Amazon.com
For this album, released in 1990 and still the best compilation of modern Egyptian music around, David Lodge divvied Egyptian pop into working-class
shaabi music and the upscale, educated, urban
al-jil ("generation") sound, and devotes six rambunctiously appealing tracks to each. In
al-jil the ongoing struggle between Islamic conservatism and a secular society tempted by Western ways is acted out in jumpy synthesizer rhythms and cautious, carefully monitored lyrics sung by some of the world's most sensuous singers. So-called
shaabi music, on the other hand, is a funkier, rootsier reaction by Arab "country" singers to the wayward politics and pitfalls of urban life. The instruments are acoustic and traditional, the lyrics often socially conscious, and the emotions fervent. Relatively untouched by the West, Egyptian music provides a unique sonic entryway into a truly different cultural universe.
---Richard Gehr
Yalla: Hitlist Egypt,Various Artists,Mango,80's,90's,Afro-Pop,Al-Jil,Arabic,Egypt,Int'l & World Music,Middle East,Middle Eastern Pop,North Africa,Pop,Shaabi,World,World Music,Worldbeat
Average customer rating:
- We Eih Ya'ni !!!
- Wonderful
- Irresistible party/dance/whirl-around-the-house recording
- An Excellnt Introduction to Shaabi and Al-Jeel!
- A 1990 compilation with some useful education
|
Yalla: Hitlist Egypt
Various Artists
Manufacturer: Mango
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Egypt
| Africa
| International
| Styles
| Music
General
| Africa
| International
| Styles
| Music
General
| International
| Styles
| Music
General
| Middle East
| International
| Styles
| Music
Arabic
| Middle East
| International
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| Music
General
| Pop
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| Music
1980s
| By Decade
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
1990s
| By Decade
| Pop
| Styles
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1980-1989
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| Compilations
| Miscellaneous
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1990-1999
| Decades
| Compilations
| Miscellaneous
| Styles
| Music
ASIN: B000003QK6
Release Date: 1990-09-14 |
Tracks:
- Al Jeel: Ei Yaani - Amr Diab
- Al Jeel: Besma - Hanan
- Al Jeel: Masakeen - Ehab
- Al Jeel: Sif Safaa - Mohamed Moneer
- Balsam Shafee - Khedr
- Al Jeel: Ya Ramal - Adel El Musree
- Shaabi: Elli Shatr Enhaa Tgannen - Sami Ali & Sahar Hamdy
- Shaabi: Kitab Hayarti - Hassan El Asmar
- Shaabi: Ya Dunnya Ley - Magdy Shabeeni
- Shaabi: Yalle Khadak Habibi - Magdy Talaat
- Shaabi: Akhar Saah - Shaaban Abdel Raheen
- Shaabi: Mish Haseebak - Hassan El Asmar
Amazon.com
For this album, released in 1990 and still the best compilation of modern Egyptian music around, David Lodge divvied Egyptian pop into working-class shaabi music and the upscale, educated, urban al-jil ("generation") sound, and devotes six rambunctiously appealing tracks to each. In al-jil the ongoing struggle between Islamic conservatism and a secular society tempted by Western ways is acted out in jumpy synthesizer rhythms and cautious, carefully monitored lyrics sung by some of the world's most sensuous singers. So-called shaabi music, on the other hand, is a funkier, rootsier reaction by Arab "country" singers to the wayward politics and pitfalls of urban life. The instruments are acoustic and traditional, the lyrics often socially conscious, and the emotions fervent. Relatively untouched by the West, Egyptian music provides a unique sonic entryway into a truly different cultural universe. ---Richard Gehr
Customer Reviews:
We Eih Ya'ni !!!.......2006-09-08
Wow, 5 years later I actually come to find this CD is available on Amazon??:)) I got it from one of my best friends from college who's Egyptian. He played it once and as soon as I heard the first song, I was obsessed with it so I asked to borrow the whole thing - and kept it for 5 years. It's funny to see it online after I just returned it to him last week - Aug'06. I love it and am so obsessed with being able to sing the lyrics along that I started studying Arabic - and I'm Bulgarian! Talk about inspiration:) The CD is super old but I recommend it to everybody - and definitely check out the latest from Amr Diab! He's a huge megastar of Arabic pop!
