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*Free UK Delivery over £75 -- Or Collect Free from your nearest Assai Records Store*
*Free UK Delivery over £75 -- Or Collect from your nearest Assai Records Store*

Born In The City Of Tanta: Lower Egyptian Urban Folklore And Bedouin Shaabi From Libya's Bourini Records 1968-75 Vinyl LP Due Out 18/04/25

Original price £0
Original price £29.99 - Original price £29.99
Original price
Current price £29.99
£29.99 - £29.99
Current price £29.99
Cat no. SF127
Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 18th April, 2025

Tracklist:

1. Basis Rahouma - ???? ?????,- Yana Alla Nafsa Masouda ???? ???? ???? ?????? (Blocked from What I Want)
2. Sheikh Amin Abde -l Qader ????? ???? ??? ??????, Mould fi Madina Tanta ???? ?? ????? ???? (Born in the City of Tanta)
3. Samah ????, - Shawish Aldawriat ????? ???????, (Patrol Sargeant)
4. Mahmoud al-Sandidi ????? ????????, - Ana Mish Hafwatak (Part 2) ??? ?? ?????, (I Don’t Miss Your Love)
5. Abu Bakr Abdel Aziz (aka Abu Abab) ??? ??? ??? ??????,- Al Bint al Libya ?? ???? ?? ????? (The Girl from Libya)
6. Sheikh Amin Abdel Qader ????? ???? ??? ??????, - Mawal Al Layl Kolo Makasib ???? ????? ??? ????? (Mawaal: The Spoils of an All-Nighter)
7. Abu Saber ??? ????, - Ya Allah Ank Zinat ?? ???? ??? ???? (Oh, God, You Are Beautiful)
8. Reem Kamal ??? ????, - Baed Al Yas Yjini ??? ????? ????? (After Hopelessness, He Comes to Me)

Egypt’s “official” popular music throughout much of the 20th Century was a complex form of art song steeped in tradition, well-loved by the middle and upper classes, and even accommodating to certain non-Arabic influences. It was highly structured by professional musicians working an established industry centered in the capitol, Cairo.

However, far from the bustling cosmopolitan center of Cairo, north and northwest, in towns like Tanta and Alexandria and extending across the Saharan Desert to the Libyan border, dozens of fully marginalized artists were developing a raw, hybrid shaabi/al-musiqa al-shabiya style of music, supported by smaller upstart, independent labels, including the short-lived but deeply resonant Bourini Records. Launched in the late 1960s in Benghazi, Libya, Astuanat al-Bourini ???????? ???????? (Bourini Records) published some 40 to 50 titles from 1968 to 1975. Bourini released 7-inch 45 RPM singles by 15 artists, all but one of them Egyptian, igniting brief careers for Alexandrian singer Sheikh Amin Abdel Qader and the blind Bedouin legend Abu Bakr Abdel Aziz (aka Abu Abab).

The tracks compiled here comprise a full range of styles covered by the label, while highlighting some of its most gob smacking moments, from Basis Rahouma’s beastly transformation into a growling and barking man-lion by the end of “Yana Alla Nafsa Masouda,” to Reem Kamal’s hopeful-if-bitter handclapping party pivot “Baed Al Yas Yjini,” which descends into an almost Velvet Underground outro-groove of nihilistic dissonance.

All the tracks on this compilation were laid down in stark divergence from the mainstream Egyptian popular music topography of heightened emotions buoyed by lush arrangements. The contrast is most evident in Mahmoud al-Sandidi’s “Ana Mish Hafwatak,” wherein his voice weaves heavily but deftly through a constant accordion drone, and Abu Abab’s “Al Bint al Libya,” a sparse, slow-burning lament with minimal percussion, violin, and Abab’s nephew Hamed Abdel Muna'im Mursi on lyre.

Whereas the Egyptian mainstream was aspirational, attempting to reflect Egyptian culture at its most refined, the performances captured by Bourini were manifestations of everyday life lived by the mostly otherwise ignored masses.

More than half century old, this music has lost none of its urgency, presence, or relevance. We hear these artists as if they’d just joined us in our living room, and not on a stage decades ago surrounded by tens of thousands of long-forgotten acolytes.