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Al Balabil
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Booking Agency · Similar Music
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| Biography: | |
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Sisters Hadia, Amal, and Hayat began singing together in 1971. They were studied musicians and dancers having graduated from Khartoum?s prestigious Institute of Music and Drama. Their father was an educator, and a brave progressive in a conservative cultural environment. He backed his daughters vigorously when they moved into the public sphere performing folklore from their ancestral home?the ancient, northern kingdom of Nubia?in a national dance group. Their big break came when they worked with composer Bashir Abbas to record the song ?Mashena (We went)? a love song that brought instant fame. The ?70s marked the height Sudanese music?s ?golden era,? a time when artists from many (though not all) of the country?s diverse regions came to Omdurman to record for Sudanese radio and television. There, a diverse collection of artists forged a unique, hybrid national sound. As open as that era was, recalls Hadia, ?It was very hard for females to be singers or dancers or actors. It was a matter of traditions and custom. So this wasn?t just a matter of music. We were trying to change ideas and traditions. It was a very big responsibility for us. And we succeeded.? Al Balabil started out singing songs in Arabic, but gradually introduced more and more Nubian material into their repertoire. In part, this was an effort to broaden the mix in popular entertainment and enlarge the country?s sense of its multicultural identity. There was also a women?s rights aspect to the promotion of Nubian culture ?The Nubian people are more modern than the people in the capital,? says Amal. ?Even in our language, we don't have ?he and she.? We don't have ?female and male.? But in Arabic language, you have this difference. In our dance, in our songs, women and men are together. They are equal. They dance with each other. But when you go to Khartoum, women are separate and men are separate.? The sisters? charisma and talent carried them to unprecedented heights of popularity, not only in Sudan, but Ethiopia, Chad, Somalia, Libya and Egypt, and even as far west as Cameroon and Nigeria. In the late 1980s, Al Balabil became less active when the sisters began to marry. Progressive as they were, they did honor the traditions of marriage. ?When you get married in Sudan,? says Hadia, ?you have responsibilities. In our culture, the female should take care of her kids and her husband.? Marriage also led to separations, as Amal?s husband took her to the Persian Gulf, and Hadia?s to the United States. In part, these moves were encouraged by the rise of a fiercely conservative, Islamist government after the coup of 1989. Life became far more restricted for all Sudanese musicians, ?Especially for us,? recalls Hadia, ?Because we don?t wear veils, and we don?t wear long sleeves.? Today, Hadia lives in Virginia, and Amal in California where she works closely with veteran Sudanese maestro Yousif el Mosley. Hadia and Amal come together to perform whenever possible, but it has been many years since they performed with Hayat. The reunion of the three sisters will be a historic feature of the 2008 Sudanese Festival of Music and Dance. Al Balabil remain as committed as ever to their mission of Sudanese unity. ?We are all Sudanese together,? says Amal. ?In our songs, we use Darfurian rhythms, rhythms from the west of Sudan, rhythms from the south. We sing different kinds of songs in Arabic. So when I meet a Sudanese, if he's from the South or wherever, I don't feel that he is a stranger. He is a Sudanese.? Al Balabil?s mission remains what it has always been, to address the deeper problems of Sudanese society through music, ?through the melody,? says Hadia, and Amal adds, ?In a different way, a beautiful way, just like butterflies.? |
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| Booking: | |
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Dawn Elder Management |
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| Similar Music: | |
| Sudanese, Nubian | |
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