Ep 346. Virginia Danielson: Book Discussion: The Voice of Egypt. Umm Kulthum, Arabic Song, and Egyptian Society in the 20th Century
Virginia Danielson (PhD, Ethnomusicology, University of Illinois, 1991) is an associate of the Harvard Music Department and a visiting scholar at New York University Abu Dhabi. She is the author of The Voice of Egypt: Umm Kulthum, Arabic Song and Egyptian Society in the 20th Century (University of Chicago Press, 1997), the first English-language biography of the Arab world’s most celebrated singer. Through rich ethnographic insight and historical analysis, Danielson traces how Umm Kulthum—known as “the voice of Egypt”—rose from rural beginnings to become a unifying cultural icon whose songs shaped modern Egyptian identity and Arab popular culture. Danielson’s work illuminates the complex interplay between gender, media, and nation-building in 20th-century Egypt, showing how one woman’s artistry transcended social boundaries to define an era.
In this episode you will learn about:
How a village Imam’s daughter became Egypt’s most celebrated voice through talent, strategy, and relentless discipline.
The clever business deals and radio contracts that secured Umm Kulthum’s financial and artistic independence.
The myth-making and media control behind her carefully protected public image.
The musical evolution of Umm Kulthum’s ensemble, blending classical Arabic poetry with modern Western instruments.
Why audience described her concerts as a national ritual where “life stopped” every Thursday night.
Show Notes to this episode:
Find Virginia Danielson on FB. You can find her book “The Voice of Egypt. Umm Kulthum, Arabic Song, and Egyptian Society in the 20th Century” on Amazon and other major book platforms.
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