Dystopia of Seoul | Climate Crisis

Vivaldi’s, Four Seasons, re-composed by AI using 2050 climate data to create a disturbing musical performance in Seoul.

Antonio Vivaldi published, The Four Seasons, in 1723, celebrating the natural world and the four distinct seasons. But what would this music sound like today in our age of climate crisis? The “Uncertain Four Seasons” global project uses climate modelling data to generate a 2050 version of, The Four Seasons, for orchestras around the world according to their climate projections.

Dystopia of Seoul is the story of this piece of AI music in the South Korean capital which suffered devastating floods in 2022. The melodies, energy and tempo are twisted by the sophisticated algorithm to reflect Seoul’s climate predictions. The result makes for disturbing listening and is another stark warning to humanity about climate change.

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‘Cash Me Outside’ girl Bhad Bhabie drops $6K on 21st birthday dinner

Cash her at Nobu Malibu.

Two weeks after giving birth to a baby girl, Bhad Bhabie celebrated her 21st birthday Tuesday with a sushi dinner totaling $6,477.

The rapper, whose real name is Danielle Bregoli, showed off the bill via Snapchat, which broke the meal down into nearly $4,000 spent on food and more than $2,500 on drinks.

The rapper’s festivities cost more than $6,000. Bhad Bhabie/Snapchat
She enjoyed seafood, drinks and multiple cakes. Bhad Bhabie/Snapchat
Her boyfriend, Le Vaughn, and their friends helped ring in her new year. Bhad Bhabie/Snapchat
She showed off the bill via Snapchat. Bhad Bhabie/Snapchat

In addition to lobster, crab and gelato, the festivities featured multiple cakes for the guest of honor.

In more footage from the party, Bhabie stunned in a black outfit with her hair down as her boyfriend, Le Vaughn, and many of their friends helped ring in her new year.

One of her team members paid for the extravagant night out, TMZ reported Wednesday.

The outing came two weeks after Bhabie gave birth to baby girl Kali. bhadbhabie/Instagram
She debuted her baby bump in December 2023.

The over-the-top outing comes on the heels of Bhabie becoming a mom, with her posting the first picture of her daughter via Instagram on March 15.

The new parent has yet to show her infant’s face on social media, covering Kali’s features with a heart emoji in a selfie last week.

Bhabie, who became famous in 2016 when her appearance on “Dr. Phil” went viral, announced her pregnancy news in December 2023 amid baby bump speculation.

Bhabie and Vaughn have yet to show their infant’s face. Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/MEGA
The couple similarly keep their relationship out of the spotlight.

She shared the sex of her little one with a Heaven by Marc Jacobs x Barragan ad campaign later that month.

In February, Bhabie revealed her baby-to-be’s name in the decor at her baby shower.

While she and Vaughn keep their romance private, the couple are believed to have been together since 2020.

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Mel B channels Scary Spice in series of leopard-printed outfits on ‘Brutally Honest’ book tour

Leopard power.

Mel B hasn’t let go of her inner Scary Spice, with the pop star promoting her memoir, “Brutally Honest,” during a slew of recent media appearances wearing several leopard-printed clothing items in recent days.

Arriving at the “Tamron Hall Show” Tuesday morning, the former Spice Girl — whose real name is Melanie Brown — sported a halter top leopard-printed catsuit, paired with a long black fur coat and gold chrome heels.

Brown, 48, exited the “Drew Barrymore Show” later on the same day in a similar getup, this time sporting a floor-length leopard-printed trench coat and the same stilettos.

Mel B is going back to her Spice Girl roots with her recent outfits. Christopher Peterson / SplashNews.com
Brown arrived to the ‘Tamron Hall Show’ Tuesday morning in a leopard-print catsuit paired with matching stilettos and a black fur coat. Eric Kowalsky / MEGA
The British pop star, 48, exited the Drew Barrymore Show on March 26 sporting a floor length leopard trench coat with matching stilettos. TheImageDirect.com
Scary Spice is back! TheImageDirect.com

The ”Wannabe’ singer styled the second look with a black bodysuit and a pair of reflective sunglasses and wore big hoop earrings with her curls up in a high ponytail.

The former “X-Factor” judge has been fully embracing the leopard look, with her back-to-back outfits on Tuesday just the latest in a slew of cat-tastic finds of late.

On Monday, the pop sensation was spotted in New York City sporting another set of statement-making coats, the first shorter leopard-printed coat, which she wore over a long-sleeved blue turtleneck top and knee-high lace-up boots.

