Ahmed Adaweyah: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 19:08, 9 November 2012
This article may contain improper use of non-free material. (February 2012) |
Ahmed Adaweyah (Template:Lang-ar) is an Egyptian singer and he was the first big star of sha'abi music during its first wave of popularity in the 1970s. He has starred in 27 Egyptian films. Adaweyah started his career as a cafe waiter but in 1971, he began performing songs using the language of the streets of Cairo, full of working class slang and double entendres. Like many shaabi (meaning of the 'people', or working class) singers Adaweyah specializes in mawal (vocal improvisation).[1] He performed in English clubs as well as in Egypt and despite his now-considerable wealth, remains a critic of the middle class. His use of drum machine and synthesizer in the 1990s was the subject of some criticism. He is also subject to censorship due to his oppositional stance.
His son Mohammed Adaweyah is a classical singer, who made an album called el-tayyeb a7san in 2000.
References
- ^ Jackson, Leon. "Biography: Ahmed Adaweyah". Allmusic. Retrieved 10 April 2010.