![]() Overhearing her father teaching songs to her older brother, she memorized the tunes and sang them herself. Much of her love of music was inherited from her father, who supplemented his income as an imam at a local mosque by singing religious songs at weddings. In an article for Harvard Magazine, Virginia Danielson, author of The Voice of Egypt: Umm Kulthum, Arabic Song and Egyptian Society in the Twentieth Century, wrote, "Imagine a singer with the virtuosity of Joan Sutherland or Ella Fitzgerald, the public persona of Eleanor Roosevelt and the audience of Elvis and you have Umm Kulthum, the most accomplished singer of her century in the Arab world".īorn in the rural village of Tammy al-Zahayrah, Kulthum was raised in very humble conditions. ![]() ![]() This sign of affection and respect was the culmination of a career that had begun nearly six decades before. With the streets of Cairo lined by several million mourners, Kulthum's fans took her body from the shoulders of of the official pallbearers and passed her from person to person for the three-hour-long journey to the mosque of al-Sayyid Husayn. The reception accorded the death of Umm Kulthum showed how powerful and beloved the Egyptian vocalist had become.
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