Some years ago a rather unusual record came into my possession. It was 51 Belly Dancer Favorites by Gus Vali and his orchestra. I did not buy it myself. The LP was given to me by Anwar Fazal, a well-known figure in Penang’s civic and cultural life.
Anwar Fazal, as many people know, has spent decades involved in consumer, environmental and public interest movements. He helped found organisations such as the Consumers Association of Penang and played a role in several international networks dealing with health, pesticides and consumer protection. At some point along the way this curious record found its way into my hands through him. The LP has stayed in my collection ever since.
The album itself is a relic from the early 1960s when Middle Eastern themed music had a small but noticeable presence in the Western record market. The title sounds grand enough but it is really a clever bit of marketing. There are not 51 separate tracks. Instead the record consists of six long medleys, each one stitching together fragments of many melodies from across the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East.
Vali was a Greek-American clarinetist and the clarinet is very much the dominant voice throughout the record. It weaves through those unmistakable oriental scales while the rhythm section keeps things moving along. Around it is a mixture of instruments like the oud, the sharp beat of Middle Eastern percussion such as the doumbek and the occasional support of a Western bass and drum kit.
The medleys are grouped loosely by region. One sequence moves through Turkish and Greek themes, another brings in Israeli melodies and elsewhere the music shifts toward Arabic material. Each tune appears briefly before the next one takes over. The idea was not to dwell on any particular melody but to keep the music flowing without interruption. But to someone like me who had never been exposed to Middle Eastern music before, the transitions were a bit too subtle. The melodies came and went so quickly that I could hardly tell where one ended and the next began. To my ears, they all sounded much the same.
That format made sense for the setting in which this sort of music was often used. These medleys could accompany belly dancing performances in restaurants or nightclubs where the dancer might want to change tempo or mood without stopping the music every few minutes.
Listening to the record today, however, one cannot help reflecting how strange the timing feels. The melodies come from a part of the world that is once again dominating the news headlines. Since 28 February 2026 the Middle East has been engulfed in another violent chapter, with the United States and Israel now openly at war with Iran. The same region whose folk melodies once circulated harmlessly on lounge records is again a theatre of bombs, missiles and political brinkmanship.
When this album was produced, the music was packaged as a kind of exotic entertainment for Western listeners. Few people probably thought very deeply about the cultures or histories behind those melodies. Yet here they are again, echoing faintly from an old LP, reminding us that the Middle East is far more than the grim news images we see today.
Perhaps that is why I keep the record. It is not particularly rare or musically profound but it carries a small chain of associations: a gift from Anwar Fazal, a glimpse of a musical tradition far from our shores and now a reminder that the same region continues to shape the world’s anxieties. A rather unlikely record to sit quietly in a Penang collection, but there it is.






