Mel B traversed the streets of NYC in a leopard print trench and multicolor white pants. She finished the look with big sunglasses and her hair in a high ponytail. GC Images
Scary Spice was known for her sultry animal print looks while on tour with the Spice Girls. Redferns
Scary Spice’s iconic leopard print looks are timeless, and Mel B rocks the look at any age. Getty Images
Scary Spice waved at onlookers while donning an oversized leopard trench coat and matching leopard print Louboutins GC Images

She also arrived on set of “The View” on March 25 in a different trench coat and matching Christian Louboutin heels.

Despite her dedication to the animal print, none of Brown’s travel outfits were featured during her March 25 appearance on “Today with Hoda and Jenna,” where she jokingly walked off set after being asked about the potential of a Spice Girls reunion tour.

However, she did spill that “us five” — meaning herself, Melanie Chisholm (Sporty Spice), Emma Bunton (Baby Spice), Geri Halliwell (Ginger Spice) and Victoria Beckham (Posh Spice) — are currently “working on something that’s going to be announced soon.”

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Artists and speakers protest SXSW festival over defence sponsors, Gaza war | Music News

Dozens of acts scheduled to appear at the South by Southwest (SXSW) festival in the United States have withdrawn in an act of protest against sponsors with ties to Israel’s war in Gaza.

As of Wednesday, at least 80 artists and panellists have pulled out of the nine-day festival, citing the involvement of several weapons companies and agencies tied to the US Department of Defense, according to the Austin for Palestine Coalition, which helped organise the protest.

The event, billed as a “convergence of tech, film, music education and culture”, is among the most prominent entertainment festivals in the southern US.

Taking place each year in Austin, Texas, the festival has been a launchpad for up-and-coming indie acts and filmmakers since its opening in 1987. This year’s festival will conclude on March 16.

But several artists slated to appear this year have withdrawn, in an effort to show solidarity with the people of Gaza.

“I have decided to pull out of my official SXSW showcases in protest of SXSW’s ties to the defense industry and in support of the Palestinian people,” musician Ella Williams, who is known as Squirrel Flower, posted on Instagram on March 4.

The Austin for Palestine Coalition identified Williams as one of the first nine acts to withdraw as part of the protest.

Ibrahim Batshon, the founder of the BeatStars digital production company, posted a day later on social media that artists associated with his organisation would also boycott the festival, which attracted over 345,000 people last year.

He cited the involvement of Raytheon and BAE Systems, two of the companies involved in this year’s SXSW festival.

“Both of these companies manufacture and provide weapons to the terrorist state of Israel, whom is currently conducting an internationally condemned genocide against an occupied and besieged population of Palestinians,” Batshon posted.

The boycott, however, has since ballooned to include featured speakers like labour union organiser Chris Smalls and musicians like Buffalo Nichols.

The advocacy organisation United Musicians and Allied Workers has also thrown its support behind the protest, echoing its rallying cry on social media: “Warmongers have no place at SXSW!”

In announcing its withdrawal this week, Northern Ireland hip-hop trio Kneecap highlighted the costs small acts would incur by missing the high-profile event.

“This decision will have a significant financial impact on Kneecap, both on lost income and on logistical costs already incurred,” the trio said in a statement. “But it isn’t an iota of hardship when compared to with the [unimaginable] suffering being inflicted every minute of every day on the people of Gaza.”

As of Wednesday, at least 31,272 Palestinians had been killed in Israel’s operations in Gaza, the vast majority of them women and children, according to local authorities. The fighting has left the enclave on the brink of famine, with human rights groups accusing Israel of slowing the delivery of humanitarian aid.

The administration of US President Joe Biden has continued to pledge political and material support to Israel, despite issuing stronger criticism of its military campaign in recent weeks.

“There are a lot of innocent people who are in trouble and dying,” Biden said last month. “And it’s got to stop.”

Governor responds: ‘Don’t come here’

The growing SXSW boycott effort, however, prompted a rebuke on Tuesday from Texas Governor Greg Abbott.

“We are proud of the US military in Texas,” he wrote on social media. “If you don’t like it, don’t come here.”

In late February, the Austin Chronicle also reported that SXSW organisers sent a cease-and-desist letter to the Austin for Palestine Coalition as they sought to rally support for the boycott.

The letter said the group had used trademarked SXSW art in their social media posts and threatened legal action, according to the news site.

Still, the festival defended the artists who chose not to participate in this year’s festival, responding directly to Governor Abbott’s comments.

“SXSW does not agree with Governor Abbott,” SXSW wrote on social media on Tuesday. “We fully respect the decision these artists made to exercise their right to free speech.”

In the same thread of messages, however, SXSW also attempted to justify its ties to the defence industry.

“The defense industry has historically been a proving ground for many of the systems we rely on today,” the festival wrote in its statement. “These institutions are often leaders in emerging technologies, and we believe it’s better to understand how their approach will impact our lives.”

