سيدة المقام العراقي فريدة - طالعة من بيت أبوها
Posts tagged music
موسيقى جوهر و شيباتاس - علّمني
Musique Jawhar & Shibatas - Allemni
h/t @AmerSweidan
البرنامج - فرقه مشروع ليلي
“الفرعي” حفل موسيقي
طارق أبو كويك يقدم “الفرعي” لأول مرة في فلسطين، وهو عرض لأغانٍ تتطرّق إلى قضايا الحب والدين والسياسة، مسلطّاً الضوء على الانقسامات الطبقيّة، والسياسات النيوليبرالية السائدة في فلسطين والأردن على حد سواء. يقدّم “الفرعي” عرضه الحميم واللمّاح بمزيج من الكلام المغنى والمحكي المنظوم على موسيقى الراب. مثيراً لدى الجمهور أسئلة غير متوقعة من خلال أفكاره جريئة.
طارق أبو كويك عازف إيقاع وكاتب أغاني يتخذ من ضفتي نهر الأردن، حيث ينتمي، نقطة انطلاقه. “الفرعي” بالعربية هو الذي يقع في الهامش بخلاف المتن، وهو ما اختاره عنوانا لمشروعه في موسيقى الراب.
Tareq Abu Kweik presents “El Far3i” for the first time in Palestine, an acoustic set that moves between stories of love, religion and politics, while protesting class divides and neo-liberal policies plaguing both Jordan and Palestine. A combination of melodic singing and spoken words that break into rap verses, “El Far3i” is an intimate and witty performance that teases audiences with unexpected questions and daring statements.
A percussionist and lyricist, Tareq Abu Kweik takes the banks of the River Jordan, his home, as his starting point. “El Far3i”—meaning “secondary” in Arabic— is a metaphor for a voice from the margins or sidelines, which gives his solo rap project its name.
خلي الكاميرات تصور- طارق ابو كويك
Alaa Wardi, Risala Ela…
سيد مكاوي - لقاء نادر
البرنامج - فرقه ابووالشباب
Tunisian Dancers Take Back the Streets
The sound of the Tunisian drum, known as the Darbouka, grows louder as the hands of performers strike the instrument’s rawhide and then bounce back in synchronicity. A young man strides to the center of the public square in front of Tunis’ Medina and begins to dance to traditional Tunisian rhythms that reverberate from the hollow depths of the Darbouka.
The dancer starts whirling before he is joined by two other dancers performing a contemporary routine, as a growing crowd watches. A passerby joins the dancers for a brief moment before continuing on his way, leaving the dancers whose numbers have now increased and whose dancing styles range from traditional to lyrical.
This piece of performance art, “I will dance despite everything,” was organized in December by the Tunisian cultural association “Art Solution.” Created in June 2011, Art Solution aims to promote dance and produce street art events as well as workshops.
“The association is conceived of as a response to the general mood of the country. We were afraid that Tunisian artists would lose their status in the street with the impeding danger of extremists, who threaten freedom,” said Bahri Ben Yahmed, one of Art Solution’s founders. ”We have organized several projects before but we were often denied permission by the ministries. The official ministries did not acknowledge artists and hence came the idea of an association that promotes artistic freedom.”
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Dancers perform in Kasbah Square (Photo credit: Facebook page of Art Solution)
“The streets belong to art and artists,” Ben Yahmed asserted.
Last December…continue at tunisialive.
