Success stories of Palestinian achievers from all over the world

Halim Al-Roumi

Personal Info

  • Country of residence: Lebanon
  • Gender: Male
  • Born in: 1919
  • Age: 104
  • Curriculum vitae :

Information

Halim Al Roumi (1919 - November 1, 1983) was a Lebanese musician and composer. His original name is Hanna Awad Baradei. He was named after the Roumi family because the family belongs to the Roman Catholic sect. He is the father of singer Majida El Roumi.

about him
Halim Al-Roumi was born in 1919, and as the references indicate, he was born in the city of Tyre, in southern Lebanon. The family moved to Haifa in Palestine, and Halim after two years of age. He joined the Conservatory in Haifa when he was still young, and participated in the concerts and festivals that were held there. In the early forties, he worked at the Near East Radio in Jaffa as a singer, composer and musician, and the radio approved him as the first artist in all celebrations and events. In the same period, he won the prize for composing the anthem of the Jordanian Arab Army, after that he took over the presidency of the musical department at the Near East Radio, he contributed to its establishment and reorganization until it became one of the most important radio stations in the Middle East. In July 1949, he married an Egyptian woman from Port Said (sources indicate her Palestinian origins) named Mary Lutfi, and he had four children: Maha, Mona, Magda (who became a professional singer), and Awad.

his artistic beginnings
He began his musical studies at the only conservatory in Haifa, and he was accepted into it at the age of sixteen, in recognition of his talent, although admission to this institute was limited to students who had completed eighteen years of age. It is said that his father, Awad, had a beautiful voice, but he did not sing.

Halim Al-Roumi began his artistic career in 1935 as an amateur, so he participated in some private concerts, theater concerts and festivals in Haifa. In the summer of 1936, he sang for the first time in Lebanon, in one of Broumana resort hotels, along with some famous Lebanese singers at that time, such as: Gram Chiba, Laure Daccache, and Wadih El Safi... His voice and performance impressed Mr. Mounir Dallah, who helped him enter the Institute. Fouad I taught Arabic music in Cairo in 1937, where he completed his musical studies in two years instead of six years, and obtained a diploma in 1939, which was considered at the time a precedent that did not occur in the history of the institute.

His artistic life in Egypt
His artistic life in Egypt began before obtaining a diploma, so he gave his first concert on the Egyptian radio in 1938. In the first period, he used to call himself the unknown artist, because he felt responsible for his role as an artist and feared failure, but he soon knew success artistically and popularly, so he revealed His real name, and he began his activity on a large scale in radio, theaters, and performances as a singer and composer, and he established a special artistic personality for himself, which the Egyptian artists of that period testify to him. He was called "Khalifa Umm Kulthum" due to his distinguished performance.

Near East Broadcasting
In 1941, Al-Roumi returned to Palestine due to special family circumstances, which forced him to stay with his family. There, he began working at Near East Radio, as a singer, composer, and oud player. He was accredited by the administration as the first artist in all occasions and celebrations.

In 1942, he won the prize for composing the anthem of the Jordanian Arab Army, and that competition was held at the Near East Radio headquarters. In 1945, he traveled again to Cairo, where he met Mr. Ibrahim Warda, a well-known film producer in artistic circles. He was one of his father's friends, so he offered him cooperation with his company to star in two films. But his luck in the cinema was bad.

After his return to Haifa, he was appointed as an assistant in the music department of the Near East Radio. After a while, he assumed the presidency of the music department in it, and he contributed with remarkable effectiveness in organizing it and building its personality, until it became one of the most important radio stations in the Middle East.

Due to some psychological pressures as a result of work, Halim Al-Roumi left his job at Near East Radio, which had moved to Cyprus, and returned to Egypt to compose and sing. In 1948, he participated in composing some of the songs for two films: “Qamar 14” and “Salah al-Din al-Ayyubi”.

