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WBC Willy Brandt Center Jerusalem |
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Concert and Session
Songs from the Underground
In this singing session Omar Yousef sings and introduces songs which
were not
“fanfared” in the media and were usually circulating in the black
markets
of students, protest movements and lots of dreamers longing for social
justice. They were not part of the commercial and mainstream fanfare
which
is dominated mainly by all types of love with a special accent on
suffering.
Omar Yousef presents another music which is richer and more colorful
in
its themes and concerns in spite of the simplicity of its means: The music
of the underground song-writers Sheikh Imam, Marcel Khalifa, Whalid
Abdes-Salaam and others.
Sheikh Imam was an Egyptian rebel, with wit, sarcasm and a courage
which
always brought him into trouble, he and his fellow poet Ahmad Fuad
Nijem.
They gave voice to the underground and the left; both were imprisoned
by
all the republican governments that ruled Egypt, from Nasser reaching
Mubarak. His songs cover the 60’s-80’s, mentioning several social,
economic and political issues in addition to love.
Marcel Khalifa was actively singing during the Lebanon war and voiced
the
concerns of the national democratic forces and the left in the
70’s-80’s.
His songs were about freedom fighters but also of vendors, taxi
drivers,
children and kites.
Walid Abdes-Salaam captured the mood and the concerns of the first
Palestinian Intifada in his songs. His texts flow between soldiers,
stones
and the dreams of zeit u za’tar.
www.willybrandtcenter.org/en/red/reviews07/omar
07.01.2009, 09:01