- Rimitti, Cheikha
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▪ 2007Saadia Algerian singer-songwriter (b. May 8, 1923, Tessala, French Algeria—d. May 15, 2006, Paris, France), was called the “mother of rai music,” the rebellious fusion of traditional Algerian and Western popular music. After a childhood of wandering as a homeless orphan, she joined a song-and-dance troupe and adopted the professional name Cheikha (from a descriptive term applied to female Muslim singers) Rimitti. Though illiterate, she began composing the first of hundreds of slang-couched songs, many of which contrasted the hardships suffered by women and the working class with the escape offered by sex and sensuality. Rimitti's song “Charag Gatta,” in which she questioned society's emphasis on virginity, was a hit in 1954, but her songs outraged conservatives, and in 1962 she was banned by the Algerian government. Thereafter, she performed mostly for expatriate Algerians in France until the 1990s, when the generation of singers she had influenced brought international prominence to rai. Rimitti's last concert was in Paris only two days before her death.
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Universalium. 2010.