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Abdo Mousa عبده موسى | |
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Born | 1927 [1] Irbid |
Died | 1977 (aged 49–50) [1] |
Genres | Arabic music, Bedouin music |
Instrument | Rebab |
Years active | 1960s-1970s [1] |
Abdo Mousa (Arabic: عبده موسى) is a Jordanian singer, composer, and rebab player, active in the 1960s and 1970s. A member of Jordan's Bani Murra, a Dom community in Jordan known for their musical talents,[2] Mousa rose to prominence writing, composing, and performing Bedouin folklore music, becoming an icon of Jordanian heritage and among the most notable rebab musicians in Jordan.[3]
Orphaned and illiterate since early childhood, [4] Mousa's talent was discovered by Jordanian Prime Minister Hazza' Majali, who had heard him playing the rebab, then referring him to join Jordan TV by 1958.[1][5] Mousa was a favorite of many notable figures in Jordan; he was known to entertain dignitaries in King Hussein's palace,[2][4] and Prime Minister Wasfi Tal hired a tutor to teach him him to read and write.[1]
Mousa composed music for many notable Arab singers, including Samira Tewfik, Salwa al-Aas, Suad Tawfik, and others.[5]