The King of Baghdadi: Elie Baida
Elia Baida
(Musician, oud)
Elia Baida, c. 1939
Only a handful of musicians maintained relevance in Lebanon, Egypt, and the United States from the 1930s until the 1960s, and Elia Baida is one of those musicians. More than forty years after his death, Baida is remembered as one of the most significant and prolific performers of his generation.
Born in Beirut, Greater Syria (today Lebanon) Elia Baida was born to Gibran and Tamam Baida on 6 August 1907. Elia Baida started his musical career in Lebanon. Ethnomusicologist Ali J. Racy, notes that Elia Baida was an “immediate relative,” but not one of the five founding cousins, of Baida Records. Elia, of course, recorded for Baida Records (later Baidaphon) and Cairophon records in the 1930s and 1940s. Sometimes he recorded solo as Professor Elie Baida or Elie Baida and others he recorded with Laure Dackache. He also appeared on Alamphon Records and Arabphon, an Arab American label that dubbed and distributed Arabic film soundtracks owned and operated by George N. Gorayeb. When Baida arrived in 11 November 1946 by way of Cairo, Egypt, he told United States immigration officials that he was only here visiting for ninety days. Baida was well known by Syrian-Lebanese Americans who had heard him on Baidaphon records. His earliest documented performance in the United State was at a hafla reportedly drew hundreds of people into an extremely tightly packed space. Members of the Glen Falls Syrian Ladies Club arranged one of his first US performances at the Blue Sky Restaurant in October 1947.
Born in Beirut, Greater Syria (today Lebanon) Elia Baida was born to Gibran and Tamam Baida on 6 August 1907. Elia Baida started his musical career in Lebanon. Ethnomusicologist Ali J. Racy, notes that Elia Baida was an “immediate relative,” but not one of the five founding cousins, of Baida Records. Elia, of course, recorded for Baida Records (later Baidaphon) and Cairophon records in the 1930s and 1940s. Sometimes he recorded solo as Professor Elie Baida or Elie Baida and others he recorded with Laure Dackache. He also appeared on Alamphon Records and Arabphon, an Arab American label that dubbed and distributed Arabic film soundtracks owned and operated by George N. Gorayeb. When Baida arrived in 11 November 1946 by way of Cairo, Egypt, he told United States immigration officials that he was only here visiting for ninety days. Baida was well known by Syrian-Lebanese Americans who had heard him on Baidaphon records. His earliest documented performance in the United State was at a hafla reportedly drew hundreds of people into an extremely tightly packed space. Members of the Glen Falls Syrian Ladies Club arranged one of his first US performances at the Blue Sky Restaurant in October 1947.
Alamphon 2025#1-2, Elaie Baida, Yamdallal, from Richard M. Breaux Collection. https://soundcloud.com/user-356929609-75127210/elie-baida-alamphon-a-2025-1-2-yamdallal
Word spread fast in Arab American communities and on the
Arab American music circuit that Elia Baida was in the United States and
available for engagements. By July 1948, an estimated 1500 people were expected
to attend what was billed as the first annual National Mahrajan at John Yaman
Park in Cortland, New York. The Cedar, a Greater Binghampton metropolitan area
group, sponsored the event. In the end, approximately 1000 people attended the
two-day affair.
Hafli Ad includes Elia Baida, 25 December 1958. newspapers.com
Following this event, Baida went on a three-month nationwide
tour that ended where his first major US gig began – the Blue Sky restaurant.
Among those in attendance was the Syrian Orthodox Archbishop of Toledo SamuelDavid. Although Baida planned a return to Beirut, he married Mary Saleem, 27
October 1948 and remained in the United States. A little over a month later,
Baida traveled to Brooklyn and performed as a special guest at the christening
of a friend’s daughter at Saint Nicholas Orthodox Church.
Just less than a year after he and Mary tied the knot, Mary gave birth to a daughter, Tamam Baida at Memorial Hospital in Meyers,
New York, near Ithaca on 28 September
1949. She was named for Elia’s mother. Elia wasted little time after
his daughter’s birth before booking another gig. This time, Saint George’s
Orthodox Church of Meyers hosted a concert at the 86 Club in Geneva and booked
Baida as its main attraction.
At first, shows paid fairly well, but they were not very steady or
consistent. Baida continued to work as a merchant, and a few years later, on 24
July 1953, Mary gave birth to a son, Gibran or Gabriel.
Things really took off for Elia Baida after Gibran’s birth. On
November 15, 1953, he appeared with Anton Abdelahad, Mike Hamway, NaimKaracand, Joe Budway, Philip Solomon, and Eddie Kochak at the Saint George’s
Hotel in a concert sponsored by the St. Nicholas Young Men’s Club. A newspaper reported
that 2,000 people attended the event. The real surprise was the presence of Sami al
Shawa at the event, who although not on the bill, musicians compelled to join
them on the stage and made time for him to perform a few solos.
