Tag Archives: middle east

Come with me to the Eastern Mediterranean and beyond…


I get to experience new customs and new cultures which I feel makes me a better and wiser person. There’s a lot that we read and hear about when it comes to other parts of the world but actually visiting and experiencing another country in person is quite different.

It’s a big world out there. People live and behave differently. When you live in another country, you can open your eyes to the beliefs and values of other people and its influence on their everyday life. You will discover new social norms and lifestyles. It will not only change your perspective, but it will re-shape your personality as well.

The Middle East is of course a set of countries whose cultural traditions are different than the West.

I start with Özel Türkbaş (September 1, 1938 – July 22, 2012) who was a Turkish-born actress, model, singer and belly dancer, who helped popularize belly dancing in the US and recorded traditional music aimed at a western audience, including the successful 1969 album Bellydance with Özel Türkbaş: How to Make Your Husband a Sultan. Ozel’s Dance Routine (Mr Thing Re-Edit) is one of the tracks from Özel Turkbas’ album, called “How To Belly Dance For Your Sultan”

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  • Aris San (1940 – 1992) was a famous Greek singer who immigrated to Israel and was one of the first to use electric guitar in a Greek music setting.

“The status of popular Eastern music changed dramatically in the 1960s, with the eruption of the “Greek” wave of popular music in Israel. “Greek popularmusic” in this context should be understood as the sound of hybrid nightclub music styles from Athens and Thessaloniki, generally referred to as laika (DeBoer 1996). A dominant feature of this sound is the presence of the bouzouki. This type of Greek music became a favorite style for Israeli born Eastern Jews as well as for many non-Easterners.

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  • GANIMIAN & HIS ORIENTAL MUSIC-COME WITH ME TO THE CASBAH

This of the earliest examples of any kind of recorded fusion between rhythm heavy pop music and traditional Turkish music. For Ganimian, this is a sadly unrecorded turk jerk combo The Nor-Ikes (New Dawn) combo – ran almost simultaneously alongside the rising Anadolou Pop scene in Turkey, resulting in his short lived powerhouse of Kif proto-rock under the changing names of Ganim’s Asia Minors, Ganimian & His Orientals and Ganimian & His Oriental Music Orchestra.

Combining a line-up of mostly unknown musicians from his local community (where he was worked as a butcher), Ganimian, in a short unison with ATCO records, was fortunate enough to accommodate jazz guitarist Al Schactman as part of his studio personnel (launching the career of this Nina Simone regular) as well as French born Armenian folk singer Onnik Dinkjian and reid player Steve Bogoshian (both from the band The House Of The Seven Uncles) as well as the esteemed Turkish raised Kanun player Ahmet Yatman.

As one of the very few early American recorded authentic Middle Eastern fusion record Come With Me To The Casbah has piqued a refined interest in a new generation of progressive world music collector resulting in a distinct drought in original Ganimian pressings on the collectors’ market earning Chicks name a rising placeholder on the want lists of DJs, vinyl hounds and ethno psychedelia collectors.

  • Devil’s Anvil

The Devil’s Anvil were a group of Arab-American musicians playing the New York folk and rock club circuit in the mid-’60s. They differed from virtually every other group experimenting with Eastern sounds because though they were rock musicians deeply rooted to the folk traditions of their heritages, and they played the Anatolian instruments associated with them. Hard Rock from the Middle East is the only album issued by the group. They had the unfortunate karma of having their album released at the height of the Arab-Israeli war and no one would touch the recording.

  • Light in Babylon

“Light in Babylon”, an original fusion of ethnicities and culture. An Iranian Israeli singer, a Turkish santoor player and a French guitarist have come together to collaborate with eclectic musicians from around the world to create and spread an open, peaceful and shining orientalism.

With the strength and openness of their youth and the various musical influences they have, they intuitively created a original colourful blend of their inner voices with flavours that would carry the imagination on a travel trough the Middle east and beyond.

Story sources: Wikipedia, Image credit: Flickr creative Commons

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Carte des pays qui reconnaissent soit le Kosovo soit la Palestine, soit les deux soit aucun


Oui au Kosovo, non à la Palestine? Non au Kosovo mais oui pour la Palestine? 

(Map of countries that ecognize Kosovo or Palestine, both or neither)
kosovo and palestine recognition
Le Kosovo fête cette année le 10e anniversaire de son indépendance. Dans le pays le plus pauvre d’Europe, gangrené par la corruption, les trafics et l’islamisme radical, la gouvernance n’est pas à la hauteur, plusieurs dirigeants étant liés à des crimes commis durant la guerre avec la Serbie.

De 1999 à 2008, le statut final du Kosovo est indéterminé, ce qui paralyse son développement politique et contribue à une situation sociale tendue. En droit international, la résolution 1244, tout en affirmant le caractère provisoire de ce statut, affirme l’attachement de l’ONU à l’intégrité territoriale de la République fédérale de Yougoslavie, remplacée en février 2003 par la Serbie-et-Monténégro dont la Serbie est l’héritière politique.

Au 17 février 2018, 116 États membres de l’ONU ainsi que Taïwan et l’Ordre de Malte ont formellement reconnu le Kosovo comme un État indépendant et souverain, néanmoins deux membres permanents du Conseil de sécurité – la Russie et la Chine – y sont opposés, ce qui est également le cas de cinq pays de l’UE, notamment l’Espagne, en prise avec l’indépendantisme catalan. Près de 20 ans après l’intervention de l’OTAN contre la Serbie, la communauté internationale reste divisée.

kosovo ethnic map
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ea/Kosovo_ethnic_map_2011_census.GIF

 

En comparant avec l’état Palestinien, en 2017, l’État palestinien est reconnu par 136 États (70,5 %) sur les 193 membres que compte l’Organisation des Nations unies.La Palestine a attendu son statut d’observateur à l’ONU pendant 65 ans.

In Jerusalem You killed me … and I forgot, like you, to die.


Duma, (West Bank) Palestine late July 2015: An eighteen-month-old Palestinian child, Ali Dawabsheh has been burnt alive in an arson attack by  Jewish extremists, while both his parents died from their injuries within weeks.

From the first day, the Israeli authorities imposed a press embargo on the subject, banning the media from publishing any details or developments related to the investigation. On 31 August 2015, the embargo was extended by a month. 

Continue reading In Jerusalem You killed me … and I forgot, like you, to die.

What’s happening between Saudi Arabia and Lebanon?


Lebanon was stunned on Nov. 4 and its still in shock when its prime minister, Saad Hariri, speaking from Saudi Arabia, delivered a halting resignation speech. Mr. Hariri said he left Beirut because he feared assassination. He placed the blame for his long-distance resignation on Iran and its main ally in Lebanon, Hezbollah.

Continue reading What’s happening between Saudi Arabia and Lebanon?