Jordanian American pianist and composer
This article is about a person whose name includes a patronymic. The article properly refers to the person by their given name, Zade, and not as Dirani.
Musical artist
Zade Dirani (Arabic: زيد ديراني, born in ), is a JordanianAmerican[2] pianist, composer, and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador for the Middle East and North Africa, of Damascene descent, whose genre blending songs are inspired by Latin, pop, and classical music. He has performed before thousands around the world including Queen Elizabeth and Nelson Mandela.
He has released eight CDs, which reflect his studies of each culture while attending the National Music Conservatory in Amman and the Berklee College of Music in Boston. Audiences throughout the Middle East, Europe, and the United States have attended his performances. His albums have reached #3 on the US Billboard chart. The CD for Zade's project: One Night in Jordan debuted on Billboard at #2 on the New Age Chart, #5 on the Classical Crossover Chart, and #11 on the Overall Classical Chart. Zade's accompanying DVD also debuted on Billboard's Top DVD/Music Video Charts at #[4] Zade has toured extensively throughout the U.S and has performed in Spain, France, England, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Lebanon,[5] Morocco, Kuwait,[6] and Egypt.[7]
Zade's father is an architect in Amman, and his parents assumed he would join the family firm when he was growing up. From a young age he enjoyed listening to Richard Clayderman's music.[8] His early piano studies were of French songs of Edith Piaf and Charles Aznavour. Zade began playing the piano and composing music at the age of 13 for piano and orchestra.[9] He held his first public concert at the age of 19, at the Citidal in Amman, which is sited of the Temple of Hercules. With his first song, he related a story of how his mother, who is not a musician, helping him write it. He was accompanied by the National Music Conservatory Symphony Orchestra founded by Queen Noor, at which he had studied.[10]
He moved to the United States in to study at Santa Clara University and later at the Berklee College of Music, majoring in music composition and business and management.[11] When he began touring the United States, he toured virtually nonstop appearing in grassroots style venues such as guest houses, churches, and synagogues, and peoples' homes. Travelling by Greyhound and Amtrak throughout the country, he played as many as events in one year.[12]
Some of his early self-released recordings are reaching the Billboard charts even now,[13] while currently he splits his time between Los Angeles and Miami Beach.[14] His album Beautiful World, which features classical piano compositions, also includes some Middle Eastern rhythms.[13]
Reviewers have described his mostly pop length music which merges with classical,[15] as 'more accessible' and 'the structures are easy to grasp.'[16]
Princess of the Night was a favourite of Zade's, and his latest release brings him together with Richard Clayderman, in a duet with two pianos. It was composed by French composer and producer Olivier Toussaint. This modern version is full of sensuality and honesty. Zade believes that music requires honesty, regardless of technique. He says, "There is no room for masquerading in music".[8]
In February , Zade released his 8th album entitled Un Piano y Amigos, produced by Spanish hitmaker David Santisteban, and featuring vocal collaborations with some of Spain's artists including India Martinez, David DeMaria, Ana Mena, Lorena Gomez, Soraya, and Paula Rojo.[citation needed]
Zade was invited by King Abdullah and Queen Rania of Jordan to join them on the official state visit to the United Kingdom where he performed before Queen Elizabeth and the British royal family in London.[17][13] In May , Zade performed at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. in celebration of Jordan's National Day by invitation from the Jordanian Ambassador to the United States.[citation needed]
To continue cross-cultural understanding through the arts, Zade launched The Zade Foundation for International Peace and Understanding in ,[18] aimed at helping young musicians share with the world a deeper understanding of their cultures by offering them a unique opportunity to expand their roles from musicians to proactive peace builders and future community leaders.[19]
Main article: Roads to You
In , Zade launched an ambitious project entitled Roads to You, celebration of One World in Washington, DC under the patronage of Queen Noor of Jordan.[20] Titled Roads to You: Celebration of One World, Zade led 40 musicians from 18 countries, in a project that showcased participants from war-torn regions coming together and working in an atmosphere of trust and team spirit. He had the idea of doing this while on a hiking trip in New Hampshire.[10] The Roads to Youconcert tour featured compositions from Zade's three recordings which include his CD, Beautiful World released May , inspired by his Middle Eastern heritage. Zade's vision of musicians as world leaders who make connections through music and culture was manifested in the tour.[13]
