El Tanbura

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Heela Heela 03:44 Tools
Sar A Lay 03:57 Tools
Waziery 04:29 Tools
Between The Desert And The Sea 02:28 Tools
I Saw The Moon 04:01 Tools
My Heart Was Burnt By Love 04:30 Tools
One Day We Blamed Each Other 03:42 Tools
Dundarawi 04:15 Tools
Salah 03:55 Tools
Shoft Toshy 04:07 Tools
Gamel Weno 04:15 Tools
Zayy El Nhardah (The Canal Song) 04:55 Tools
Friends of Bamboute 00:30 Tools
Ghosen El Habib 06:54 Tools
Lally 04:33 Tools
Sar A Lay - Video Clip Mix 03:54 Tools
Khaly Anka Al Yhom 04:01 Tools
Badr Arid 03:22 Tools
Noh el Hamam 00:30 Tools
Song for the Prophet 03:43 Tools
Afra 00:30 Tools
El Madad 04:44 Tools
Zayy el Nhardah 04:54 Tools
Sar a Lay (Video Clip Mix) 04:54 Tools
Afrah 04:27 Tools
Sar a Lay [Video Clip Mix] 04:27 Tools
Ayh El Amal Ya Ahmed 04:27 Tools
Wazery 04:27 Tools
Friends of Bambouty 00:30 Tools
Sar A Lay (Video Clip Mix) 04:27 Tools
Sahep El Bamboute 00:30 Tools
Ahwa Qamar 00:30 Tools
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El Tanbura are a collective of veteran master musicians, singers, fishermen and Sufi philosophers. For the past 17 years they have been custodians to some of Egypt’s oldest folk traditions at their home in Port Said, at the gate to the Suez Canal. Their music is driven by the seductive call of the Simsimiyya - an ancient lyre dating back to the times of the Pharaohs. The origins of the Simsimiyyia are lost in the mist of time and legend. It’s modern history comes to life in the 1930s, when Café owners in Port Said often employed a player to entertain their customers in the old-time smoking dens. Adopting influences from other styles of local folk music and local Sufi beliefs, the instrument quickly gained in popularity, eventually drawing large audiences and a new repertoire known simply as Simsimiyya was created. This popular success was followed by a downturn after the war: economic difficulties and widespread commercialisation led to a decline of the tradition in the late 1970s, and many of the old masters simply withdrew from performing, disillusioned and tired. El Tanbura’s founder, Zakaria Ibrahim first heard the Simsimiyyia in Port Said as a young boy in the 1950s. The sound of the instrument stayed in his memory ever since, and in 1980, he decided to dedicate himself to seeking out the old masters and convince them to perform once again. In 1989 a small nucleus of veteran performers came together to form the El Tanbura group. They were laughed at initially, but the infectious atmosphere of the performances soon convinced others to join, and the band grew to include not only folk musicians and percussionists but dancers and singers drawn from local fishermen, market traders and builders, alongside with some older master instrumentalists. Performances today feature seductive simsimiyya melodies, Sufi inspired vocal chants, increasingly intense drumming and bouts of frenzied dancing. Band members dress in an eclectic mix of jellabas, jeans, fez and baseball caps, and enjoy involving their audiences as their rhythms and chants gains in heat and passion. With a musical legacy nearly spanning two decades, and concerts at home and abroad consistently winning them new fans, wider success has been elusive for El Tanbura until now. But with a WOMEX showcase and international CD release scheduled for this fall, and ambitious touring plans for 2007, this is surely about to change! Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.