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Members of Iraqi boy band dream of Rock 'n Roll fame

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  • Members of Iraqi boy band dream of Rock 'n Roll fame

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    April 8 2004

    Members of Iraqi boy band dream of Rock 'n Roll fame
    But with instability in country, their opportunities are even more
    limited than during Saddam's reign

    By Borzou Daragahi
    Special to The Daily Star

    BAGHDAD: They're young, cute and talented. After the fall of Saddam
    Hussein, Western journalists swooned over Art Haroutunian, Nadeem
    Hamid, Hassan Ali, Shant Zawar and Diar Delyar, the fun-loving
    members the Iraqi boy band, Unknown to No One. They were invited to
    England. They dreamed they'd soon see their names in lights, joining
    the ranks of their idols: Wham!, Backstreet Boys, Boys to Men, West
    Life and Michael Jackson.

    Alas, Iraq's bungled reconstruction effort and continuing instability
    have put a damper on their rise. Despite its new freedoms and new
    possibilities, the new era hasn't made the pop life any easier, and
    it's brought plenty of disappointments, even for Baghdad's jovial boy
    band.

    "Good things during Saddam's time have turned bad while bad things
    about the Saddam time have turned good," says Haroutunian, the band's
    leader. "We don't have to fear being summoned for military service or
    hunted by the intelligence officers. But we fear terrorist bombings
    and insecurity. Even though we have more money, there are no night
    clubs and no entertainment."

    Indeed, the light-hearted band's experiences since the toppling of
    Saddam Hussein's regime on April 9, 2003 encapsulates many of
    post-war Iraq's successes and failures.

    The band members, who sing and speak perfect English, thought they
    had paid their dues, trying to live out their Rock n Roll fantasies
    under Saddam Hussein's brutal dictatorship, where satellite dishes
    were outlawed and Western music had to be smuggled into the country.

    Once they wanted to get their song, Hey, Girl, on a radio station
    controlled by Saddam Hussein's son Odai, who was killed by American
    troops in Mosul last summer. Keyboardist Haroutunian says they were
    told no way, not even with payola, unless they came up with a
    birthday song for Saddam Hussein.

    They whipped something together: "Shining throught the times, Your
    light never ends, You're the one who helps us find the truth out of
    lies, You're the answer to all our hopes and dreams, Our love, our
    lives to you we have have given, Our love, you bring, all bells let
    them ring, As we all will sing, long live dear Saddam." Odai's radio
    station aired the Saddam song on the hour for a week.

    "Then our love song, they broadcast it only once, and that was it,"
    says Haroutunian.

    For Haroutunian, an Iraqi Christian, and his Sunni, Kurdish and
    Shiite bandmates, the US invasion liberated them from tyranny. It was
    time to party, or so they thought.

    "My whole life I was living this lie and it was gone in a twinkle of
    an eye," Haroutunian said. "I laughed and cried. We celebrated."

    Indeed, the US invasion transformed Iraq's pop landscape. Record
    stores became filled with bootlegged copies of Britney Spears, 50
    Cent and Christina Aguilera.

    Satellite music channels began pumping out the latest Arab pop tunes
    from Beirut and Cairo. The airwaves were flooded with America's Radio
    Sawa, with its mix of Western, Middle Eastern and even Indian hits.

    Despite the flood of new entertainment, the band found opportunities
    in the new Iraq even more limited than before. Just after the war,
    they were invited to England by Channel 4. Promoters and media
    descended on them, vowing to make them the next big thing.

    But Iraq's Foreign Ministry burned down after the war, and since the
    boys didn't have passports, they've been waiting a whole year to get
    permission to leave the country. They're stuck in Iraq until at least
    June 30, Haroutunian says.

    The band would have loved spending the last year in Baghdad putting
    together a new album. From Now On, their first album, sold 2,000
    copies at about $2 a piece. But the Baghdad music scene is even more
    moribund than before. All the studios have cleared of their equipment
    in fear of robbers.

    "Nobody's producing songs here," Haroutunian.

    Under Saddam Hussein, the boys tried in vain to find a venue in which
    to perform live in Iraq. These days they wouldn't dream of it. An
    epidemic of violence has shaken the country, says guitarist Ali. "Who
    will risk his life and go watch an Iraqi boy band in a concert?" he
    asks. "Nobody would do it."

    The post-war Iraq has even robbed Unknown to No One of the main
    fringe benefits of being in a pop band. "All the parents keep their
    girls locked up at home," says singer Hamid, whose slim, tall figure
    and bedroom eyes made him the band heartthrob before the war. "None
    of us is getting lucky with the girls," he says.

    The band wanted to spend the past year sharpening their act, getting
    tighter musically. But Iraq's phone service was destroyed during the
    war and full service has yet to be restored. Just arranging a
    practice has become a complicated nightmare.

    All of the boys are in their early 20s, except for Art, who's 26, a
    little gray for boy band stardom. But they remain hopeful.

    "We have the ambition of becoming rock stars," says Hamid. "It hasn't
    happened yet. But," he takes a deep breath, "fingers crossed."

    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=4&artic le_id=1724
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