- Source: Lili Boniche
Lili Boniche (born Élie Boniche; April 29, 1922 – March 6, 2008) was an Algerian singer of Andalusian-Arab music. Boniche was the heir to an erudite, centuries-long tradition of Algerian song and a pillar of Franco-Arab music.
Born into a Sephardic Jewish family in the Casbah of Algiers, Boniche was a child prodigy who taught himself to play his father's mandola at the age of seven. Later as an in-demand singer throughout France in the 1940s and during wartime. Boniche incorporated the tango, paso doble and mambo into his repertoire, especially while entertaining the troops. He is known for having sung with Arabic lyrics a number of great Cuban popular songs as part of his regular repertoire. He retired in the 1950s, only to launch a second career in 1990, releasing the album Boniche Dub in 1998, produced by Bill Laswell and fashion doyen Jean Touitou. The album earned him new fans across Europe. This retrospective combining his greatest hits and previously unreleased works not only fills a gap with regard to available recordings, but it pays tribute to an important pioneer of cultural fusion.
In addition to writing music for commercial release, he also was a film composer.. He died in Paris.
Discography
Alger, Alger , Roir Records/E1, February 16, 1999
Œuvres récentes , APC Play it Again Sam, 2003
Il n'y a qu'un seul Dieu (live à l'Olympia), East West Warner Music France, 1999
Trésors de la chanson judéo-arabe, Créon Mélodie
References
External links
Biography at Oriente.de
Biography @ Uncommon Sound
Discography @ Afrik.com (in French)
Lili Boniche at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Lili Boniche
- Maurice El Médiouni
- List of Jews from the Arab world
- History of the Jews in Algeria
- Francis Falceto
- List of songs about cities
- Bill Laswell discography
- Deaths in March 2008
- Historia de un Amor (song)
- Sfinks Festival