Salah Abd al-Hayy was the last outstanding Egyptian singer of classical 
Arabic music as it was performed around the turn of the century by great singers 
like Yūsuf al-Manyalāwī (1847-1911), his uncle ‘Abd al-Ḥayy Ḥilmī (1857-1912) and Sayyid 
al-Ṣaftī (1875-1939). During his lifetime Egytian music went through quite drastic changes, personified by the famous Om Kalthoum. Salah Abd al-Hayy seems to have been the only singer who refused the huge orchestras of the time and stuck to the small classical arab ensemble, the Takht, consisting of 'Ud, Qanun, Ney, violin, and one or two percussionists.
He also stuck to the classic Wasla (Maqam suite) consisting of a metrical introduction, a Taqsim (non-metrical instrumental improvisation on 'Ud or Qanun), a Layali (a great non-metrical vocal improvisation supported by an 'Ud or Qanun) and some metrical compositions at the end.
Unfortunately this music seems hardly to exist since after his death anymore in Egypt, except in a very marginal way. See for example the beautiful piece by Ibrahim El-Haggar here. We will post a broadcast by him in the future.
Here we present an old LP - I have no idea when it was released: maybe in the 1950s or 1960s - with one of his well-known compositions in the Wasla format. The piece covers both sides.
"Born in Cairo to a family of musicians (his uncle was ̕Abd al-Hay Hilmî), 
he was trained with the Sahbageyya groups and then with the Muhammad ̕ Umar and 
̕Ali al-Rashidi groups. He started his career with his uncle’s repertoire. He 
reached his glory in the middle of the 1920s. His powerful and moving voice made 
him the last brilliant representative of the Khedivial aesthetics in its 
improvising dimension. An ardent defender of the takht, he was the first singer 
broadcasted on national radio in May 1934 without, however, renewing his 
repertoire."
Around 15 or 20 years ago there existed some (I think 4) CDs by him, manufactured by the Saudi Arabian CD company Sidi. Nowadays one can't find them anymore anywhere.
But in the internet one can find many recordings by him: on all the downloading and streaming sites (Amazon, Deezer, Qobuz (flac format) etc.) and also on YouTube, especially if one puts in his name with arabic letters: صالح عبد الحي 
About the artist see:
A few years ago a wonderful set of four CDs by his 
uncle Abd Al-Hayy Hilmi was published. It can be obtained from: info@raga-maqam-dastgah.com.
Abd Al-Hayy Hilmi (1857-1912) (Vocal) – An Anthology – Une Anthologie, Set 
of 4 CDs containing 45 recordings + 1 booklet in English, French and 
Arabic,
CD 1: Odeon 1903-1910 - Dawr - 'ahd el-ekhewwa (7:45), Dawr - gaddedi ya 
nafsi hazzek (7:15), Dawr - sallemte ruhak (6:56), Muwashshah - ya nahif 
al-qawam (3:46), Muwashshah - waghak mushriq (3:50), Taqtuqa - 'amara ya'ammura 
(4:05), Dawr - el-hobbe sabbahni'adam (7:35), Dawr - enta farid fel-hosn (7:00), 
Dawr - el-hosn ana'eshe'to (10:52), Dawr - fe maglis el-'ons el-hani (6:07), 
Dawr - bustan gamalak (9:37).
CD 2: Zonophone / Early Gramophone 1906-1909 - Dawr - el-bolbol gani 
(9:37), Dawr - ahin en-nafs (15:52), Dawr - ana 'a'sha'fi zamani (9:36), Dawr - 
el-warde fo' wagnat bahiyy el-gamal (12:49), Muwashshah - atani zamani (10:26), 
Dawr - la ya en (9:01), Mawwal - ya mufrad el-ghid (4:29), Qasida 'ala l-wahda - 
fa-ya muhgati dhubi gawan (4:26).
