Husein Aidid | |
Native Name: | حسين عيديد |
Native Name Lang: | ar |
Birth Name: | Husein |
Birth Date: | 1913 |
Birth Place: | Pekojan, Tambora, Jakarta |
Origin: | Jakarta, Indonesia |
Death Date: | September 13, |
Death Place: | Tanah Abang, Central Jakarta |
Genre: | Gambus |
Years Active: | 1947–1962 |
Label: | Bali record |
Past Members: |
|
Husein Aidid (Arabic: حسين عيديد|Ḥusayn ʻAydīd, pronounced as /ar/; born 1913) was an Indonesian songwriter, singer and entrepreneur. Aidid was the founder and leader of the Orkes Gambus al-Usysyaaq (founded in 1947) which later became transformed into the Orkes Melayu Kenangan in 1950. Together with his new Malay Orchestra, on October 26, 1950, Aidid began its first broadcast on Radio Republik Indonesia and was broadcast nationally. At that time, RRI was the most popular entertainment facilities of society.
Aidid died in September 13, 1965.
Aidid was born in an Arab village in Pekojan, West Jakarta in 1913. He came from the family of Ba 'Alawi sada of Arab Hadhrami descent surnamed Aidid (Arabic: عيديد|ʻAydīd, pronounced as /ar/), his father was Alwi bin Abubakar Aidid, while his mother was a Betawi girl named Fatimah.[1] He studied at Kampong Djawa-Batavia Centrum School, majoring in Metalworking.[2]
Aidid married a Betawi girl named Saodah and had six children, three boys and three girls. They are Alwi Husein Aidid, Fatmah Husein Aidid, Faisyi Husein Aidid, Abubakar Husein Aidid, Farhana Husein Aidid, and Hamid Husein Aidid.
Since young, Aidid has been wrestling with the music world. He studied music to Sardi, the father of a legendary violinist Idris Sardi. The instruments he used to play were piano and violin. With his piano he could create and orchestrate a song, then poured in a special music book.
In 1947, Aidid along with other Pekojan youths founded a gambus orchestra named al-Usysyaaq, with Aidid as its leader. Although at the beginning of the emergence of this gambus orchestra has not been able to penetrate Radio Republik Indonesia, but the performance of the gambus orchestra unexpectedly got a good response from the people of Jakarta who, at that time, were fond of the Malay rhythmic songs, like qanbūs music.