In Lebanon
Early January 1950 Halim went to Lebanon, to spend their honeymoon. He was offered a job in the Lebanese Radio for a short period, and his main task was to re-establish and organize the music department in it, and a work contract was arranged for him for only three months, as he was determined to return to the Near East Radio in Cyprus, but fate preceded him in the Lebanese Radio for thirty years from 1950 until July 1979. Appointed as head of the music department, then transferred to the position of head of the recording library department by assignment. He lived in Kfarshima, near the capital, Beirut, where he worked. He wrote his memoirs summarizing thirty years of serving the Lebanese Radio. These notes were later published in a book.

He worked hard to raise the level of the Lebanese song and build its personality. He also contributed to the establishment and organization of the radio music section on solid foundations, which were the main pillar in the development and prosperity of the Lebanese Radio, and in launching a large number of singers and artists.

He participated in the “Quarter Sound Conference in Arabic Music” that was held in Lebanon, at the invitation of the Ministry of Education and Fine Arts, on 10/1/1956 and lasted for a week. The conference was chaired by the Czech musician Alois Haba. Among those who participated in it: Assi, Mansour Al-Rahbani, Tawfiq Sukkar, Alexei Boutros, Boghos Jalalian, Halim Al-Roumi (representing the Ministry of News) and Sabri Sharif.

His daughter, Magda El Roumi
His daughter Magda El Roumi mastered art, despite his strong opposition, and he composed a number of songs for her, including “The Feast of the World, O Mothers”, “Lebanon is My Heart”. She also re-recorded some of his tunes. He called it "the voice of peace and the future."

his death
Diabetes, which he contracted at the beginning of his fourth decade, haunted him until the last days of his life, as a result of which his two legs were amputated, one after the other, and his vision became scarce until it was completely extinguished. He died on November 1, 1983, and joined the convoy of creators who devoted their lives and donations to Lebanon.

His writings
Memoirs of Halim Al-Roumi, printed and published by Riyadh Al-Rayes House 1992

Achievements and Awards

His awards and works
He won the first prize in the Andalusian Muwashahat Composition Competition, which was organized by the Academy of Arab Music in Tunisia in 1972. He composed the following Muwashahat: “Yarno with a lukewarm end” (old poetry), “Oh, O Ahel Al-Hay” (arranged by the poet Ibn Zumrak), and “It is necessary to be thankful.” On us” (arranged by the poet Ibn Al-Khatib). The muwashshah was dealt with in a new way, which is the repetition of the group for the first verse of it (the qaflah) and after each of its parts, or the chanting of parts of the khans in which the singer is alone. Thus, Halim Al-Roumi combined the Egyptian style with the Aleppine style in performing the muwashshah, abbreviating the chanting of the group.

He produced a lot of diverse musical and lyrical tunes, amounting to about two thousand different works of art, including about five hundred and fifty tunes for the Lebanese Radio alone, broadcast live or recorded with his voice or the voices of the most beautiful and famous Lebanese and Arab singers, which he had the greatest credit for discovering, training, teaching and releasing some of them. . He was the one who introduced Fayrouz to the brothers Assi and Mansour Rahbani in 1951 AD. He composed and took the hand of his daughter Magda Al-Roumi. Muhammad, Fayza Ahmed, Nasri Shams al-Din, Nazik, and Nouna El Hana also presented, encouraged, and encouraged.

His works, in their entirety, were characterized by depth and artistic originality, dealing with all the lyrical and musical colors known in Arabic singing, and his production was distinguished especially by poems, muwashahat and operettas. The most important of which are: the poems “The Will of the People,” “A Flash on the Banks of the Nile,” “Perfume” and “The Lake”; and stanzas of “sorrow overcame him, so he wept”, “he yearns with a lukewarm side”, “Oh, the people of the neighborhood”and “we must be thankful”; and the operettas “The Three Drops”, “Majnoun Layla”and “Abu Al-Zaluf”; And the songs “Don’t Get Angry”, “Saluna” and “Here We Meet Only”. He was also the first to compose a poem for Abu al-Qasim al-Shabi, which was “The Will of Life.”

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