CD 3: Late Gramophone (1909-1910) - Taqsim layali, taqtuqa - 'idil-yamin 
(9:04), Taqtuqa - ya nakhleten fel-'alali (4:38), Taqsim layali, mawwal - ya 
hadiya l-'is (8:44), Muwashshah - nahat fa-'agabtuha (4:40), Muwashshah - hati 
ayyuha s-saqi (4:05), Qasida 'ala l-wahda - a-saqiyaya 'a-khamrun fi ku'usikuma 
(3:55), Taqsim layali, mawwal - la tehsibu inn el-be'ad (4:04), Dawr - el''albe 
dab es'efini (8:07), Taqsim layali, mawwal - sahi l-gefun (4:18), Mawwal - amr 
el-gharam (4:03), Taqsim layali, qasida mursala - lla muhayyaka nuru l-badr 
(8:16), Dawr - min habbak 'awla be-'urbak (6:19), Qasida 'ala l-wahda - a-la fi 
sabili l-lah (6:26).
CD 4: Baidaphone 1911-1912 - Qasida 'ala-wahda - shakawtu fa-qalat (4:14), 
Qasida mursala - a-lasta wa'adtani (4:14), Qasida 'ala l-wahda - araka 'asiyya 
d-dam'i (8:09), Mawwal - sabah es-sabah (4:07), Qasida mursala - 'umri 'alayka 
tashawwuqan (3:47), Dawr - ma-ahebbe gherak (10:45), Mawwal - ya di 'l-gamal 
wed-dalal (3:18), Muwashshah - ya laylu 'inna l-habiba wafa & muwashshah - 
gusnu banin gabinuhu (7:01), Du'a - ye'ish khedewi masr (7:18), Dawr - ya masr' 
unsek 'al (4:00), Muwashshah - ya akhal el-'en (4:13), Qasida mursala - tih 
dalalan (4:01), Dawr - maliki ana 'abdak (7:20), AMAR - Foundation for Arab 
Music Archiving and Research
”Abd al-Hayy Hilmi, a talismanic artist in a non-conformist style of the 
Arab intellectual and cultural renaissance (the Nahda). At the turn of the 20th 
century, he was the king of Tarab (music). He was maverick in life, just like 
the way he sang. His personal versions of the songs that were the most performed 
are surprisingly outspoken and free, illustrated by immediate compositional 
improvisation. We present in this box set of 4 Cds, including 45 recordings 
featuring all the styles Hilmi sang in and which further represent different 
periods covering all the facets of this great singer’s artistry.
Abd al-Hay Hilmî, a seductive dandy, was the spoiled child of Egyptian high 
society at the turn of the century. He was noted for his odd manners; he would 
leave a concert he was hired for if he failed to notice a pleasant looking face, 
be it male or female, in the audience, and preferred to sing for handsome 
strangers. An obsessive drinker, he would also use various drugs to reach the 
state of saltana necessary to unleash his extemporizing creativity. He ended up 
worn by his excesses, which caused him an angina pectoris, and he died whilst 
drunken in Alexandria after a feast of sea turtle.
A whimsical character in his life, as well as in his art, he was often 
summing up the introduction and livening up the composed thread of the melody. 
He would neglect entire sections so as to privilege one verse, one standstill in 
a particular modal color to which he added a tragic and hallucinated touch, 
displaying a wide range of virtuosic effects expressing emotions, shifting from 
long melodic phrases to a jerky staccato, interrupting the instruments with 
another dramatic piece of embroidery over the heady main theme. A self-taught 
artist in learned tradition, Abd al-Hay Hilmî insisted on ignoring the rules. 
His well-known lack of respect for rhythm and composition made him an easy 
target for harsh criticism from rigorists who were subjugated by Western 
patterns with their sanctification of the composer’s role. His passion naturally 
finds its best expression in mawawil, where non metrical improvisation is the 
only rule. In this field, he remains unmatchable.
A successful record-selling artist, he was first hired by Zonophone in 1906 
cutting his best discs ever inspite of poor technical quality. He then 
collaborated with the record companies installed in Egypt until his death, often 
recording the same works many times a year for the British Gramophone, Odeon and 
Baidaphon. A prodigal sybarite, he would receive from the companies important 
amounts of money, squander it and then be forced to repay his debts in terms of 
recordings. This is why, once, he mischievously added at the end of a qasîda 
rimed curses against the Gramophone Company, that went unnoticed.”


 
4 comments:
never thought I'd find him here! thx a lot tawfik <3
Thanks a ot Tawfiq, your collection is really amazing. hanks again for sharing it with us. ;-)
Very good, thanks...instead of raw WAV, I would suggest if you could you post these in a lossless format, like FLAC...saving some bandwidth
ممكن ترفعهم بصيغة mp3
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