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Egyptian singer-songwriter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maryam Saleh (Arabic: مريم صالح, romanized: Maryam Ṣāliḥ; born 1985[1]), full name Maryam Saleh Saad (Arabic: مريم صالح سعد, romanized: Maryam Ṣāliḥ Sa'd) is an Egyptian singer and songwriter (including psychedelic rock and trip-hop) and actress.
Her father was the stage writer, theater director and critic Saleh Saad, with whom she worked as an actress and directing assistant at a young age.[2] He died in a fire in 2005 in Beni Suef. Among her father's friends was Sheikh Imam, who had great influence on her.[3]
As an actress, she starred in plays such as Laila Soliman's Lessons in Revolution, a couple of short films and Ibrahim El-Batout's film A Shams (2008),[3] for which she also sang the title song.[1]
Around 2008, she founded her band Jawaz Safar, in which only the instruments oud and tabl were played.[1] In 2008 she founded the band Baraka,[2] the ua the Sheikh Imam songs Nixon Baba, Valery Giscard d'Estaing Ya Wad Ya Yu Yu, ya wādd yā yū yū and Ya wādd yā yū yū El-Bahr Byidhak Leh "('Why does the sea laugh') covered[1] and later sung by her sister Nagham Saleh.[3]
Since 2010 she works together with the Lebanese musician Zeid Hamdan; the music was described as Arab trip-hop.[4]
Maryam Saleh starred as the prostitute Mona Farkha in the 2011 Egyptian short film A Tin Tale (Arabic: حدوتة من صاج, Hadouta Men Sag ; Director: Aida El-Kashef) as part of the Dubai International Film Festival.[5][6]
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