Saleh (b. 1908 d. 1986) and Daud (b. 1910 d. 1976) Al-Kuwaity (صالح و داوود الكويتي) == האחים סלאח ודאוד אל-כוויתי ==
were Jewish - Kuwaiti musicians.
Saleh began studying Iraqi and Kuwaiti music from Khaled Al-Bakar, a famous Kuwaiti Oud player of the time. He soon began to compose his own music. His first song, "Walla Ajbani Jamalec" (By God, I love your beauty), is still heard on Gulf radio stations.{{db-author)) While still children, the brothers started performing before dignitaries in Kuwait and making a name for themselves as "wonderkids". Soon enough, Iraqi record companies began recording the brothers and distributing their music throughout the Kingdom of Iraq. Because of Saleh & Daud's success, the Al-Kuwaity family moved back to Basra in Iraq. There Saleh joined the Qanun master Azur, and learned from him the secrets of writing in the "Makam" style of composition, considered the highest and most prestigious of all styles in Arab music. The brothers started performing in the nightclubs of Basra, and after a while – a result of their growing success – the family moved to Baghdad.
The brother's success didn't go unnoticed by the Iraqi noble ruling class, and soon they became King Faisal's favorite entertainers. They performed for him and composed music for various formal events - the highlight being a piece composed by Saleh for the King's coronation ceremony. In 1936 Iraq's Minister of Education asked Daud and Saleh to take part in establishing Iraq's first radio station. The two became founding members of Iraqi radio and, together with the Egyptian singer Fat'hia Ahmad, performed and played in the initiation ceremony. From that day, up onto their immigration to Israel, they played in the station's orchestra – of which Saleh was named director. At the same time they also played on King Faisal's private radio station.
The Al-Kuwaity brothers continued performing and playing throughout the Arab world up until the 1950s, gaining fame and influence with both the mass of listeners and the Iraqi political elite. They recorded hundreds of works, some of them incorporating western elements such as Waltz. In addition to mastering the high Makam style they also wrote songs in the "Aa'thba" style – popular music with themes of sadness and loss. The brothers also composed music for the cinema, including the music for an Arabic version of Romeo and Juliet, and worked with some of the greatest actors in the Arab world. Saleh and Daud performed regularly on Iraqi radio and continued taking part in the kingdom's major national events. They also set up two clubs in which their concerts were held – one for the summer and one for the winter.
Saleh and Daud's status in Iraq was of no use to them when faced with the difficulties of finding their place in Israel. Their welcome in the new country was harsh due to the mass migration of jews from opressive arab regimes theey weresent to live in a temporary tent camp. The Israeli establishment looked down on Arab culture, treating it with indifference as the culture of the enemy.
Upon their arrival Saleh and Daud began playing and performing in the Arab channel of "The Voice of Israel" (Israeli radio), soon becoming two of its leaders. For many years they gave a regular live radio performance, with thousands of people in Israel and millions in Iraq and Kuwait listening. With the help of the radio dozens of songs written by them in Israel became hits in the Arab world. Despite leaving their homeland, and the state of war between Israel and the Arab world, the radio in Kuwait and Iraq kept on broadcasting their music – omitting their name and nationality. Their hits are still played on the radio throughout the Arab world and they have fans among both the Iraqi and Kuwaiti people and with Iraqi and Kuwaiti ex-patriots throughout the world. Songs such as "El-Hajer Mu Ada Ghariba" (Neglect isn't a foreign custom), "Hadri Chai Hadri" (Make the tea), "Ma Tqulli Ya Hilu Min Wein Alla Jabek" (Tell me, beautiful one, from where did the Lord bring you?) and "Walla Ajabni Jamalek" ( ), are heard daily throughout the Arab world and are a central plank in the canon of Iraqi and Kuwaiti music.