Odette Kaddo: Arab music, it gives me Life!
Odette Kaddo
Odette Kaddo, 1956. From 23 May 1957, The Caravan. |
One of the major differences between
first wave and second wave Arab immigrant musicians to the United States is the
enormous amount of press coverage Arab expressive culture received in the Arab American
press during and after World War II. This is the case for both Arab-language
and English-language newspapers targeted at readers of Arab descent. Careful
study of Al-Hoda newspaper in the 1910s and 1920s and The Syrian
World in the 1920s and 1930s turned up very little information about Arab or
Arab American record labels and musicians during this era. Similar examination of the Arab American
press during and after World War II yielded exponentially more about the haflas,
mahrajans, phonograph record labels, and musicians popularly known in Arab
American communities across the United States. The growth and technological
developments in recorded sound after WWII meant that second-wave Arab immigrant
musicians to the United States were more likely to have had well-established musical
careers in Lebanon, Syria, or Egypt than their predecessors. This is especially
true for singers like Odette Kaddo.
Odette Kaddo, Odetee Kehdo, or
Odette Kadu was born 21 August 1927 in Zgharta, Greater Syria (now Lebanon).
She was one of six children born to Jamile Corrah and Wadia J. Kaddo. Zgharta
is in the mountainous region of northern Lebanon near Tripoli and Ehden. Zgharta’s
proximity to Ehden is important to understanding how Odette eventually
immigrated to the United States, but we will get to that later.
Odette started singing in 1936 at
the age of nine. She listened to the music of Umm Kulthum and Asmahan and developed
her own voice as she entered adolescence. She performed locally, then
regionally with her brother, manager, and accompanying oud player Nassir Kaddo,
when Mohammed Abdul Wahab introduced her to people in the music business and
encouraged her to move to Cairo. There she faced discrimination from many
Egyptians including nightclub owners and her idol Umm Kulthum, because Odette
spoke a Lebanese dialect of Arabic rather than an Egyptian dialect. Kaddo perfected
Egyptian Arabic and became a hit when she landed a record deal with Baidaphon
records. On Baidaphon, her name is spelled Odetee Kehdo.
Odetee Kehdo on Baidaphon #BB 100970-1 & 2, Courtesy of Richard M. Breaux; https://soundcloud.com/user-356929609-75127210/odetee-kehdo-baidaphon-bb-100970-1-2 |
Her popularity soon
spread throughout Lebanon and into Jordan, Egypt, and other parts of the Near
East. As emigrants left the Middle East during this time, Kaddo’s voice, fame,
and recordings found their way to France, Brazil, Australia, Mexico, and the
United States. Life was good. Odette owned her own car and house, but wanted more.
She wanted to visit the United States; she wished to see Hollywood.
Odette and Nassir Kaddo arrived in the United States in February 1955. Courtesy of Ancestry.com |
One of Odette’s biggest fans,
friends, and supporters, was Arab musician Naif Agby. Agby immigrated to the
United States around 1948 with his sister Olga “Kahraman” Agby. Meanwhile, by
1954, Odette’s fame and notoriety took her on tour to Paris where she and Nassir
performed at “a series of engagements and television appearances.” By 1955,
fans in Arab American communities in the United States eagerly awaited her
arrival and proposed tour. Singer Naif Agby, who grew up in Ehden, Lebanon,
only fourteen miles from Zgharta, sponsored her US tour. She and Nassir arrived 16 February 1955 on Pan-Am
Flight 065/16 from Beirut via Paris and the next day the Arab American press
announced their arrival. Her first concert in Brooklyn’s Syrian and Lebanese community
included her brother, Nassir Kaddo, along with Naif Agby, Djamal Aslan, Philip Solomon, Sam Fackre, and Mike Hamway. Fans packed Brooklyn’s Hotel Bossert on
the corner of Montague and Hicks streets on 30 March 1955 to see and hear Odette
with their own eyes and ears. Odette first took up residence in Brooklyn and
then Waterbury, Connecticut. Both cities had thriving Lebanese/Syrian
communities. By 1 May, Odette and Nassir performed at the fifth annual Middle
East Melodies concert at Detroit’s Latin Quarter. Also, on the program were musicians
Mohammed el-Bakkar and Philip Solomon. A week later, Odette and Nassir played
at the first anniversary hafli for the Sons of Lebanon Club of Binghamton, New
York. An engagement at the Cedars Resort
Hotel followed just before Memorial Day, and a two-day mahrajan sponsored by
the Lebanese-Syrian Society of Los Angeles fell over the Labor Day weekend. Odette
finally saw Hollywood!
Odette Kaddo's first concert in Brooklyn and the US. Courtesy of The Caravan, 24 March 1955. Newspapers.com |
Naif Agby, Philip Solomon, Joe Budway, and Mike Hamway remained on tour with the Kaddos. Churches and cultural groups
on the hafla and mahrajan circuit made up the majority of Odette’s
performances, but on occasion she and Nassir played private parties, as was the
case in November 1955 when they sang for 400 guests at a Bar Mitzvah for the
son of a Mr. And Mrs. Stanley Neheim at the Casa Del Rey in Florida. Odette
closed out the year with another private performance, this time, for Naif Agby’s
sister/singer Olga “Kahraman” Agby-Sutton.