The excitement of the event had not settled, when Elia took off
to Akron to headline at a hafla at the Hamilat et Teeb Society. At the height
of his career, few singers/oud players could sell out a venue. Baida sold out
the Virgin Mary Church Hall for a hafli in Brooklyn in 16 January 1954 and the
event had to be moved to a bigger venue. Naim Karacand, Abraham Messadi, Louis
Kawam, and John Hyder also played the event. According to one report, “Elai
Baida captivated his audience with his incomparable vocalizing and skill on the
oud.”
Between 1954 and 1971, Baida’s career soared. He played
small halfas, like those sponsored by the Lebanon American Club of Danbury,
Connecticut, in February 1954, and larger mahrajans in Montreal, all over New York,
several towns in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Florida, South Carolina, and in New
Jersey. Sometimes he shared billing with Mike Hamway and Anton Abdelahad. Then,
of course, there was the mega-Hafli where he appeared at along with Naim Karacand,
Philip Solomon, Mike Hamway, Naif Agby, and Leon Abood in April 1954.
Thanks to exposure in the Arab American press and his
growing popularity as a live performer, he along with Mohammed Abdel Waheb, Om
Kulthoom, Farid al Atrash, and Mohammed El Bakkar became one of the biggest
selling musicians on Alamphon records.
Elia Baida’s schedule filled quickly and he remained on the
road constantly. In May 1954, one
Arab American newspaper declared, “Elia Baida Has Busy Schedule” with dates in
Boston, Massachusetts, Brooklyn, New York, Patterson, New Jersey, and a host of
other east coast cities with Syrian Lebanese communities. Lilian Mazloom and
Elia Baida played the same venue in July 1954. Dare we say, he was one of the
busiest and hardest working people in show business.
The places Baida played over the years ranged from social
halls in small communities to the Cedar Hotel in Asbury Park, New Jersey,
dubbed, “America’s Finest Syrian Lebanese Hotel and Resort.” Here he played
alongside and on the same program with Eddie Kochak, Victor Nader, David Saidy,
and Louis Hekim.
Music festivals and concerts regularly increased in spring, peaked
summer and fall, then decreased to a trickle in winter. Even with a routine
schedule, there might be one or two new venues. Other times, familiar clubs like
the Green Manor, that was home to Eddie Kochak’s Arabian Night, might find Baida’s name on the
marquee with Naim Karacand and Mike Hamway. Baida wrapped up this particular
summer at the three-day Labor Day weekend concert in Pawtucket, Rhode Island.
Baida continued to maintain a jam-packed schedule in 1956.
In May 1956, he became a naturalized citizen of the United States taking his
oath in Ithaca, New York. He booked
performances solidly the next few years, but took a break in September 1956 to
return to Beirut for a visit and to record with Baidaphon. When he returned to
the US, he picked up right where he had left off. Certain cities became a part
of the annual circuit and new names like Ray and Sammy Sheheen joined Baida
when he played in and around Binghampton, Ithaca, and Lansing.
Ad for The Lebanese Mahjaran, The Caravan, 19 August 1954. Newspapers.com
Into the 1960s, Baida remained quite prolific and released
"Elia Baida Sings Again" in 1966 on a 33 1/3 RPM album. Some of the material was
new and other songs are newer recordings of his older material. This album
would be one of his last projects.
We can track Baida’s career into the early 1970s, but he disappears from public view by 1971. What was happening in Baida’s life is a bit of a mystery. Did his physical or mental health force him into retirement? Was he injured in some way that went unreported in the press? We don’t know. Sometime in 1974 or 1975, Baida sat for an interview with a budding ethnomusicologist, Ali Jihad Racy for an article entitled, “Record Industry and Egyptian Traditional Music: 1904-1933.”
We can track Baida’s career into the early 1970s, but he disappears from public view by 1971. What was happening in Baida’s life is a bit of a mystery. Did his physical or mental health force him into retirement? Was he injured in some way that went unreported in the press? We don’t know. Sometime in 1974 or 1975, Baida sat for an interview with a budding ethnomusicologist, Ali Jihad Racy for an article entitled, “Record Industry and Egyptian Traditional Music: 1904-1933.”
What we know is that early Saturday morning on 13 August
1977, one day shy of a week after his 70th birthday, Elia Baida took his own life. The ambulance arrived, attempted to stabilize Baida enough
to transport him to Tompkins County Hospital, but at 8:50am, Elie Baida died en
route to the hospital. Later that year, “From Lebanon With Love,” Elia Baida’s
last album was released posthumously.
Elia Baida rests in the annex of the Pine Grove Cemetery in Lansing, New York. Whoever ordered his headstone took two years off his life as it reads "1909-1977."
Elia Baida rests in the annex of the Pine Grove Cemetery in Lansing, New York. Whoever ordered his headstone took two years off his life as it reads "1909-1977."
Richard M. Breaux
© Midwest Mahjar
Hello, I am working on an exhibition about oriental Music from 1900 to 1970's. I Would it be possible to contact you by e-mail please ? Thanks, Best, Fanny Arlandis
ReplyDeleteHello Ms. Arlandis, Thank you for your inquiry. I can be reached at profrichardmbreaux@gmail.com
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