The Austin for Palestine Coalition and the United Musicians and Allied Workers Union are set to host a protest show in Austin on Thursday.



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Remembering El Rayes Zakaria, Egypt’s folk music revolutionary giant | Music

The ancient-looking PA system was not meant to handle the immensity of sound produced by famed Nile Delta folk music ensemble El Tanbura as they warmed up for a show on the streets of Ismailia on a warm summer night in 2019 – one of several shows in the Suez Canal’s major towns marking 30 years since El Tanbura’s founding.

The volume and distortion made for a mash-up of the traditional music of the Delta with the signature sonic footprint of mahraganat, the contemporary urban youth music that rose from outdoor weddings in working-class neighbourhoods to take Egypt and much of the Middle East by storm during the last decade.

Overseeing the warmup with his characteristic smile was legendary musician Zakaria Ibrahim – El Rayes (a ship captain or a boss in general), the “godfather of popular art”, the “Pyramid of popular culture” – who passed away in Cairo on February 12 at the age of 72.

Zakaria founded El Tanbura in 1988 after struggling for nearly a decade to find players of the simsimiyya, one of the world’s oldest instruments. Sometimes called a box lyre, the simsimiyya is the smaller cousin of the tanbura, a five-stringed lap harp with roots stretching from ancient Egypt – it appears on art going back to the Middle Kingdom, about 2000 BCE – to India.

Zakaria and El Tanbura on stage [Courtesy of Mastaba]

Rayes Zakaria’s work to revive interest in ancient instruments made him a giant of Egyptian, African and world music.

He was also a revolutionary artist – centring his life and art around using music to encourage if not enable change in Egyptian society and to support the people after the revolutionary moment inevitably ends.

He cared deeply about his songs, and about the history and culture behind each one, to the point where he was known to lose track of time and space.

But that was precisely the point of most of the music he helped create as the founder and singular force behind the El Mastaba Center for the Preservation of Egyptian Folk Music, Egypt’s – and likely the Arab world’s – most important institution dedicated to traditional music.

Zakaria Ibrahim’s musical roots

Zakaria was born in Port Said in 1952, the same year as the Egyptian revolution, and came of age in an atmosphere of resistance and patriotism between the 1956 war against Israel, the United Kingdom and France and the 1967 war.

During this time, the shaabi (popular, working class) music of Port Said and the Canal became famed across Egypt and the Arab World as the music of resistance, the lyrics and propulsive rhythms matching the spirit of resistance against British and then Israeli invasion and colonialism.

The characteristic dancing style of the Canal zone was a big part of El Tanbura’s performances [Courtesy of Mastaba]

Port Said was in the thrall of dama during this time – a combination of party music and transcendental experience that combined popular love songs and Sufi music from different traditions in the Nile Delta and Canal zone and used the simsimiyya to produce the sound that captivated Port Said.

In the three years following 1967, Egypt fought the War of Attrition with Israel and the songs of the simsimiyya travelled across Egypt, taken there by the people displaced from the Canal zone by the war to serve as a reminder of their hometowns.

Zakaria moved to Cairo in the early 1970s to attend university, just as Egypt moved from the Arab nationalist politics of President Gamal Abdel Nasser to the more neoliberal and pro-Western policies of his successor, Anwar Sadat.

He became deeply involved in the left-wing student movement, ultimately serving a short stint in prison because of his activities.

At the same time, the music of the simsimiyya, which had been so deeply ingrained in the culture of Port Said and the broader Delta, became increasingly commercialised.

“Instead of being the way we were before, singing and gathering in the streets all together then leaving together, now, there is a situation where the one who is coming to attend has to pay the one who sings,” Zakaria once lamented, criticising what he saw as the commodification of the music of the people.

El Tanbura, shown here in 2020, and their music are closely tied to the sea and the mystical cultures of Egypt [Courtesy of Mastaba]

Meanwhile, the music of the zar, and particularly the rango, had all but become extinct except as a tourist curiosity.

When he returned home at the turn of the 1980s, Zakaria found his mission: not only to salvage or even conserve the music he loved but to bring together as many of the old practitioners as he could find to revive it and, with it, the spirit of the community, as well as resistance.

“Zakaria was an African Alan Lomax,” Moroccan-Italian musician and filmmaker Reda Zine said, referring to the famed ethnomusicologist who did so much to preserve traditional music.

“He was trying to redraw the ancient caravan routes, to highlight the healing, just like the Gnawa in Morocco,” Zine explained, referring to the North African country’s Sufi music.

