Kazem Al Saher
The Impossible Love
Compact
Disc: Mondo Melodia 168 850 016 2
Genre: Popular
Arabian love ballads
By Srajan Ebaen
Since the zenith of Oum Kalthoum, and with more than
30 million of his own sold albums under the belt, Kazem Al Saher has developed
into the biggest vocal sensation the Middle East has seen yet. Initially
self-taught from listening to famous composers on the radio, he was accepted
into the Baghdad Museum Academy when he embraced the oud as his instrument.
Still, despite constant rebukes from commercial producers, Al Saher kept
steadfast to his dream of making it as a singer. When a video of his song “The
Snake Bite” was secretly maneuvered into an Iraqi television broadcast just
after the Iran-Iraq war, the authorities demanded that he change the lyrics or
have the song banned. His refusal only enhanced his growing popularity when he
followed up instead with concert tours and recordings for different Kuwait
labels. Though the conservatory kept denouncing his music as pop, by now Al
Saher had successfully slipped the establishment’s grip on his very own terms.
However, he then returned to the classical roots and embraced the classic
Arabian idiom to release a recording that revisited traditional Iraqi maqams
(Arabian music modes) not explored in public in a long time. By 1998, his
repute had grown beyond pop star status and he was recognized as a bona-fide
artist, even recording a tribute to the Pope with the Italian Symphony
Orchestra.
Kazem is fond of the
grand and epic sweep of a classical orchestra’s massive string section to
support his long-arcing ballads. As the title gives away, The Impossible
Love album revolves around the perennial theme of love in all of its myriad
forms - from unrequited to blissfully merging, from a son’s devotion to his
aging father to the longing for reunion after prolonged separation. Quite
unlike Western pop sound bytes that rely on repetition, catchy hooks and short
durations, Al Saher’s ballads are complexly developed symphonic events with
full back-up chorus in the traditional question-and-answer style which, like
title track, can span up to eight minutes. With a firm footing in the classical
tradition, his sentimental and passionate lyrics don’t degenerate into the
common syrupy effect of popular love songs. Granted, the rhythmic accompaniment
and occasional appearance of synthesizers are clearly poised for mass appeal.
However, his commanding voice in the melismatic style of the Orient and the
sheer sophistication of the compositions point beyond far beyond Pop triteness.
He clearly takes his place alongside fellow Mondo Melodia artists George
Dalaras, Cheb Mami, and Faudel, all of whom are top performers in their
respective hard-to-pigeon-hole categories. Sometimes the Pop moniker really
does epitomize popularity for all the right reasons. It certainly does here.
Mondo Melodia is to be highly complimented for issuing Al Saher’s first US
release.