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Riad Abdel-Gawad: riad & takht's bios

Riad Abdel-Gawad - composer, violinist and educator

Misr: Um al-Donya—Egypt: Mother of the World is Riad Abdel-Gawad’s latest full-length album. It relies both on the talents of his quintessential Middle Eastern ensemble, and his Western classical influences ranging from Joseph Haydn to John Coltrane. All of the principle classical instruments from the Arabic Middle East are represented: the kamanga (Riad’s violin is tuned several tones lower than its Western counterpart), nay (bamboo flute), qānūn (plucked dulcimer), riqq (tambourine), and the oud (lute). The percussive rhythm of bongos, duff (frame drum), and contrabass on this release, adds another musical dimension. The launch of "Egypt: Mother of the World" coincides with Riad’s performance at the Chicago World Music Festival 2010. Explore this website for more information, streaming music, newsletters, images, videos, and a blog. Click "like" on his public Facebook page at www.facebook.com/musicariad. Join Riad's networks at www.myspace.com/musicariad and www.reverbnation.com/musicariad.

"Having immersed himself for over a decade in a unique guru-based artistic school in Cairo, Mr. Abdel-Gawad is considered by his peers in Egypt to be one of the main protagonists and one of the most serious artists to come out of this particularly distinct school of musical style. This unique Arab music school was developed by Abdo Dagher, legendary violin accompanier to Egyptian singer Oum Kalsoum, the "Incomparable Voice" so-named by Maria Callas. Riad Abdel-Gawad links and preserves a tradition whose roots reach to the Medieval Arabic writers’ and practitioners’ old sources. This school, is the only such teacher-disciple school to develop in recent (c. 100 years) documented Cairo history. Baghdad experienced the development of a similar unique stylistic school, (of Mouneer Basheer) c. 30-40 years ago that focused on `oud—"lute" performance. This Iraqi school now has a small number of renowned second-generation performing artists (e.g. Nasheer Shama, Adel Sallameh). Born in Cairo, Egypt, Riad Abdel-Gawad studied at Harvard University. Riad describes that this takht platform or dikka (as it was also known in Arabic) was a raised stage area for musicians to entertain listeners in cafés during the era of Mohamed Ali. He said, "the tekht musicians at the turn of the 20th-century usually consisted of singer, qānūn, as well as the indigenous two-stringed instrument called the kamangah. But this instrument soon fell out of use in favor for the Western violin. Subsequently, the violin appropriated the term kamangah as its own cognomen in Arabic perhaps in deference to its predecessor." After graduating from Harvard, Riad principally resided and worked as a composer and musician in Belgium, Egypt, France, Germany and Italy. He even worked, iconoclastically, as a street musician in Brussels, Liège and Paris. Having championed the idea that trans-national composition and performance would be one of the frontiers of music in the twenty-first century, Riad Abdel-Gawad strived to authenticate and work towards this idea in his own musical art. From that viewpoint, as Riad elucidated to me, as a young man he sought professional musical experience that would have been difficult to know had he entered the world of academia upon graduating from Harvard. Shuttling "nomadically", between Europe and Egypt Riad Abdel-Gawad assisted Abdo Dagher in masterclasses, and performed with him in festivals, on CD recordings, and in tours, and appeared in television and in a documentary film and in performances in Belgium, Egypt, Italy, France, Germany, Holland, Spain, and Switzerland. Having a wonderful camaraderie with Abdo, Riad and he once took a train from Marseille to Munich all of the while practicing their violins in a semi-enclosed train compartment "enchanting" the other passengers and the train staff. They were on there way to tour in Germany with Roman Bunka. I met Riad at Abdo’s well-known musical salon in Hadayek el-Qobba, a popular district near downtown Cairo. He became a fixture at Abdo’s salon-school, his "right-hand" man, as one can see from the photographs of Riad on the wall of Abdo’s music salon. Abdo endearingly described Riad as his ibn el-fann, literally, "an artistic son". Riad practiced with Abdo and Abdo’s many visitors from all over the globe in sessions (saharat) from dusk to dawn. Riad was fortunate to have experienced many of these sessions and found them useful as did many of the most famous musicians in the Middle East did. Abdo instilled in his students his unique method and improvisatory practice. Riad reciprocated, in part, by writing and documenting Abdo Dagher’s musically-rich and technique-filled menheg ("musical method and exercises"). Riad Abdel-Gawad also helped in transcribing six of Abdo Dagher’s compositions that are published by International Opus. Riad Abdel-Gawad has also performed his own compositions as a violinist in festivals, workshops, tours in Belgium, Cameroon, Congo (Democratic Republic), Denmark, Egypt, France, Germany, Greece, Holland, Italy, Spain, and the United States. Riad Abdel-Gawad’s compositions have been broadcasted worldwide on radio, as well, have been commissioned, featured, and played at international music festivals, competitions, and venues including: the Mediterranean Composition Competition in Greece, the Darmstadt International Summer Course for New Music, and the Palais des Beaux Arts for the Ars Musica Festival in Brussels. Recent commissions, performances, commercial recordings and publications of Riad Abdel-Gawad’s compositions have come from: Future Classics Label, Meet the Composer, Oxford University Press, and the Princeton Composer’s Ensemble Series. Honors, awards, fellowships and grants have come from including: ASCAP, the Akademie Schloss Solitude in Germany, BMI, Harvard University, and the MacDowell Colony."