Odette and Nassir continued with
their second tour schedule into 1956 with dates in Miami on 5 February at the
Al Kareem Club and 12 May for the Syrian-Lebanon American Clubs. Next they were
off to a 3rd of March hafli in Miami Beach, then on to the Lebanese
Flood Relief Concert on 11 March. Here the Kaddos appeared with Tony Abdelahad.
Following quickly on the heels of that fundraiser, the New England Region Syrian
Orthodox Youth Organization or SOYO booked Odette and Nassir and Philip Solomon
for its 16th annual convention in Boston from 16 -18 March. Another
500 people crowded into the Knights of Columbus Hall in Hartford, Connecticut
to hear Odette, Nassir, Tony Abdelahad, Fred Elias, and Tony Tawa. Yet one of
the biggest and best attended concerts of the year took place in Jacksonville.
There the Florida State Syrian-Lebanese American Clubs convention booked Little Sami Jourdak, Antoine Hage, and Odette and Nassir Kaddo for the multiple days’ festivities.
Odette recorded on E.S. Records
or Eastern Star Records and Zodephone Records (a Lebanese label founded by
Adnan Zodeh). Although the number of sides she cut on these labels remains
unclear, one of her E.S. Records appears below. Odette travelled between the
United States and Lebanon recording LPs and is known to have developed a
life-long friendship with Jordan’s King Hussein.
Odette Kaddo on Eastern Star Record Company. Photo by Richard M. Breaux. |
Odette Kaddo "Bokra Bokra," ES Records 530 AB https://youtu.be/PEILy7EwdVI
Charity events and the hafla-mahrajan
circuit remained the foundation of any Arab American musician’s career and the
end of 1956 and beginning of 1957 found Odette and Nassir in Syracuse, New York.
At the request of the Lebanon Women’s Aid Society for orphans and the annual
Holy Name Society of St. Louis Gonzaga Church Hafli in Utica, New York, Odette
played old and new material. She rang in the New Year with an enthusiastic crowd
at The Sheik Restaurant in Buffalo, New York. Odette only performed once in
early 1957, because other, more important things, had developed in her life.
The year 1957 changed Odette’s life
forever. On 4 May 1957, Odette Kaddo married Philip Peters, an emigrant from
Hasroun, Lebanon, who relocated to Detroit, Michigan. The ceremony took place
at Saint Maron’s Church in Detroit and a reception at Detroit’s Latin Qiarters
followed. This time Odette’s friends and music colleagues Jaleel Azzouz, Philip
Solomon, and Cliff Berbari performed at her private event. The couple
honeymooned in Lebanon for several months and returned to the United States in
October.
Life became much busier and her music
career really slowed down because in April 1958, Odette Kaddo Peter’s gave
birth to her first child, eight pound, ten-ounce, Rose Marie Peters. Being a
mother’s a full-time job and the only other musical commitment Odette made that
year was a performing at a private celebration with Naif Agby, Kahraman, and
Nassir Kaddo for a guest visiting Detroit from her home town.
Odette shocked fans in December 1959
and May 1960 when she collaborated with Naif Agby to release three 45 RPM records,
one by Odette, one by Naif Agby, and a third, on the Kaddo Record Company
label. Nassir Kaddo, of course, founded the label to help Kaddo’s brand
generate more revenue. Odette, too, with Naif Agby working as composer and
arranger, released Songs of the Cedars in 1960.
The success of Songs of the
Cedars on Kaddo Records and Odette Sings Just for You on Orient
Records became the last of six total commercial LPs by Odette. Most had been recorded
in Lebanon. As she and Philip had more children, Anthony, Charles, and Philip
Jr., she turned her attention to raising them and running the family business –
the Detroit Sausage Company. Now the only private events and charity concerts
were lucky enough to have Odette grace them with her presence and voice.
Odette became a Naturalized US
Citizen 2 August 1968. By then, the federal government removed or no longer enforced
overt racialized and ethnic-based bias immigration restrictions. Some
historians of Arab American history consider this the year to be a part of a
third immigration wave.
Odette faded from public view and
in 1979 Philip Peters died. Interestingly,
Odette’s views on the Arab American music scene and on the gender politics
among Arab women appeared in the Detroit Free Press on occasion. In a
1985 article about the various roles of women of Arab descent globally, Odette
argued “I think Lebanese women are more advanced than (women) in the rest of
the Middle East. I wouldn’t change anything for them. They have everything.” The
author pointed out “Not all Arab women wear veils. Many pursue careers. Not all
Arab women are subjected to a live of obedience to their husbands and families.”
One year later, a write-up in the same newspaper named Odette Kaddo as one of
several “Arab stars” who called Detroit home. The piece also noted that Odette’s
seventeen-year-old niece, Amalia Kaddo, sang at local clubs regularly.
Odette returned to doing parties
and charity benefit concerts by the late 1980s and early 1990s. She felt her
voice had improved with age, but remembered how much she hated the tedious and
exhaustive life of touring. She claimed that Arab Americans liked people like
Frank Sinatra and Michael Jackson, but sing Arab music because “it is a part of
their souls.”
Odette Kaddo Peters died 1
September 1997 from cancer in Grosse Pointe, Michigan. She was 70 years old.
Richard M. Breaux
© Midwest Mahjar
Comments
Post a Comment