User:Ninly/Sonia M'Barek

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Sonia M'Barek
سنية مبارك
Sonia M'Barek performing at the Institut du Monde Arabe in 2009
Background information
Born1969
Sfax, Tunisia
GenresArabic music
Occupation(s)Singer
Years active1978–present

Sonia M'Barek (سنية مبارك, also spelled Sonia Mbarek), (1969– ),[1] is a Tunisian singer.

Early life[edit]

M'Barek was born in Sfax, Tunisia. At age 9, she sang traditional Tunisian music (malouf) with the Municipal Theatre of Tunis, under the direction of Tahar Gharsa.[1] At 12, she made her first television appearance, interpreting "Ahkili aliha ya baba", a children's song composed by and performed with Adnène Chaouachi.[1] The success of this song thrust M'barek into the artistic domain.

A student at the National Conservatory of Music at Tunis, she received a degree in Arabic music in 1986, and in 1987, with composer Rachid Yeddes, received the prize for the best song at the Festival de la Chanson Tunisienne (for "Khali el hozn baîd alik"). In 1990, she realized a project inspired by world music, entitled "Musiques sans frontières" ("Music without borders"), which she presented at the Festival International d'Hammamet.

Career[edit]

In 1992, M'Barek released her first album, Liberté. Between 1993 and 1993, she worked successfully with the oud player Ali Sriti and his student Anouar Brahem, with whom she gave over 30 concerts classical music concerts, which were released on an album called Tarab. In 1997, she released her second solo album, Tawchih, followed in 1999 with Takht, which was distributed throughout Europe, the United States, and Japan by World Network, a German record label. That same year, she gave a concert in Paris, at Café de la Danse, for the Festival Les Belles Nuits du Ramadan.

In 2000, she performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC, during the National African Summit, and during a tour of the francophone world, she also gave a concert at the United Nations in New York (Dag-Hammarskjöld Auditorium), and participated in the festival Voix de femmes in Brusseles, celebrating the opening of the Halles de Schaerbeek. M'Barek then released the albums Tir el Minyiar in 2003 and Romances in 2004.

Engagements[edit]

Between 2005 and 2008, M'barek was the first woman to act as director of the Festival de la Chanson Tunisienne, which is organized by the Tunisian Minister of Culture[1]. She has been a member of l'Association des Etudes Internationales since 1995, a member of the executive office of La Rachidia (الرشيدية) from 2001 to 2003 and, since 2002, goodwill ambassador of the the the Tunisian Association for the Fight against Cancer.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Patrick Labesse, "Chant nomade de la Méditerranée", Jeune Afrique, 12 April 2009, p. 78

External links[edit]