 

Profile by Mohamed A. Mostafa, journalist for El-Gumhuriyya and el-Nagm

Yousri Abdel-Maqsoud - Percussionist: Bongos, Duff, Riqq

Yousri Abdel-Maqsoud, is truly one of the greatest living Arabic percussionists. Yousri played bongos for six years in the orchestra of arguably the most popular Arab singers ever, Abdel-Halim Al-Hafiz. Yousri’s inimitable bongos are heard countless times — from that prolific time of Abdel-Halim’s orchestra — over the airwaves that resound from Middle Eastern cafes every day. He has a very unique riqq instrument of multiple layers of brass jingles which he plays with finesse and without comparison in a highly-detailed rhythmic style. Yousri without a doubt is a guardian of the old Arabic traditional rhythms, yet he also developed a style of arabized Latin and African rhythms that is unique. Yousri, an Egyptian, was based in Qatar for two decades. He has recently played and toured with one of the greatest living Iraqi oud players, Nasir Shama. He originally has a Bachelor’s in Business and has worked as a musician since 1962. He has worked with many of the most famous Arab and Egyptian artists, from the second half of the 20th-century: Mohamed Abdo, Talal Madah, Abady El Johar, Mohamed Abdel-Wahab, Warda El Jazairi, Naghat El Sagheer, Shadiya, Mohamed Qandeel, Sayed Makawe, Saad Mohamed, and Muharram Fouad.

Saber Abdel-Sattar - Qanunist (plucked dulcimer)

Saber Abdel-Sattar is one of the finest and the most promising qanun players to come out of Egypt in a generation. Saber has over two hundred qanun students as the qanun director of the Beit el-Oud ---“the House of the Oud”. The Beit el-Oud ---- supported by the Egyptian Ministry --- is located at a traditional Ottoman period building near the Khan Khalily market. It preserves the playing of and instructs all of the main takht---“traditional Arabic Middle Eastern” instruments. He has played with many of the most currently well-known musicians and singers in the Middle East. He played with Nasir Shamma’s ensemble for several years. He won best qanun player at the international competition of qanun in Tunisia. He was the touring qanun player for the Mozart d’Egypte, platinum-selling album in the 1990s. He also is an accomplished composer and has come out with a qanun instructing CD.

Mohamed Foda (Fouda) - Nayist

Mohamed Foda (Fouda) is without a doubt one of the best known nay player’s in Egypt and beyond. He performed on the first volume of The Music of Islam, Vol. 1: Al-Qahirah, Classical Music of Cairo. He is known worldwide for his beautiful renderings of the taqaseem from which he came out of Abdo Dagher’s school of taqaseem. His taqaseem are well-known on two albums for Virgin Records: Egypt, Music from the Desert to the Sea and the platinum-selling album Mozart in Egypt. He also recorded for Nonesuch on the Grammy-winning album, Egypt, of Youssa d’Nour and Fathy Sallama. One can see Foda on the current credit openings to Link TV’s world music program.

Hesham Makarem - Oudist

Hesham Makarem is truly an amazing talent and has promise to become one of the best oud players in Egypt and beyond. He has toured with Egyptian guitarist Ali Khattab in Spain and is a founding member of Yorka, which mixes Andalusian and Algerian music. He received in Bachelor of Music from the College of Fine Arts in Zamalek. He has played in music festivals in Egypt, Germany and Spain. He also played with the national orchestra of Algeria. For six years, he has studied with and performed in the ensemble of the legendary Egyptian violinist Abdo Dagher. He is a sought after studio musician in Cairo.