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Prominent Lebanese Celebreties | Nasri Shamesedine
Nasri Shamesedine
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Nasri Shamseddine & Fairuz |
His complete name is Nasreddin Moustapha Shamesedine. He
was a major figure in Fairuz's works. Born in the village of Joune (in the southern part
of the Chouf Mountain) in 1927, Nasri was a minor player when the Rahbanis launched the
Lebanese Popular Troupe in the late fifties. Initially, he was overshadowed by the
presence of Wadih al Safi, a major artist of Lebanon and the Middle East.
Wadih left the Rahbanis in 1961 to go on a solo career and
also to express his disagreement with Assi Rahbani who insisted on orchestrating the minor
details and preventing Wadih from freelance during the shows with his singing style.
(Wadih tended to go on with his songs over the prescribed time and to "play
around" with the tune that Assi thought to be perfect). Nasri was the best
replacement for Wadih.
Nasri was chosen not because he looked like Wadih (round
with almost no hair), but because he understood music and had superior vocals. Quickly he
became a favourite with the public, playing the roles of the village head (al Mokhtar),
the town policeman, the respectable member of the community, etc. He appeared in every
Fairuz show since 1961 until the civil war in 1975. His last participation was in 1979 in
Petra. He died in 1983.
Nasri left an important collection of solo songs that are
very popular in Lebanon. He published several albums with the label Voix de l'Orient. In
tribute, the label published a "Best Of" in 1998 that featured 24 of Nasri's
hits, including Tallou es Siyadi.
Nasri played in all three Fairuz motion pictures: as the
town guard and Fairuz's father in Bint al Hares (in fact the title of the film referred to
him" Daughter of the Town Guard); as the village head (mokhtar) and a revolutionary
(Safar Barlak); and as a mokhtar and Fairuz's uncle in Bayah al Khawatem. It was his dream
to star in films. That's why early in his career he traveled to Egypt. First he settled in
Alexanderia for six months where he worked for a while with Esmaeel Yassin and Mohamed
Abdelmoutaleb troupes. Then he moved to Cairo in order to work in the cinema. But he
didn't manage to and then returned to Lebanon where he, one day and while he was eating
beans, read that the Near East radio station wanted talented people to join the station's
choir. He met Sabri Sharif and was hired. Later he met with The Rahbani Brothers who gave
him roles in their sketches and then gave him his first song 'Ba7elefak Ya Tayr
Belfour'aa'
His albums are accessible through every record distributor
thanks to the Voix de l'Orient strong marketing. We know of three CDs by Nasri alone that
one can purchase. However, these CDs miss the musical dialogues between him and the other
artists, and the popular Lebanese musings he contributed in Fairuz's shows (mijana, ataba,
etc.). One can only appreciate Nasri's contribution by following his work in the complete
recordings of Fairuz's operas.
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