to teach Eastern music at the Academy. He was also a member of the
successful Jewish-Arab Bustan Abraham band and has composed music to
poems by Mahmoud Darwish.
This year's week-long festival was
marked by diversity, including a special encounter led by vocalist
Miriam Toukan between the poems of Israeli national poet Haim Nachman
Bialik and the songs of the great Lebanese vocalist Fairuz, between
klezmer and Arab folk music. Other international participants revived
traditional Turkish, Greek and Kurdish music, leading Jerusalem Mayor
Nir Barkat to say: "The festival is a cultural pearl, a dialogue of
multiple cultures, between East and West, between new and old, making it
the pride of the city."
Concerts were attended by a mixed Jewish and Arab audience Copyright: Confederation House, Jerusalem / I. BarelAs
the festival grows in popularity, an effort was made to attract young
Jews and Arabs to the events, with discounted ticket sold in Arab
neighborhoods in the city. The festival is supported by the Jerusalem
Foundation and the Israel Ministry of Culture.
The 14th annual Jerusalem International Oud Festival, produced by the
Confederation House,
is the jewel in the crown of this center of ethnic music, poetry and
theater. Confederation House provides a stage for Jewish, Arab and other
artists and ensembles from throughout Israel and abroad. Its location
opposite the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem, between the old and new
cities, is ideally suited to an organization that seeks to serve as a
bridge connecting peoples, reviving ancient dialogue between cultures,
and symbolizing the hope for a better future.