To be sure, from the first moment Zakaria listened to Gnawa at El Mastaba, he could hear the similarities in mood, in the strings and songs from one end of North Africa to the other.

“Zakaria saw the connections between the healing power of Sufi music… the way others looked at tarab [virtuosic art music],” Zine explained.

“And he saw how the Moroccan government had finally come to support Gnawa and its culture, and he wanted to achieve the same for the spiritually grounded folk music in Egypt.”

El Rayes dedicated his life’s work to bringing ancient instruments and musical feel to people [Courtesy of Mastaba]

The simsimiyya, the tanbura and the “rango” – a small wooden xylophone that together with the tanbura has long been the primary instrument of various types of ritual gatherings known as zar ceremonies – have a spiritual past, the source and route of which varies depending on who’s telling it.

Their modern origins centre around the conquest of modern-day Sudan in 1820 by Egypt’s Muhammad Ali and the participation, as slaves and free people, of increasing numbers of Sudanese, Nubians, Ethiopians and other East Africans in the burgeoning “Egyptian” army, as well as in cotton cultivation and trade more broadly.

With the establishment of Port Said in 1859 and the abolition of the slave trade at the end of the 19th century, major Egyptian cities right up to the Mediterranean saw a marked increase in sub-Saharan communities, and eventually neighbourhoods and quarters.

Their cultural, religious and musical practice intersected and embedded with local practices to produce various forms of modern Egyptian folk music, most of which are rooted at least partly in the Sufi and East African traditions that define groups like El Tanbura, Rango and other ensembles created or sponsored by El Mastaba.

Revolution, evolution

One of the most powerful moments of the 18-day Egyptian Arab Spring uprising of 2011 was when El Tanbura marched – danced, really – into Tahrir Square, the symbolic heart of the protest movement.

El Rayes, on the right, singing old revolutionary songs to Tahrir Square’s Arab Spring revolutionaries in 2011 [Courtesy of Mastaba]

El Tanbura sang revolutionary songs that were sung first against Israel in 1956 and 1967, underscoring both the stakes of the protests and whose side the politically grounded artists were on.

Six months on from the start of the revolution on January 25, El Tanbura was at London’s Barbican to perform with other musicians who played in Tahrir Square. This began a series of tours that would take them across the Arab world, Europe and Asia, including major festival stages like Glastonbury and Roskilde.

Listening to Zakaria describe his music, never mind sing and dance to it on any stage, it became clear that what made El Tanbura so powerful was what makes all the best Sufi music so popular: the mix of sacred and profane, spiritual and earthy, in the service of music that forces even the most reluctant listener to join in and dance.

The simsimiyya, which had been the “pulse of the people” as far back as 1956, once again helped drive revolutionaries forward, not just for politics, but as Zakaria liked to say, “for love … It’s the Sufi feelings, people submerged in love, together.”

El Rayes, shown here at El Tanbura Hall, lived for his music and its message [Courtesy of Mastaba]

For anyone who attended a performance of El Tanbura, Rango, or the other bands of El Mastaba, such as NubaNour and Bedouin Jerry Can, that idea of being submerged – or as Zakaria would describe it, of simply letting go and flying – was a regular occurrence, whether in the Canal cities or at their Cairo base, the El-Dammah Theatre in Abdeen.

On any given Wednesday or Saturday night, during their regular shows, the groups sang and danced to what can best be described as party music with a spiritual core, which also created the very real material Zakaria needed to get his musicians respect, credit and income for their art.

What Zakaria understood is that when you are dealing with heritage music, it is not just about conserving the past, it is about composing the future. Sometimes this is the only revolutionary act still possible, especially after Egypt’s counter-revolutionary coup of 2013 made dancing into the square with simsimiyyas and dafs raised overheads, singing “Get up and take your freedom”, all but impossible.

Two days after the 2019 show in Ismailia, Zakaria stood on the shore of the Mediterranean at El Tanbura’s home base in Port Said, after another performance by the group in front of their most ardent fans.

El Tanbura’s performances are energetic, enveloping, and all-consuming [Courtesy of Mastaba]

His face glowed slightly in the moonlight, illuminating not just contentment but the stress of running an independent organisation with a history of resistance music as Egypt’s counter-revolutionary era dragged on.

When I asked him why, at nearly 70 years old, he continued to work at the frenetic pace the groups and the music demanded, he responded instantly: “Mark, I’ll play till I die.”

But he stopped performing weeks before his passing, in protest against the destruction wrought by Israel’s war on Gaza and possibly of the Egyptian government’s response.

Zakaria, whose friends called him the “ambassador of joy”, spent his final weeks not playing the music he did so much to conserve, and which brought him and so many others joy.

