Little Sami: Debkee to Your Heart's Content
“Little Sami”- Sami M. Jourdak
1928-2018
Little Sami, The Caravan, 3 February 1955. Courtesy of Newspaper.com |
(Oud, Deberkee)
You’ve seen his name several times before. Mostly on some of
the Arabic-language 78 rpm records on the Orient Records label. Orient Records famously printed red, orange, yellow, green,
white, or light-blue labels with a swan swimming on the water in a black circle at the
top center of its label. We still don’t know much about Orient Records, but it
should not be confused with the label created by well-known Arab American
composer and former Maloof Records owner Alexander Maloof.
For years, some presumed that this stage name “Little Sami” signified
a relationship with Lebanese violin virtuoso Sami al Shawa, but the only
connections we know of for sure are that Egyptian-born Fadel Antoun Shawa (b.
1904) who traveled between the Middle East, Brazil, and the United States in
the 1940s and 1950s. Of course, Little Sami knew Sami al Shawa and a host of
other Arab American musicians from the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s. His career
reached its height between 1955 and 1965; although he performed much of his
life in the United States.
“Little Sami” was
born Sami Michael Jourdak to Micchel N. Jourdak and Mariam Koury Jourdak
(sometimes spelled Gerdak) on 8 August 1928 in French mandate-controlled Lebanon.
He was one of at least four children. He began playing oud and derbekke as a
child and immigrated to the United States on 16 April 1947. Like Amer and Sana Khadaj, he came to the United States at the beginning of the so-called second wave
of Arab immigrants. Although the second wave tended to be more Muslim, and some
like Khadaj were Druze, Jourdak was a Melkite Catholic. Sami told immigration
officials at Ellis Island that he was an actor. It is possible he had appeared
in Arabic-language film or played music in an ensemble for a film’s musical
score before coming to the Americas.
Sami wed his first wife Freda Cecilia on 10 March 1949 in
Dillon, South Carolina. According to court records, however, he deserted his first
wife, separated from her in November 1949, and a judge granted them a legal
divorce in July 1954. At around this time, Little Sami’s career began to take
off.
Few Arab American musicians managed to find their way onto
the television during this time, but in October 1954, Ray Beilouny, John Hydar, Naif Agby, Marie
Tashji, and Little Sami appeared on the Nancy Craig TV show on Channel 7 in New
York. In December of that same year, Little Sami appeared at the All-Star New
Year’s Eve Party in the Grand Ballroom of the Saint George’s Hotel in Brooklyn.
Others slated to perform the same night with Little Sami included Semi Sheheen (Sammy Shaheen),
Naim Karacand, Philip Solomon, Ray Beilouny, Leon Abood, Mike Hamway and Mosa Kalooky. Russell Bunai, Fadwa Abed, and Hanan sang and the others played and
sang individually and collectively. Non-stop
dancing carried the night and the event lasted well into the wee hours until
5:30am the next morning.
Little Sami and others on advertisement for New Years Eve Party, 31 December 1954, The Caravan. Courtesy of Newspapers.com |
The New Year brought new and increased opportunity to play
live at various events in the Midwest and on the East coast. On 22 January
1955, Sami, John Fayed, and Anton Hage provided the musical entertainment for
the Miami Syrian-Lebanon Club’s gala hafli. Later in the month, Sami received an
offer from Pete Butrus Simrany, owner of the Eastern Star Restaurant at 205
Atlantic Avenue, to perform every Friday of the year at 10 p.m. “with accompanying
musicians.” This was good, steady, reliable work not available to most Arab
American musicians at the time. The newspaper advertisement encouraged patrons to
“Eat Where the Stars Eat” and “debkee to your heart’s content."
"Eastern Star Restaurant Ad," The Caravan, 3 February 1922. Courtesy of Newspapers.com
"Ya Leil Malak" #215A and "Alyake" #215B. From the Richard M. Breaux collection.
By 26 January 1956, Sami, John Fayed, and Anton Hage
returned to the annual Syrian-Lebanon Club hafli in Miami. The group performed
an additional charity event before their return to Brooklyn but added OdetteKaddo, Nasser Kaddo, and Moosa Kalooky to the performance. This time, it did not
take an entire year before they got back to Florida, as Sami, Hanan, Anoun
Hage, and Joe Budway journeyed to Jacksonville and entertained over 700 people
at the Florida State Syrian-Lebanon American Clubs convention in May. The
Florida Syrian-Lebanon Club was a member of the larger Southern Federation of
Syrian Lebanese American Clubs, a non-religious non-politically affiliated group
established to preserve Syrian-Lebanese culture and heritage back in 1931.
Little Sami would have only been two years old at the time of the federation's founding.
"Romanak #170A & #170B. From the Richard Breaux collection. https://soundcloud.com/profbro/little-sami-fadel-shawa-romanak-170a-170b |
The belly dance music craze allowed Arab American musicians to
remain active, helped musicians pay their bills, and gave musicians time to create music, however, what was once a
matter of cultural affirmation and retention increasingly played on exaggerated,
bordering on degrading Arab stereotypes. Bolstered by Hollywood's obsession with negative
and unflattering Middle Eastern, Arab, and Islamic caricatures, record and
music companies certainly paid some musicians, but Arab American musicians had less control over
how their music was marketed. Partially-veiled women with see-thru pants or men
in satiny turbans, smoking water pipes or with water pipes as props appear on album cover after album cover.
By the 1970s and 1980s, Sami Jourdak’s star faded. Many of
his contemporaries retired. Some, like al-Bakkar and Amer Khadaj, met untimely
deaths. Sami Jourdak married and divorced two more times in the 1980s. His last
marriage was to Wahiba El-Shoveiri. Sami retired to his old stomping grounds first
in Miami, then near Fort Lauderdale, Florida. By the 2000s, Sami’s sense of
humor had not diminished, he spent a good amount of time betting on horses at race
tracks like the historic Gulfstream Park. Sami Jourdak, known among 78 rpm Arab
American music collectors as Little Sami, died at the Catholic Hospice at Holy
Cross Hospital 13 October 2018. He was 90 years old.
Thank you to George Farah for confirming the "Oriental Records" label.
Thank you to George Farah for confirming the "Oriental Records" label.
Richard M. Breaux
© Midwest Mahjar
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