Fatma Said | |
---|---|
Born | 1991 (age 32–33) Cairo, Egypt |
Education | Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler Berlin (BMus, MMus) Accademia del Teatro alla Scala |
Occupation | Opera singer |
Agent | Askonas Holt |
Website | fatmasaid.com |
Fatma Said (born 1991 in Cairo) [1] is an Egyptian soprano living (as of 2022) in London. [2]
Fatma Said grew up in Cairo, where she attended the Deutsche Schule der Borromäerinnen Kairo. [3] [4] Her father, Ahmed Hassan Said, was the first president of the Free Egyptians Party founded during the Arab Spring. [3]
Said's early focus was tennis, but following the recommendation of her school choir teacher she received her first singing lessons at the age of 14 with soprano Egyptian-French Névine Allouba . In 2009 she got accepted to study classical singing at the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler Berlin where she received her Bachelor of Music in 2013 and Master of Music in 2018 under Prof. Renate Faltin. She then received a scholarship at the Opera Academy of La Scala in Milan, [5] [6] becoming the first Egyptian soprano to ever sing at La Scala. [7] In 2016 she was seen as Pamina in Peter Stein's production of The Magic Flute at La Scala in Milan. [8] [9]
She has appeared on many international stages, including the Teatro San Carlo (Naples), Staatsoper Hamburg, Royal Opera House Muscat, Wexford Opera in Ireland, Gewandhaus in Leipzig, Vienna Konzerthaus, Royal Albert Hall, and Carnegie Hall. [10] She played roles in the operas Falstaff , L'enfant et les sortilèges , La Cenerentola and The Barber of Seville . [9] She sang at many well-known festivals such as the International Music Festival in Bad Kissingen, the Schumann Festival in Bonn and the 9th and 10th D-Marine Turgutreis International Classical Music Festival in Turkey. [11] She was an artist-in-residence at the Konzerthaus Berlin in 2022/23. [12]
Said is also known for her social commitment. At TEDxCairo in 2011, she sang “The Day the People Changed”, a new song she participated in composing about the Egyptian revolution. [13] In 2013, she worked with composer Eugenio Bennato at the Teatro San Carlo on an educational project about the Arab Spring. [13] She represented Egypt on Human Rights Day several times and appeared at the United Nations in Geneva together with Juan Diego Flórez [9] [14] where she committed herself to the musical education of children and young people. In 2016 she was the first opera singer to receive the Creativity Award from Egypt. She was also honored by the National Council for Women that same year. On 25 September 2021 she performed at Global Citizen Live in Paris, along with Elton John, Ed Sheeran, and other well known stars. [15]
Music has been an integral part of Egyptian culture since antiquity in Egypt. Egyptian music had a significant impact on the development of ancient Greek music, and via the Greeks it was important to early European music well into the Middle Ages. Due to the thousands of-years long dominance of Egypt over its neighbors, Egyptian culture, including music and musical instruments, was very influential in the surrounding regions; for instance, the instruments claimed in the Bible to have been played by the ancient Hebrews are all Egyptian instruments as established by Egyptian archaeology. Egyptian modern music is considered as a main core of Middle Eastern and Oriental music as it has a huge influence on the region due to the popularity and huge influence of Egyptian cinema and music industries, owing to the political influence Egypt has on its neighboring countries, as well as Egypt producing the most accomplished musicians and composers in the region, specially in the 20th century, a lot of them are of international stature. The tonal structure music in the East is defined by the maqamat, loosely similar to the Western modes, while the rhythm in the East is governed by the iqa'at, standard rhythmic modes formed by combinations of accented and unaccented beats and rests.
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