In 1958, Rahbani had his break, at the age of twenty, when the Arabic Service of the BBC contacted him about composing forty songs and writing the soundtracks to thirteen BBC Arabic radio productions. In 1962, he wrote "Ma Ahlaha" (ما أحلاها) for Lebanese singer
Nasri Shamseddine and became a program director and musical consultant for
Radio Lebanon, where he also met his future wife, Nina Khalil. The couple married and stayed together for the rest of their lives. Rahbani stayed at Radio Lebanon until 1972 but also continued his career as a record producer with a number of record companies in Lebanon. At the beginning of the
Lebanese Civil War in 1976, he moved to Paris. Rahbani has to his record hundreds of successful Lebanese and pan-Arab music, some in foreign musical adaptations, but mostly in Arabic music. Of his foreign songs, some notable titles include "La Guerre est finie", sung by Lebanese Armenian singer Manuel Menengichian and "Mory", a sea song sung by Lebanese singer
Sami Clark. Rahbani accused
Saber Rebaï of plagiarizing his music with the song "Atahadda al 'aalam" (أتحدى العالم). When the songwriter Khaled Bakri and his record company,
Rotana Records, denied the charges, Rahbani filed a lawsuit, in which a committee of musicians noted similarities between the Saber Rebai song and Rahbani's musical score "Nina Maria", and ordered Rotana Records to withdraw the album and add credits to Rahbani. Rahbani has written numerous songs for
Fairuz and
Sabah. Other Rahbani compositions have been sung by
Wadih Safi,
Melhem Barakat,
Nasri Shamseddine,
Majida El Roumi, and contemporary singers including
Julia Boutros,
Pascale Sakr, and
Haifa Wehbe. In 1996, Rahbani published the poetry collection
Nafizat el Omr (A window to my life). In 2001, he composed a song for the
Organisation internationale de la Francophonie summit held in Beirut, Lebanon. ==Awards==