Wonderful.......2004-01-21
I love,love,love this CD. I especially like
Amr Diab's song "Ei Yaani". I'm an Amr Diab fan.
I highly recomend this CD for anyone who likes Arabic music.
Irresistible party/dance/whirl-around-the-house recording.......2002-03-10
A friend gave Yalla to me a few years ago. He heard it in a little combo exotic food/CD store, and bought it immediately. I in turn was on my feet within seconds of putting it on. Someone on epinions said it was just for belly dancers. So untrue! But perhaps that reaction came because you move differently to this hybrid though very Eastern recording than you do to straight Western rock (which I'm more familiar with - and these days, in 2002, so much of music is hybrid anyway). It's much more unpredictable,faster (sometimes frenetic - I usually tire out before the end,as I did a couple of minutes ago, prompting me to sit down and write a review!), sexier. This is one of my all-time favorite recordings, and it belongs on a multi-CD player at a great party. Or, with equal enjoyment, "in the privacy of your home."
An Excellnt Introduction to Shaabi and Al-Jeel!.......2002-03-05
I went to great lengths to track down this CD, on recommendations of one of my friends who actually is from Egypt, and let me tell you, it was well worth the time and effort I spent to find it. This CD is an excellent introduction to modern Egyptian pop music, namely Al-Jeel and Shaabi music. The CD is divided into two sections, one dedicated to Al-Jeel, which is a sort of techno-pop style, originating in the '80s, and melding Bedouin, Nubian, Lybian and Egyptian styles into something new, yet uniquely Egyptian. As an admited fan of Al-Jeel music, I was very pleased with the selections, which includes such greats as Amr Diab, Hanan, Ehab and Khedr, though I would have also included Hamid Shaeri, but oh well. C'est la vie. The second set is dedicated to Shaabi, which is the modernized music of the working class people of the cities, often with controversial lyrics. Again, the selections are excellent.
Both the Al-Jeel and Shaabi selection are broken down into six selections each, so you get pretty good exposure to both. A word of caution though. As one reviewer commented, most of the songs on here are a bit dated. They are still excellent choices, mind you, but there are so many new releases, and new names, that this CD couldn't possibly reveal everything about Egyptian pop. Still, considering how hard it is to get a hold of Egyptian pop music in the United States, this might still be your best introduction. And if your already a fan, why not. Its still an excellent compilation.
A 1990 compilation with some useful education.......2001-02-01
"Yalla!" = "Let's go!" -- The title implies that this is just another compilation of current Arab-world hits. Well, it used to be. But this album was done in 1990 and much has changed in the world of pop since then. However, even in 1990, this album is really much more than a simple compilation. It's a bit of an education, too. I would have bought it for the liner notes alone. Sure, you like this music, but do you REALLY KNOW what "Jeel" music is? What "Shaabi" music is? It's all explained here and there are little (very little) descriptions of each of the singers. As far as the music is concerned, it's divided into two groups, as Richard Gehr describes in his "Editorial Review" at the top of this list of reviews here on Amazon. I have a bit of a problem with the music in that it is all ten (or more) years old and the quality of Arab pop music production both jeel and shaabi (and Sudanese, too -- there's one cut of Sudanese pop) has greatly improved since then (I'm writing this in 2001). So, frankly, compared to what you hear on the great "Camelspotting" compilation (don't miss that one!!) and in current releases like the spectacular "Tamally Maak" album from Amr Diab (or the latest from Abdel Gadir Selim in Sudan), the 'quality' of this music sounds somewhat teeny bopperish by comparison. Not 'bad' -- just 'not as great.' Still I'm glad I bought it. By the way: the late '80s also seem to have been a period of very heavy westernization of Arab music. The characteristic 5-note scale of Arab music is completely absent from many (not all) of these cuts: Nearly every song is heavily influenced by the Western tonal model. Today's pop sounds significantly more Arab than most of these cuts.
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