Mamdouh Elkady, executive manager at El Mastaba and Zakaria’s assistant for more than 30 years, summed up the intensity of the sense of loss from his passing.

“With the death of Zakaria, we lost the central pillar of the tent that shaded us with his compassion and love for everyone working in the traditional folk music system,” Elkady said.

“But given all the problems the country, region and world face today, we have to continue his vision. The time for resistance as well as joy, revolution as well as togetherness, has returned.”

That’s a message Zakaria Ibrahim, impresario, organic intellectual and revolutionary, would have been able to sing and dance to straight through till dawn.

Zakaria Ibrahim [Courtesy of Mastaba]

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From Malcolm X to ‘reality rap’: Decoding hip-hop album art | Music

The intersection of political commentary and hip-hop music is a tradition dating back decades, kicking off with 1982’s “The Message” by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five. The genre’s heyday spanned the 1990s in an era when album artwork was a significant part of music discovery.

Before streaming came to dominate the modern music ecosystem, fans would flock to record stores to flip through the latest releases. While CDs might now be relegated to a single stand inside a supermarket, for previous generations, record stores comprised a path to finding new music, a bit like searching through Spotify or Apple Music today.

Album covers were an important part of this experience. And in the world of hip-hop, they have long been used to send messages about culture, politics and the artists’ general worldview.

Here, Al Jazeera decodes eight album covers from the peak era of political hip-hop and explains the images and symbols used on each.

Gang Starr, Daily Operation (1992)

Eyebrow cuts: Pictured in the foreground on this cover of Daily Operation is Guru, who along with DJ Premier, forms the hip-hop duo, Gang Starr. The cuts shaved out of Guru’s eyebrows reflect an expression of Black culture that was popularised by rapper Big Daddy Kane.

Malcolm X: In the background hangs a portrait of Malcolm X, a Muslim American minister and human rights activist who had a significant influence on the world of hip-hop. Many of his speeches were cut and remixed in songs throughout the 1990s.

Turntables: These are SL-1200 turntables, among the most popular pieces of equipment used by hip-hop DJs. Gang Starr’s DJ Premier is one of the most prolific and influential producers in the industry.

Influential book: The book, Message to the Blackman in America by Elijah Muhammad, who was a prominent Nation of Islam leader, was first published in 1965. It introduced many in the world of hip-hop to Black theology, encouraging the principles of self-determination and community revitalisation.

Boogie Down Productions, Ghetto Music: The Blueprint of Hip Hop (1989)

“Ghetto” music: The use of “ghetto”, a term used to describe poor African American neighbourhoods, is intentional. This is explained in the album’s liner notes, which denounce materialism in the industry, stating: “We’ve found it again necessary to return to our roots – ‘The Ghetto’ – to ensure purity, talent and intelligence often lost in trying to keep up with the Joneses.”

Police intimidation: The image of a police officer standing over group member KRS-One suggests a looming threat. The track “Who Protects Us From You?” is an indictment of police abuses in Black communities. The same year this album was released, the notorious Central Park Five case unfolded, in which five teenagers were wrongfully convicted of raping a white woman.

Queen Latifah, Nature of a Sista’ (1991)

Arabic name: Queen Latifah chose her moniker from an Arabic book of names – “Latifah” means “kind” and “gentle”. The word “queen” was added to represent the notion of women as queens of their own destiny.

Afrocentric attire: The focal point of this cover is Queen Latifah’s African-inspired headdress, which speaks to the Afrocentric themes that were popular in hip-hop of the 1990s. Many artists in this era used symbols to represent pan-Africanism and Black nationalism, including medallions and clothing decorated with images of the African continent.

X Clan, To the East, Blackwards (1990)

The X: This is a nod to the Nation of Islam practice of substituting an “X” in place of a surname (such as Malcolm X), which was symbolic of African Americans losing their true names and identities during the era of slavery.

Prominent activists: Members of the X Clan are pictured alongside prominent Black activists and abolitionists who fought for African American rights, including Harriet Tubman, Malcolm X and Marcus Garvey, among others.

Pink Cadillac: The pink Cadillac was symbolic of Black cultural style and upward mobility. Group member Professor X, who died in 2006, said the pink Cadillac was a message that people should “celebrate themselves”, adding: “When I think of a pink Cadillac I think of my uncles, who were from South Carolina. Those guys had a Caddy every year. It meant something to them. We were talking about a 1959 pink Caddy because it represented a point in time.”

Public Enemy, Muse Sick-n-Hour Mess Age (1994)

9mm gun: The image of a 9mm handgun pointing directly towards a skull is symbolic of Black-on-Black crime, suggesting that this type of violence is self-destructive or suicidal.

