Everything about Hamza El Din totally explained
Hamza El Din (b.
Toshka,
Egypt, July 10,
1929; d.
Berkeley, California, May 22,
2006), was a
Nubian composer,
oud player,
tar player, and vocalist. Born in the village of Toshka, near
Wadi Halfa in southern Egypt, he's considered by some to have been the father of modern Nubian music. Originally trained to be an electrical engineer and after working in
Cairo for the
Egyptian national railroad, El Din changed direction and began to study music at the
Cairo University, continuing his studies at the
Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia in
Rome; he also studied in
Ibrahim Shafiq's Institute of Music and the
King Fouad Institute for Middle Eastern Music, and traveled in Egypt on a government grant collecting folksongs. His performances attracted the attention of the
Grateful Dead,
Joan Baez, and
Bob Dylan in the 1960s, which led to a recording contract and to his eventual emigration to the United States. Like much of Egyptian Nubia, his home village of Toshka was flooded due to the construction of the
Aswan High Dam in the 1960s, creating in El Din a drive to preserve and promote his culture.
In 1964 and 1965, he recorded two albums for
Vanguard Records; his 1968 recording
Escalay: The Water Wheel is recognized as one of the first
world music recordings to gain wide release in the West, and was claimed as an influence by some American
minimalist composers, such as
Steve Reich and
Terry Riley.
(External Link
) In this period, he mentored a number of musicians, including
Sandy Bull. Later, he released albums for
Lotus Records and
Sounds True. His album
Eclipse was produced by
Mickey Hart. He performed with the
Kronos Quartet on an arrangement of
Escalay in 1992. His pieces were often used in
ballet performances and plays.
El Din held a number of teaching positions on
ethnomusicology in the United States during the 1980s and 1990s (in
Ohio University,
University of Washington, and the
University of Texas), eventually settling in the
San Francisco Bay Area after studying the
biwa in
Tokyo Japan during the 1980s. In 1999, he released his last album, "A Wish".
He died on Monday, May 22, 2006, at the age of 76, after complications following surgery for a
gallbladder infection at a hospital in
Berkeley,
California. He is survived by his wife, Nabra.
Discography
- 1964 – Music of Nubia
- 1965 – Al Oud
- 1971 – Escalay: The Water Wheel
- 1978 – Eclipse
- 1982 – A Song of the Nile
- 1995 – Lily of the Nile
- 1996 – Available Sound: Darius
- 1996 – Muwashshah
- 1999 – A Wish
Further Information
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