New sounds from the Middle East
Soul, jazz and electronic music from a range of new artists
This month, Global Beats focuses on the music of the Middle East as the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service programme continues to showcase up-and-coming musical talent from around the world.
Ester Rada is an Israeli, originally from Ethiopia, who shot to prominence in the last two years with a heady mix of soul and Ethio-jazz. She performs one of her favourite songs, Out, which is all about the days when everything just goes wrong.
The band Mashrou' Leila from Lebanon is another highly successful new act. The lead singer, who is openly gay, sings a song for Global Beats which pokes fun at the misconception that gay men can somehow lure others who are straight into homosexuality.
The programme also hears from Ajam, a London-based group passionately committed to keeping the traditional popular music of Iran alive and Yousra, a young Egyptian singer-songwriter, enjoying the openness to alternative music that has come to her country since the revolution.
Collaborating in the Middle East can be difficult, as 47Soul can affirm. The band’s members come from Palestine, Israel, Jordan and Syria and it is easier for them to come together to perform in Europe than in their own countries, but this does not deter them. Their celebratory sound is winning fans across borders.
Other featured artists include Egyptian Maurice Louca, an electronic composer who is now working with Middle Eastern musicians, and Amani Yahya, a female rapper from Yemen who is a torchbearer for women's freedom.
Image: Maurice Louca
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Broadcasts
- Sat 18 Apr 2015 22:05GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online
- Sun 19 Apr 2015 03:05GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online
- Wed 22 Apr 2015 08:05GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online
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