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Artist
Mohammed Wardi began singing at the age of five; his first hit was in 1960, and he still has the most extraordinary effect on a Sudanese audience, having come to embody the collective memories and aspirations of an entire nation. Mohammed Wardi sings not only in Arabic but also in his native Nubian - a quite different sound from Ali Hassan Kuban - drawing on 7,000 years of culture. The soaring voice of "golden throat" Mohammed Wardi has won acclaim right across the African Sahel and the Arab world. Although this singer from Nubia was in exile for 13 years starting from 1989 (back 2003), his music always stirs emotion for many Sudanese, sometimes with directly political allusion - to the October 1964 popular uprising, for example - and sometimes more obliquely, but always with powerful resonance. He was born in 1932 near old Wadi Halfa. Schooled across the border in Egypt, he returned as an elementary school teacher, then moved to Khartoum in 1957 and became a professional singer two years later. Four decades and 300 songs later, he can stand on a stage, hand in pocket, the epitome of relaxation, leaving the audience to complete the lines of a song - and make the hairs stand up on the back of your neck. He's had spells in jail which only confirmed his popularity; at a human rights demonstration outside the Sudan Embassy, his unaccompanied voice galvanised the spirit of an otherwise sombre gathering. But the most compelling occasion of all must be his 1990 concert at Itang, te
Al Sourah (The Photo)

Two Niles to Sing a Melody: The Violins & Synths of Sudan

The Rough Guide To The Music Of Sudan
Live In Addis Ababa - 1994
2004 - The Rough Guide to The Music of Sudan
The rough guide to Sudan
Two Niles to Sing a Melody: The Violins Synths of Sudan
Live in Addis Ababa
Www.TeShamo.Com

Live in Addis Abeba, 1994
Two Niles to Sing a Melody: The Violins & Synths of Sudan (2018, Ostinato)
Live In Addis Ababa, 1994