| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Leih Sebtaha (Why Did You Leave Her) is the fifteenth full-length Arabic studio album from Egyptian pop singer Angham, launched in Egypt in 2001 by Alam elPhan Production Company. The record comprises ballads primarily co-written by Angham[citation needed]and Bahaa elDeen Mohammad - with whom she had previously worked on "Betheb Meen" (Who Do You Love) (1997) - and a few urban and oriental dance tracks. Half of the entire tracks in this record was musically composed by Sheriff Tagg. Lead track "Sidi Wisalak" (Your Charm) became Angham's most successful single in her singing career[citation needed], and also at the time of its release when it topped the Middle East singles charts[citation needed], and "Magabash Serty" (Did He Mention Me) became her second to reach number one in Egypt and Kuweit[citation needed]. Angham was nominated for "Best Female Artist"[citation needed]for "Leih Sebtaha"[citation needed] record at the 2001 Cairo Music Awards[citation needed]. It remains Angham's most successful record to date, alongside the following record "Omry Maak" (My Life With You), selling more than 2.2 million copies worldwide[citation needed]. It was this record in particular that made Angham more popular across the Middle East[citation needed].
[edit] Album information"Leih Sebtaha" record was the result of two years of hard work and recording[citation needed]. Angham collaborated with the same composers and lyricists who worked on "Betheb Meen" record. However, she kept her same style of songs like in the previous years, improving the tracks' arrangements only. It was the fact that she collaborated with a new team of arrangists, mostly young ones, contributed in making the songs more modern and reachable to the public[citation needed]. Angham said that this record is not her favourite one, and later on, revealed that "Bahibbik Wahashteeny" (I Love You, I Miss You) record was the closest to her heart because it explained who she is as a human being[citation needed]. The recording and mixage of the tracks were done by a complex team composed of Ameen Akef, Nash'at, Sameh elMazni, and Mohammad Saker. The photographer is Mohammad Abdel Sammeea who presented Angham in a new and liberative woman[citation needed], and introduced her to the arts of CD covers[citation needed]. Angham worked alongside executive producers Ali El Maleegi, Bassam Awwad, and Hassan elZakem to be able to buy a wider variety of songs, and later on pick the best for the record[citation needed]. Magabsh Serty is the last song that Angham worked on with music composer, Riyad elHamshari, who died in 2007. He previously worked with Angham in two successful[citation needed]tracks from "Wahadaniya" (Lonely Woman) record: "Baatly Nazra" (Send Me A Glance) and "Bethebbaha Walla" (Do You Love Her Or What). Angham recalls how she was excited to record "Magabsh Serty" (Did He Mention Me) song, which was the first track to be recorded and inserted in the record[citation needed]. The quick-tempo urban track features gossips murmurs effect on the tape version, while it does not contain it on the CD[citation needed]. On the other hand, "Leih Sebtaha" instrumental is only available on the CD version[citation needed]. It is the second song to have an instrumental after "Wahadaniya" (Lonely Woman) in 1999, and the last one because Angham found it a useless idea. Because of its popularity, "Sidi Wisalak" was remixed twice by DJ Mufti and DJ Ali[citation needed], but however the two remixes were released as singles on the Internet[citation needed], after two years, due to copyrights restriction[citation needed]. The same song was featured in "Sahar elLayali" (Sleepless Nights) movie which was nominated as Best Foreign Film in Oscar Awards in 2003[citation needed]. "Ana Indak" (I'm At Your Place) features a telephone voice message in the interlude of the track. Angham said she got inspired by this idea when she tried to call someone on her cellphone during a pause between the recordings and got an answer machine back. She communicated the concept with arrangist, Tarek Madkour, who applied the effect instantly. "Tedhak Alaya" (You Laugh At Me) is the first Gulf song sung by a non-Gulf singer that stood for more than three months in Kuwait, Dubai and UAE charts. [edit] PromotionThe main concert that Angham performed in was at Layali Dubai (Nights of Dubai) international concerts in 2001. She also sang at Layali el Television (Nights of Television) where she met the audience for the first time after the record's stability in the charts[citation needed]. An emotional Angham stood speechless when the crowd sang "Sidi Wisalak" instead of her, a phenomenon that surprised Angham who was not used[citation needed], in her previous records, for an acclamation like this[citation needed]. The firm position[citation needed] of "Leih Sebtaha" on top of the charts caused conflicts between Angham[citation needed] and few Egyptian singers[citation needed] who were driven by jealousy over the record's phenomenal success[citation needed]s. The press tackled shortly a violent feud between Angham and Sherine Wagdy[citation needed], and later on between Angham and Amal Maher[citation needed]. Both fellow artists presented their excuse to Angham and both issues terminated peacefully[citation needed]. [edit] Music videoAngham only filmed "Sidi Wisalak" (Your Charm) as a music video, despite failed plans to film "Magabsh Serty" and "Rahet Layali". The music video was released two weeksp prior to the record's official release in the music markets. It was directed by Ahmad elMahdy, who constructed efficiently a new identity for Angham, in which she will use it for the many years that follows. The successful[citation needed] collaboration between elMahdy and Angham encouraged the team to work on future music videos such as "Omry Maak" (My Life With You) in 2003 and "Kolma N'arrab" (Closer) in 2007. In the music video, Angham appeared in a very short hair and a new wardrobe, blending in a scenario that features a romantic and mystic encounter with a man she fell in love with at the metro, and desperately seeks to meet him again by stealing one of his shirt's button that fell down during a trip in the train. However, the press unjustly desipected the music video "as too provoking"[citation needed], but later on excused Angham and classified it as "non harmful"[citation needed], when they finally compared it upon the emerge of new sexual-themed and provocative music videos in the early 2003 along with the apparition of Lebanese performer, Haifa Wehbe. "Sidi Wisalak" music video won "Best Music Video"[citation needed] in 2001 at the Cairo Music Awards[citation needed]. The award was officially handed to Angham by Egyptian minister of information, Safwat al-Sharif[citation needed]. [edit] Track listing
[edit] References | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |