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He was the youngest of three sons of Farha and Amram
Amzallag. His family moved from Safi to Rabat in 1926; when he was 14 years old (around 1936), shortly after his mother's death they moved again, to Salé. In Rabat, he started to familiarize himself with Arab-Andalusian music and taught himself to
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Elmaghribi returned to
Montreal in 1996, though he continued to travel and perform internationally. At some point in the last decade of his life he served as cantor at Beit Yosef Sephardi synagogue of New Jersey, and taught Sephardi liturgy at
58:. The Institut européen des musiques juives describes his work as combining "popular Moroccan songs, ancient and modern, classical Andalusian singing, and liturgical chanting, to which he integrated melodies from Turkey and Central Europe."
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Chaimae
Bouazzaoui, the first Moroccan woman diplomat in Israel, interviewed Samy Elmaghribi's daughter, in 2015, on the occasion of the launch of the Samy Elmaghribi Foundation in Canada, describing her father as "the Moroccan Aznavour".
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In 1955 in
Casablanca, Elmaghribi established his own record label, Samyphone. The discs were originally pressed in France. In the beginning of the 1960s, the Israeli record label Zakiphon, which specialized in the music of
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Elmaghribi was 20 years old when he decided to quit his position as a sales manager to devote himself entirely to music. Having access to the
Moroccan palace, he was one of the most preferred singers of
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in Israel, where he established a
Sephardic music center Merkaz Piyyout Veshira. From 1988 to 1994, Elmaghribi served there as music director and led a student choir that developed into the
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play the oud; he also sang in the synagogue. He later perfected his technique by attending the "Conservatoire de
Musique" in
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Elmaghribi left
Morocco for Montreal in 1960. In 1967, he became the first cantor of Shearith Israel, the
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and by following some of the most revered
Algerian masters of Andalusian music.
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I Sing and I Pray: Samy
Elmaghribi’s Sonic Reflection on Music and Religion
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reissued several Samyphone albums from the 1950s for the French market.
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220:. Paris: Institut européen des musiques juives. 13 December 2021
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192:. Paris: Institut européen des musiques juives. 7 December 2021
103:. He officiated there for 16 years. In 1984 he moved again, to
292:"Canada: Official Launch of the Samy el Maghribi Foundation"
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in New York. He died on March 9, 2008, in Montreal.
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Canadian Jewish Studies / Études Juives Canadiennes
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139:The Rough Guide to the Music of Morocco
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16:Jewish-Moroccan musician (1922-2008)
346:20th-century Moroccan male singers
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190:"Elmaghribi, Samy (1922 – 2008)"
26:, died on March 9, 2008) was a
371:Moroccan expatriates in Canada
366:Moroccan expatriates in Israel
361:Moroccan expatriates in France
308:Silver, Christopher. (2022). "
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109:Israeli Andalusian Orchestra
218:"The music label Samyphone"
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351:20th-century Moroccan Jews
341:People from Safi, Morocco
62:Early life and education
22:(born April 19, 1922 as
144:World Music Network
132:Contributing artist
117:Yeshiva University
34:musician. Born in
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24:Salomon Amzallag
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356:2008 deaths
336:1922 births
273:(in French)
248:(in French)
242:"Samyphone"
127:Discography
330:Categories
322:, 178–190.
277:2020-11-08
267:"Zakiphon"
252:2020-11-08
224:2023-04-17
196:2023-04-17
151:References
82:Mohammed V
69:Casablanca
52:Montreal
32:Moroccan
271:Discogs
246:Discogs
142:(2012,
105:Ashdod
75:Career
56:Ashdod
54:, and
28:Jewish
94:Pathé
48:Paris
40:Rabat
44:Salé
36:Safi
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