Who was Asma Hamza? Google Doodle celebrates Sudanese oud player
The illustration can be seen across the Mena region today

Google is celebrating Sudanese composer and oud player Asma Hamza with its doodle on Monday.
The legacy of the artist is being marked on July 17 to commemorate the day she was among the winners of the Laylat Al Qadr Al Kubra music competition in Sudan in 1997. Hamza died in 2018 aged 82.
Google said: « This win was a turning point in her career and helped her gain recognition in a male-dominated field.
« Asma was born in 1932 and loved music while growing up, dreaming of one day becoming a singer. Her vocal cords, however, weren’t equipped to do that safely, so she switched from singing tunes to whistling them. When her father heard her whistle in harmony, he borrowed an oud, similar to a lute but with a thinner neck and no
« She taught herself how to play songs she’d heard on the oud, from her own memory and ear for music. Her father encouraged her musical career from the start, but he was one of few. At that time, it was not socially acceptable for women to create music in Sudan; Asma recalls that the first piece she composed was in secret. As she got older, she composed more melodies for several talented Arab artists and became known as one of the first female composers in Sudan. She also continued perfecting her oud playing and became among the first formally trained woman oud players in 1946. »
The doodle of Hamza can be seen across the Mena region today, in countries including Morocco, Algeria, Libya, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Oman and the UAE.
frets, so Asma could practice.