Laughing politician: This picture highlights governmental neglect of Black communities in the US. Public Enemy has been known to use provocative and hard-hitting political imagery. At the time of this album’s release in 1994, hip-hop was going through a transformation from Afrocentric political commentary to what Ice-T called “reality rap”, also known as “gangster rap”.

Ku Klux Clan: This picture of a hooded Klansman represents white supremacy in the US. It is notable that the Klansman is passively witnessing the destruction of a skeletal figure, presumed to be Black, as represented by the red, black and green kufi on the skull.

Malt liquor: The two bottles of 40-ounce malt liquor point to the prevalence of this substance in Black neighbourhoods, as the cheap alcoholic beverage has been marketed towards low-income communities.

Ice Cube, Death Certificate (1991)

American flag: The country’s flag is draped over the corpse, reinforcing the album’s criticism of the US, with songs addressing issues such as gun ownership, racial profiling and the “war on drugs”.

Uncle Sam: On this album cover, rapper Ice Cube is pictured standing over a corpse lying on a gurney with a toe tag that says “Uncle Sam”, which symbolises the US government. This points to how American institutions have failed the citizenry.

Common, Like Water for Chocolate (2000)

Point of view: The image appears to have been shot through a car window, highlighting how American society passively views the racist societal structures designed to oppress Black citizens.

Racial segregation: This cover image was shot by photographer Gordon Parks in Mobile, Alabama, in 1956. It clearly captures the racial segregation of the era, with a Black woman drinking from a water fountain labelled “coloured only”, as a young girl peers into a nearby shop window.

KMD, Bl_ck B_st_rds (2000)

Racist caricature: The “Sambo” caricature has traditionally been used as a racist depiction of African Americans, but on KMD’s album cover, it makes a statement against racism. The image of this character being hung represents the removal of racist stereotypes and negative depictions of African Americans. “It was a mockery of a mockery,” group member MF Doom, who died in 2020, once said.

Lynching: The imagery of lynching, represented by a hangman’s noose, points to the historical violence perpetrated against African Americans. Lynchings were used to terrorise and silence Black people in the US during the 19th and 20th centuries, especially across the southern states.

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Israel agrees to revise lyrics rejected by Eurovision | Arts and Culture News

Public broadcaster Kan says Israeli President Herzog has called for adjustments of song due to political content.

Israel has reportedly asked lyricists to revise the country’s proposed Eurovision Song Contest entries, potentially heading off a dispute with organisers over political content.

In a statement on Sunday, Israeli public broadcaster Kan said President Isaac Herzog had called for “necessary adjustments” to ensure Israel’s inclusion in the event, which it has won four times.

Authorities last week said Israel would not be able to participate in this year’s edition of the competition, which will be held in Sweden in May, if organisers rejected the song chosen to represent the country. Eurovision rules ban political content.

The song selected as Israel’s entry to the competition – October Rain – reportedly references victims of Hamas’s October 7 attacks on southern Israel that triggered the ongoing war in Gaza.

The Israeli broadcaster has “contacted the lyricists of the two selected songs, ‘October Rain’ which was chosen in first place and ‘Dance Forever’ which came in second, and asked them to re-adapt the texts, while preserving their artistic freedom”, the statement said.

“Among the new texts that will be proposed, Kan will choose the song that will be sent to the Eurovision supervisory committee, so that it approves Israel’s participation in the competition.”

The selected song, to be performed by 20-year-old Russian-Israeli singer Eden Golan, will be revealed on March 10, the statement said.

One line from the original lyrics of October Rain read: “They were all good children, every one of them.”

“There is no air left to breathe, there is no place for me,” the song ends, according to Kan, which has published the lyrics in full on its website.

Israel became the first non-European country to enter Eurovision in 1973, and its participation and hosting of the event have regularly run into controversy.

In 2019, Icelandic band Hatari, who previously challenged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to a Nordic folk wrestling match, made pro-Palestinian statements during the vote count in Tel Aviv.

Organisers also gave American pop icon Madonna a ticking off after her dancers flouted political neutrality rules by wearing Israeli and Palestinian flags on their costumes.

This year’s competition comes against the backdrop of the war, sparked by the Hamas attack which resulted in the deaths of 1,139 people in Israel.

Hamas fighters also took about 250 captives, with 130 still held in Gaza although 31 are believed to be dead, according to Israeli officials.

Israel’s military response has killed at least 30,410 people in Gaza, according to the Ministry of Health in the Hamas-run territory.

After organisers barred October Rain last week for breaking rules on political neutrality, Kan insisted that it had “no intention to replace the song”, and threatened to withdraw from the competition.

