Abu Bakr Salem Balfaqih | |||||||||||
Occupation: | Singer, composer | ||||||||||
Years Active: | 1956–2017 | ||||||||||
Native Name: | أبو بكر سالم بلفقية | ||||||||||
Native Name Lang: | ar | ||||||||||
Birth Date: | 17 March 1939 | ||||||||||
Birth Place: | Tarim, Sultanate of Tarim, Aden Protectorate | ||||||||||
Death Place: | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | ||||||||||
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Abu Bakr Salem Balfaqih (Arabic: أبو بكر سالم بلفقية) (17 March 1939 – 10 December 2017) was a Yemeni-Saudi singer, poet, and composer of Hadhrami origins. He is also nicknamed 'Abu Aseel, The Father of Khaliji Music (Arabic: أبو الغناء الخليجي|link=no)[1] and 'the one with the golden larynx' (Arabic: صاحب الحنجرة الذهبية|link=no). Abu Bakr is known in the Arab world for his unique voice.[2]
Some of Abu Bakr's patriotic odes to Yemen celebrated historical events such as the abolition of the monarchy in the north in 1962, the independence of the south in 1967, and the unification of both the South and North Yemen in 1990, as well as songs in honour of his home region, Hadhramaut. In addition to the Yemeni nationality, Abu Bakr also held Saudi nationality after he moved to Saudi Arabia in the 70's. He worked with other Khaliji music pioneers including Talal Maddah, Tariq Abdul-Hakim and Shadi Gulf.[3] His last release was a duet with young Yemeni singer and winner of the "Khaleeji Star" (a singing competition on the television) Fouad Abdulwahed.
Abu Bakr was born on 17 March 1939, in Tarim, a historic town situated in the Hadhramaut Valley in the south of Yemen.[4] His family was from the Ba 'Alawi sada. After his father died he was raised by his mother, grandfather, and uncles.[5] His grandfather Abdel Rahman Balfaqih was a poet in Hadramaut.[6]
While he was a teenager he was asked to perform the Adhan call to prayer in mosques in Tarim. When he became insightful about both poetry and Islamic studies. When he was 17 years old he wrote his first poem: 'You are the most beautiful among all roses'. In his 20s, he started singing Nasheeds and Moashahs locally. He brought together all the poems that he turned into songs into one book that he called "A poet First, a Singer Afterwards." He started composing folk songs when he moved from Tarim to Aden which at the time was experiencing a cultural and musical boom, home to rising artists such as the Yemeni poet Lutfi Jafar Iman, and the singers Ahmed Bin Ahmed Qasim and Muhammad Saad Abdullah.
He studied at a teachers' institute in Yemen. He also worked as a teacher for three years, drawing on his training at a teachers' institute, before shifting to the art scene.
Before drawing his path in the music world, Abu Bakr worked as a teacher for three years.
Abu Bakr began singing at organized parties and events and performed on Aden TV. In 1956, he made his big hit through a broadcast with his first song using his first poem Ya Ward Mahla Jamalak.
Later in his career, Abu Bakr brought together all the poems that he turned into songs into one book that he called A Poet First, a Singer Afterwards. Inspired by the amount of positive feedback that he received after his first appearance on TV and after his hit on the broadcast in Aden, Abu Bakr dedicated two years of hard work to focus on his music career. Within these two years, he regularly released songs including Lima Alqee Al Habib, Khaf Rabek, Ya habib, and Ya Kahef Al Rouh.
In 1958, Abu Bakr left to Beirut to find more opportunities as it had a well established regional music hub through its plethora of performance venues, radio stations, and well-designed recording studios. He released a series of popular singles such as 24 Saa'ah (24 hours) which sold more than one million copies and became a hit in the Arab world in a relatively short time. It is still considered one of the classics of the Arabic music Tarab genre. Abu Bakr fled Beirut when the Lebanese Civil War broke out in 1975.
After leaving Beirut, Abu Bakr settled in the capital city of Saudi Arabia, Riyadh. In Saudi Arabia, the Yemeni poet Hussein Abu Bakr Al-Mehdhar wrote most of Abu Bakr's greatest songs and in return, Abu Bakr sang Hussein's greatest and most memorable compositions. Abu Bakr held concerts across the Gulf countries, drawing large crowds.[2]
Abu Bakr was married to two women both of Yemeni origin. His son Aseel Abu Bakr Salem followed his steps and he made a strong entrance to the world of Khaleeji music when he joined his father in the song "A Sun Between You and Me." The song immediately became a hit and remained at the top of charts for a time.
Abu Bakr suffered from health problems for the last ten years of his life. He had an open heart surgery and suffered a kidney failure when he was being treated in Munich, Germany. He was admitted in a clinic for several months afterwards.[9] He also went at intermittent periods to King Faisal Specialist Hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. His last public appearance was on the Saudi National Day celebration at the Red Sea city of Jeddah in September 2017. He was not able to continue singing, however, due to his long-term illness. He died three months later on 10 December 2017, at the age of 78 years.