Baligh Hamdi is tagged as: arabic, composer, egypt, world, ethnic Baligh Hamdi (بليغ حمدي) (Oct 7, 1932 - Sept 17, 1993) was an Egyptian composer who created hit songs for many prominent arabic singers, during the 1960s and 1970s especially. Born Baligh Abdel Hamid Hamdi Morsi in October 7, 1932 Shubra district of Cairo. His father was a professor of physics at King Fuad I University (now Cairo University). He learned to play the violin at age nine, and the oud two or three years later. He took music lessons with a variety of teachers throughout childhood and teenage years. He became a professional musician in 1954 at age 22. Immediately prior to that, he had been a law student, and he chose to not complete the studies for the law degree. He started his musician career as singer. But very soon he turned to composing, and his compositions got good acceptance in the mid-1950s. In the late 1950s the then-famous Oum Kalthoum sang his composition El Hob Eih and it was a hit. Some other of Baligh Hamdi’s early compositional successes include “Why no”, sung by Faydah Kamel, the song “Ma Thbinish Be Al Shakl Dah (Don’t love me like that)” by Fayza Ahmed and the song “Tkhounoh ([How do you] Betray [my heart])” by Abdel Halim Hafez. For the next two decades he was one of the most popular, succ... Read More About Baligh Hamdi Biography... Send Baligh Hamdi ringtones to your cell |
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