But Herzog “emphasised that it is precisely at a time when those who hate us are seeking to repress and boycott the State of Israel” that the country “must raise its voice … loud and clear in every world forum”, Sunday’s Kan statement said.

Last month, Eurovision organiser European Broadcasting Union (EBU) rejected demands that Israel be barred from entering the competition due to its bombardment of Gaza.

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‘No identity’: Why is Kenyan music failing to break through globally? | Arts and Culture

Nairobi, Kenya – In November 2023 when the Grammy Awards announced five inaugural nominees for the Best African Music Performance category, only South Africa and Nigeria were represented. The news sparked a debate about the continuing trend of contemporary music from both countries – Amapiano and Afrobeats – dominating the continent of 54 countries.

This was especially so in Kenya. The East African nation is one of the continent’s cultural heavyweights and so often a leader in many other sectors. Yet, in most parts of Africa and the world, dance floors and airwaves are devoid of Kenyan music.

Some of the best-known names today like boy band Sauti Sol have achieved some level of crossover across the continent and clinched Grammys off of their work with their Nigerian and South African counterparts. But their fame and appeal still lag behind that of their counterparts.

Even within Kenya, Amapiano and Afrobeats enjoy frequent airplay. Bongo Flava, a genre from nearby Tanzania, is also quite popular, perhaps in part because the songs are in Swahili, the main language in both countries.

When Universal Music Group (UMG) announced the launch of Def Jam Africa in 2020, the label announced locations in Nigeria and South Africa, but promised to sign music from all over the continent. Other big record companies like Warner Music and Sony Music have also set up shop in both countries. While some of the artists signed do come from outside of those music hubs, Kenyans have yet to break in.

To Tabu Osusa, a Nairobi-based author, music producer and record label executive, the reason for Kenya’s absence on the continental centre stage is clear.

“Kenyan music has no identity,” he told Al Jazeera.

Identity, according to Osusa, is a sound but also a generational lineage; groups of melodies, turns of phrase, and rhythms that flow from one year to the next. Afrobeats and Amapiano have these and are distinctively African, he adds. By comparison, there is no existing equivalent in Kenya.

South African artist Tyla performs during New Year’s Eve celebrations in New York City, US, on December 31, 2023 [Jeenah Moon/Reuters]

A shrinking identity

Kenyan music used to be characterised by the distinct plucking sound of a guitar, strummed to imitate a traditional eight-string lyre. When it was heard, everyone could tell what it was: Benga music. Derived from the Luo word for beauty, Benga took hold of Kenya in the 50s to 60s and spread across the continent during the 70s.

Musicians transferred the sounds of traditional Western Kenyan songs to the guitar, creating the distinct pluck, pluck, plucking sound Benga is known for.

Osusa blames colonialism for the genre’s disappearance.

“When we gained our independence [in 1963], our fathers left everything in the village,” he said, referring to a migration to urban areas in the 1970s. “Our culture, our food, our sense of dress, our music. They moved to town to start afresh, and if anyone brought anything from the village they were labelled as mshamba – meaning from the village.”

“I don’t know why we didn’t move our culture to the cities,” said Osusa. “Nigerians did, and that’s why they’ve been able to make village life funky and sexy [through their music]. The Nigerian musicians always appreciated those who were before them – so there’s that continuity from the days of the Juju music to Afrobeats.”

Bill Odidi, a music writer for Business Daily Africa and radio presenter for Music Time in Africa, agrees with Osusa’s hypothesis. Kenyans lost their musical traditions and with that, their chances of entering the mainstream, he says.

But he also believes the political and economic situation in the early days of post-independence Kenya didn’t “allow for music to thrive”.

“Indigenous culture was really suppressed by the settler community,” said Odidi. “The guys who came into power after independence just carried on with the same sort of policies. They admired the Western and the British way of life [more] than they did their own.”

Stuck in a loop

Colonialism isn’t the only thing holding Kenyan musicians back – according to Kenyan musicians.

One problem is the apprehension to define music as a career.

“A lot of artists are hesitant to go into music full time,” said Maya Amolo, a Kenyan R&B singer recognised as one of Spotify’s Fresh Finds Africa artists in 2022. “The issue is that we’re just not developed as an industry. South Africa and Nigeria, they’ve been building and evolving their music industry for a very long time and we have not. Without a functioning industry with some form of structure, you’re not going to make any money.”

This creates an inevitable loop: the industry is underdeveloped because people don’t pursue art full-time. People don’t pursue art full-time because the industry is underdeveloped.

“Blinky” Bill Sellanga, frontman of Kenyan alternative group Just a Band believes Kenyan fans and the local music industry need to do more for the artistes.