His second CD, Roads to You, was released in June in the United States featuring Arabic and Latin influences performed by the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra and Choir. One of the cuts from the CD, titled Kingdom of Peace, was featured at the Winter Olympics as the Japanese Female Figure Skating Team competed to this song. That song, and the Roads to You CD is the collective effort of more than one hundred musicians from different parts of the world, and was recorded in Miami, Beirut, Prague, and Los Angeles. Roads to You remained on the Billboard Charts more than 20 weeks. His debut CD, self-titled Zade, was released in April , and featured guest musicians from the Middle East and the United States including Charlie Bisharat on Violin, Chris Chaney on Bass Alanis Morissette, Jane's Addiction, Natalie Merchant, Fairouz, and Julia Boutros. The album remained on the Billboard Charts for 13 weeks.[citation needed]
Main article: One Night in Jordan: A Concert for Peace
One Night in Jordan was an unprecedented event in which more than 90 elite musicians from over 40 nations were led by Zade at one of the oldest Roman Amphitheaters in the world in Amman, Jordan.[21] The concert included London's Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Ashley Irwin. A Television Special was broadcast worldwide later in the year. The album was released on February 9, by ZD Records and distributed by EMI. The concert DVD was released on March 9, by ZD Records and distributed by EMI. The concert was aired on PBS stations in and [citation needed]
Zade works with both aspiring and world renowned musicians, to promote cultural understanding, and spread a message of peace and co-existence. He was appointed UNICEF Regional Ambassador for the Middle East and North Africa in August ,[18] with a focus on advocating for children caught in violence, conflict and poverty.[22]
With UNICEF, he performed at Al Zaatari Refugee camp in Jordan, which later inspired the creation of Musiqati or ''My Music'',[23] the world's first music therapy program designed specifically for children in refugee camps, which he launched at Azraq Refugee Camp.[24] The programme helps Syrian refugee children cope with trauma and loss by making music, while also enhancing their skills to communicate and express themselves, and group cooperation. The program was designed by child protection and music therapy experts in consultation with children and adults living in Syrian refugee camps in Jordan.[25]
The evaluation of the program, which was piloted for a year in Azraq refugee camp at children friendly Makani centres for over 4, children,[26] shows that 65 per cent of child participants displayed significant progress in terms of their participation, ability to wait and take turns, decision-making, working with others, and ability to express themselves confidently.[24]
Zade also collaborated with UNICEF on the creation of the song Heartbeat.[27] The song is composed by Zade with production by David Santisteban and lyrics by Jad Rahbani. The song is performed by 10 year-old Ansam, an internally displaced girl in Syria who was born blind.[28] The video was filmed in an area of Syria heavily damaged by the fighting. Children performing as part of the choir are all internally displaced and participate, along with Ansam, in UNICEF psychosocial support programmes. They are shown having fun in the video, as children should. He donated the song as “a message of hope from Syria’s children to the children and people of the world, with a simple request to get their childhood back.”[29]
At p.m. forty days after the Beirut Port explosion Zade joined other prominent artists in Lebanon near Beirut Port, to comfort the bereaved and pay tribute to those who were lost, in the performance of Recollect Beirut;. singers performed from across Lebanon to honor the victims.[30]
Album | Year | Tracks | Length |
---|---|---|---|
Un Piano y Amigos | 11 | 40 min 18 sec | |
Mediterrani | 10 | 36 min 40 sec | |
One Night In Jordan (Live) | 13 | 1hr 13 min | |
Beautiful World | 10 | 46 min 21 sec | |
Roads to You | 11 | 47 min 21 sec | |
Zade | 12 | 46 min 57 sec |
Album | Year | Tracks | Length |
---|---|---|---|
Princess of the Nights | 1 | 3 min 43 sec | |
Tango 75 | 4 | 14 min 59 sec | |
Las Pulseras del Verano | 1 | 3 min 44 sec | |
A Mother's Prayer | 1 | 4 min 44 sec | |
The Capitol Sessions | 6 | 21 min 55 sec |
Album | Year | Tracks | Length |
---|---|---|---|
My Arabic Collection | 12 | 55 min 36 sec | |
Solo Piano | 9 | 31 min 45 sec | |
Piano Love Songs | 10 | 39 min 4 sec |
In October , Zade was awarded the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee's Distinguished Achievements Award for his work that promotes global understanding through the arts. He has also received The Jordanian Ministry of Education Award for the Arts and The Arab-American Music, Art, and Literature (AMAL) Award.[4]