Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
The Homeless Wanderer 07:08 Tools
homesickness 03:13 Tools
Mother's Love 03:37 Tools
The Last Tears of a Deceased 08:30 Tools
The Mad Man's Laughter 03:57 Tools
a young girl's complaint 05:54 Tools
Ballad of the Spirits 05:56 Tools
Presentiment 03:42 Tools
Evening Breeze 02:52 Tools
The Song of the Sea 09:30 Tools
The Jordan River Song 02:37 Tools
The Story of the Wind 02:46 Tools
Golgotha 03:13 Tools
The Garden of Gethesemanie 03:24 Tools
Tenkou Why Feel Sorry 02:03 Tools
The Song of Abayi 03:14 Tools
Tenkou! Why Feel Sorry? 02:03 Tools
tenkou! why feel sorry 02:03 Tools
Ballad of the Spirits - Piano 05:55 Tools
A young girl's compaint 06:11 Tools
Tenkou! Why we feel sorry? 02:03 Tools
Ballad of the Spirits (Piano) 07:07 Tools
Homeless Wanderer 07:07 Tools
Mothers Love 07:07 Tools
Yemendjar Shega 07:07 Tools
Mèla Mèla 07:07 Tools
Antchi Hoyé 07:07 Tools
Milènu 07:07 Tools
Embi Ila 07:07 Tools
Kulun Mankwalèsh 07:07 Tools
Sét Alamenem 07:07 Tools
Song of Abayi 03:26 Tools
Atawurulegu Léla 07:07 Tools
Fetsum Denq Ledj Nèsh 07:07 Tools
Song of the Sea 03:26 Tools
Garden Of Gethesemanie 09:32 Tools
Story Of The Wind 02:46 Tools
Jordan River Song 02:37 Tools
the garden of gethsemanie 03:26 Tools
Piano Solo 07:07 Tools
Thelast tears of deceased 03:26 Tools
Last Tears Of A Deceased 03:26 Tools
Young Girl's Complaint 06:10 Tools
Mad Man's Laughter 03:57 Tools
The Last Tears of The Deceased 03:57 Tools
15 Evening Breeze 03:57 Tools
Mother S Love 03:57 Tools
tenkou ! Why feel sorry ? 02:37 Tools
Homeless Wonderer 02:37 Tools
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Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou (born Yewubdar Gebru , Addis Abeba, Ethiopia, December 12, 1923) is an Ethiopian pianist and composer. Young Yewubdar secretly fled Addis Abeba at the age of 19 to enter the Guishen Mariam monastery in the Wello region, she had once before visited with her mother. She served two years in the monastery and was ordained a nun at the age of 21. She took on the title Emahoy and her name was changed to Tsege Mariam. Her father Kentiba Gebru and her mother Kassaye Yelemtu both had a place in high society. Yewubdar was sent to Switzerland at the age of six along with her sister Senedu Gebru. Both attended a girls’ boarding school where Yewubdar studied the violin and then the piano. She gave her first violin recital at the age of ten. She returned to Ethiopia in 1933 to continue her studies at the Empress Menen Secondary School. In 1937 young Yewubdar and her family were taken prisoners of war by the Italians and deported to the island of Asinara, north of Sardinia, and later to Mercogliano near Naples. Yewubdar resumed her musical studies in Cairo, under a Polish violinist named Alexander Kontorowicz. Yewubdar returned to Ethiopia accompanied by Kontorowicz and she served as administrative assistant in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and later in the Imperial Body Guard where Kontorowicz was appointed by the Emperor Haile Selassie as music director of the band. Despite the difficult life in religious order and the limited appreciation for her music in traditional Ethiopian culture, Emahoy worked fervently day and night. Often she played up to nine hours a day and went on to write many compositions for violin, piano and organ concerto. In early 1960s Emahoy lived in Gondar studying the religious music of St Yared, composer and father of Mahlet, the early Ethiopian religious music. On her daily trips to and from the church, she came across young students in Liturgy known as “yekolo temari” One day she asked why these young people sleep outdoor by the church gate. She was told they beg for food and lodging and are homeless while they pursue their education with the church. Emahoy was deeply moved by the sacrifices these young people made to study the Mahlet. Although I did not have money to give them, I was determined to use my music to help these and other young people to get an education, Emahoy told Alula Kebede in her interview on his Amharic radio program on the Voice of America. Musical Achievements Emahoy’s first record was released in Germany in 1967 with the help of Emperor Haile Selassie. Other recordings followed with the help of her sister Desta Gebru; the proceeds were used to help an orphanage for children of soldiers who died fighting at war. The Golden Years Emahoy left Ethiopia following her mother’s death in 1984 and fled to Jerusalem, Israel because socialist doctrine in Ethiopia during the reign of dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam attacked her religious beliefs. Emahoy is now 85 years old and she plays the piano at the monastery nearly seven hours a day, she continues to write new solo piano compositions. Emahoy has been recognized by many music critics around the world and there is a growing interest in her life and her music by international media including Le Monde, BBC, and Canada TV. She appears on the 2006 CD: Éthiopiques Volume 21: Ethiopia Song, Emahoy Tsegue-Mariam Gebrou Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.