“We haven’t rallied behind Kenyan music,” said Sellanga. “The mic traditionally hasn’t been given to us. Nigeria and South Africa, even the Congo have had a music industry for so long. They’ve been able to really hone their sound, and they stand behind their sound. Kenyan DJs push Afrobeats and Amapiano. Nigerian DJs aren’t doing the same for us.”

The artists cite additional reasons for East Africa’s inability to break out on the mainstream: compared with Nigerians, fewer Kenyans want to leave the country (45 percent versus 19 percent according to the Pew Research Center) leading to less of an exportation of Kenyan culture.

Studios in Kenya are underfunded, and the production quality can, at times, be years behind other African countries. Some say the Kenyan music scene is defined by chasing the success of Nigeria and South Africa.

Sellanga believes that despite this, the lack of a unifying sound is what makes Kenya a great place to grow and learn as an artist.

“Kenyan music is more regional, for sure,” said Sellanga. “The Kenyan sound that is around varies from place to place. The beauty of these differences is what makes us special. Just A Band couldn’t have existed in any other country in Africa.”

‘Blinky’ Bill Sellanga, frontman of Kenyan music collective Just A Band [Courtesy of Bill Sellanga]

‘They want to listen’

To rediscover the Kenyan sound and get people to listen, some artists are constantly working to prioritise their culture.

Shipton Onyango, who goes by his stage name Winyo, has been a Benga artist for more than 15 years. “I want to put an emphasis on Benga music, only make it fresh and new to a global market that can identify with it,” said the singer who works with Osusa’s Ketebul Music.

While Winyo agrees with much of Osusa’s hypothesis, he also concurs with some of his peers that the effort to bring Kenyan music to the main stage needs to focus less on a revival of the past and more on the sounds of the present.

Some of the new music being made is Benga, some of it isn’t. But not enough people are listening yet.

“People want to know what Kenyan sound is and how to work with it,” said Winyo. “I think a lot of musicians in the industry have gone back to the drawing board. They want to know what Kenyan sound is. You would be shocked to find out a lot of Kenyans like Kenyan music. They want to listen to it. There is a market out there.”

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A Palestinian singer could represent Iceland at Eurovision | Israel War on Gaza

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Bashar Murad, a Palestinian singer based in Jerusalem, could represent Iceland in the Eurovision Song Contest if he wins selection on Saturday.

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Palestinian singer running to represent Iceland at Eurovision contest | Music News

Bashar Murad said he wants to use his song to ‘illustrate’ the difficulties Palestinians face in order to be heard.

Palestinian pop singer Bashar Murad is hoping to represent Iceland at the Eurovision Song Contest in May and bring “a Palestinian voice to the main stage”.

Iceland is expected to pick its contestant on Saturday for the annual song competition, which is being held in the Swedish city of Malmo.

Murad is competing in the national final with a song co-written by Einar Stefansson of the Icelandic band Hatari, known for raising a banner showing Palestinian flags during the 2019 Eurovision Contest.

While the competition bills itself as a non-political event and can disqualify those it considers to be in breach of the rule, the global political backdrop frequently weighs in on decisions.

In 2022, Russia was banned from participating in the contest after several countries called for its removal due to its invasion of Ukraine.

In light of the war in Gaza, some artists have called on the competition organisers to also exclude Israel from the competition.

The European Broadcasting Union (EBU), which organises the competition, said last week that they were scrutinising the lyrics of Israel’s song submission for possible references to the October 7 Hamas attack, which would go against the rules of the competition.

Israel has threatened to drop out of the competition if its song, Eden Golan’s, October Rain, is rejected.

Protesters take part in a demonstration organised by ‘Together for Palestine’ to demand a ceasefire and exclude Israel from the Eurovision Song Contest, in Stockholm, Sweden, February 17, 2024 [TT News Agency/Fredrik Persson via Reuters]

But in Iceland’s domestic qualification, singers of any nationality can participate if they sing their song in the first semifinal in Icelandic.

Murad, who was born in and lives in occupied East Jerusalem, said it was difficult to learn the song in Icelandic, but he found some similarities to Arabic.

His entry, Wild West, tells the story of challenging boundaries and chasing dreams against all odds.

“I wanted to illustrate how many obstacles as Palestinians we have to go through in order to be heard … we’re excluded from every mainstream platform,” he said.

“Everyone has theories about my participation. And everyone is politicising my existence when I’m really just a human who had a dream and applied for this competition fair and square.”

When asked if Murad wants Israel to participate in the competition, he said, “Of course, I don’t want my occupier to be there.”

“But my main focus right now is to be able to bring, for the first time in history, a Palestinian voice to the main stage.

Israel has won the competition four times and sees the contest as a barometer of its standing internationally.

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