Skip to main content

NPR Article about Fairuz and the Royalty Dispute

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/therecord/2010/07/30/128877303/how-a-royalty-dispute-may-silence-lebanese-star-fairouz

Royalty Dispute May Silence Fairouz
by JACOB GANZ
July 30, 2010

The Lebanese singer Fairouz is the focus of protests around the world since a court in Beirut banned her from performing one of her signature songs last month due to a dispute over royalties. She was set to perform the song "Ya'ish Ya'ish" at the Casino du Liban until the children of her late husband's brother stepped in.

Ian Black of the Guardian explains the dispute:
Many of Fairouz's works were co-written and composed by her late husband Assi al-Rahbani and his brother Mansour. When Mansour died, his children filed a suit against Fairouz, triggering a court order stopping her performing material that involved his contribution.

Mansour and Assi are popularly known as the Rahbani Brothers. Fairouz, which means "turquoise" in Arabic, is the stage name of Nihad Haddad. The 75 year old singer is an icon in the Arabic-speaking world, and as NPR's Jamie Tarabay pointed out in her50 Great Voices profile of the singer, Fairouz has fans around the world. Protests against the action taken by Mansour's children have popped up as far away as Australia, the Guardian says, and her cause has also been taken up by fans on Twitter.

In her profile, Tarabay writes:
The singer's career began as Lebanon gained independence, linking her inextricably to the country's history. During Lebanon's bloody civil war, when Beirut split in two in the 1970s, Fairuz refused to take sides. She decided not to perform in Lebanon at all, instead touring exclusively overseas. For Fairuz, music was her political activism, and the war-weary Lebanese clung to it. They latched on to one song in particular during this desperate time. It's called "Behebak Ya Libnan," or "I Love You, Lebanon," and it's still beloved in Lebanon today.

Click HERE for Blog Archive

Show more

Or type below to

See Popular Posts Below

Jordanian Artist Tamer Al Ahmar Revives Cultural Icons in Unique Ways

Film Discussion + Free Screening of "When Monaliza Smiled" on July 22, 2020 (Stanford by Zoom)

Top 20 (alternative) Arabic Songs of 2014 Spotlighted on Arabology

Hatem Shaheen Talks about the Success of his Jordanian Hair Salons حاتم شاهين يتحدث عن قصة نجاح صالونه المميز في عمان - الاردن

Video Recording: Ramzi Salti in Conversation with Director Fadi Haddad (July 2020)

List of Arabology’s Top 30 Songs of 2020 (Includes YouTube Playlist)

Dr. Ramzi Salti Interviewed about His Teaching Career, Radio Show, and Arabic Music

Video of Ramzi Salti's Talk about Lebanese Music (Sijal Institue, Aug 2020) Now Available

Arabology Interviews Jordanian Author Hazem Tabbaa

Dr. Ramzi Salti Interviews El Far3i about His Upcoming Crowdcast Concert on Dec 12, 2020

Click here for Labels

Show more