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Music, A Healing Medium On So Many Different Levels

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  • Music, A Healing Medium On So Many Different Levels

    MUSIC, A HEALING MEDIUM ON SO MANY DIFFERENT LEVELS
    By Kaelen Wilson-Goldie

    The Daily Star
    Thursday, September 14, 2006

    Musicians come to the rescue of war victims with benefit concert and CD

    INTERVIEW

    BEIRUT: "We felt that we were trapped," says Ghazi Abdel Baki, as he
    sits in the colorful seventh-floor headquarters of his production
    house for documentaries, animations and music. The noontime sun is
    filtering through fabric panels that loop down from the glass ceiling
    of a rooftop office. The labyrinthine spaces of Forward Productions,
    situated in the neighborhood of Sakiat al-Janzir, between Verdun
    and Raouche, include recording studios and editing suites and rooms
    stuffed with low-slung couches and pillows.

    Abdel Baki, who is 36 going on 37 this month, is a drummer by training
    and a composer and producer by trade. At present, he is recalling
    the initial motivation that sparked "We Live ... ," a compilation by
    Lebanese musicians created under the summer's siege.

    "We didn't know where the horizon of this war was," he explains,
    meaning that while Israel was bombing Lebanon during the months of
    July and August, no one knew when it would end.

    "If we had known where the horizon was, we might have lived this period
    differently," adds Carol Mansour, Abdel Baki's partner at Forward and
    a documentary filmmaker with boundless energy and an impressive head
    of auburn curls.

    "Moving around the city was very difficult," explains Abdel Baki. "And
    the feeling was very difficult. In the beginning, we felt all our
    projects had been halted in their tracks. It was very abrupt. There
    was no build-up to this. We were not prepared for a war.

    We had to shift from being productive people very quickly."

    Less than a week into the conflict, Abdel Baki and a handful of
    musicians he has known and worked with for years decided to meet up at
    the Blue Note Cafe on Makhoul Street, between Hamra and the American
    University of Beirut, one of the longest-standing and most-fabled
    music venues in Beirut.

    Among them was Charbel Rouhana, one of Lebanon's best known oud
    players, who performs regularly at the Blue Note; bassist Abboud
    Saadi, whom Abdel Baki describes as "the godfather of all the modern
    musicians;" and Ziyad Sahhab, an up-and-coming oud player, singer and
    composer, who, at 23, is set to release his second album on Forward
    next month.

    "The Blue Note is like our second home," explains Abdel Baki. "And
    it was one of the few places that was open at the time. We stayed
    from noon until seven in the evening, just discussing things."

    A friend from Kuwait, Meshal al-Kandari, was also with them. A
    marketing manager for mobile phones who writes poetry and, as it
    turns out, song lyrics - he got stuck in Lebanon when the war broke
    out. Beirut was meant to be a stopover on his way to the rather more
    rollicking Spanish island of Ibiza.

    At the end of that first and ultimately only Blue Note session, Abdel
    Baki, Kandari and company left with a plan. Kandari would orchestrate
    a benefit concert for Lebanon in Kuwait with Rouhana and a band of
    musicians who would join them there from locations as far flung as
    Armenia (Arthur Satyan) and Minnesota (Tom Hornig).

    Abdel Baki would take tracks by all the musicians present and rework
    them - in some cases re-record them - into the compilation that is
    now complete, a copy sitting in its jewel case on a desk in Forward's
    office.

    "Whatever needs to be done on the outside needs to be linked to people
    on the inside," says Abdel Baki, addressing a contentious issue that
    has afflicted those working in all spheres of culture in Lebanon -
    whether to create for an audience at home (showing solidarity) or
    abroad (raising awareness).

    Abdel Baki and Kandari embraced the debate and did both. For six
    days in July, Abdel Baki worked on the CD. It wasn't easy. After
    that meeting at the Blue Note, many of the musicians holed up in
    their respective hometowns. The proximity of the Forward studios
    to the Israeli warships located off the coast of Beirut made for
    particularly harrowing and disruptive acoustics.

    "We had no electricity. Our morale was down. Here, you hear very well
    the gunboats and in this glass structure," he explains, one feels
    palpably exposed to the threat of death.

    http://www.dailystar.com.lb

    Still, Abdel Baki, Rouhana, Saadi, Sahhab and Kandari managed to rework
    and update the six tracks that now comprise "We Live ... " Kandari
    added new lyrics to Rouhana's "Loubnan Fawk Hamat al-Duniah." Saadi
    rejiggered a previously unrecorded, jazzy instrumental piece called
    "Najwa's Song." Sahhab captured the mood of the time with a tracked
    named "Safar," the expression used when someone has traveled. Abdel
    Baki messed around with a track slated for his upcoming album
    "Communique #2," a follow-up to his debut, "Communique #1." The song
    now carries the title "Under Siege."

    "Before the title was much more cynical," he says.

    What was it?

    "Happy Citizen," he smiles.

    What is immediately striking about "We Live ..." is that, considering
    the circumstances under which it was produced, it is a far from
    somber album. While not particularly cohesive in terms of style or
    even quality - a compromise to context - it is resolutely energetic
    and suitably manic.

    "Beyond the bombing and all that is, in our opinion, being imposed
    on us, we felt that we as musicians, we live," says Abdel Baki. "Out
    of total chaos musicians can still produce. That was the challenge,
    and some people criticized us for this but the fact that we were
    producing an album is itself [the point]."

    As evidence of how technology kept people tethered together during
    the war, Abdel Baki finished the album, "liquefied" the tracks by
    converting them into MP3 files, enlisted a graphic designer in New
    York to do the layout of the cover and the liner notes and then sent
    everything to Kuwait, where Kandari, who had grabbed Rouhana and fled
    Lebanon to make it on time to that benefit gig, set up a group called
    Wafa ("loyalty" in Arabic) to produce the CD there.

    Now, all proceeds from both the benefit concert and sales of the
    CD are going directly to humanitarian aid and refugee relief groups
    working on the ground and with the people in Lebanon. That in itself
    posed an additional round of challenges.

    Over the past month, much criticism has been leveled at the Lebanese
    government's Higher Relief Council (HRC) for inefficiency, ineptitude
    and worse in terms of distributing aid.

    Particularly in its documentary division, Forward carries a distinctly
    progressive political bent - producing films about migrant labor in
    Lebanon, for example. So Abdel Baki is well positioned to say he thinks

    such criticism about the HRC is valid: "It's totally politicized
    and arbitrary," he says. For this reason, the contributions from
    "We Live ..." are going directly to the people. "No bureaucracy,
    no red tape," Abdel Baki says. To keep this system transparent,
    Kandari has created a blog to track the movement of funds.

    The first edition of "We Live ..." consists of 2,000 copies, and
    Abdel Baki hopes to follow it up with a series of concerts

    at Masrah al-Madina this fall. This is only a slight modification of
    his original plans for the season.

    "We're two weeks behind, but October is still October," he says,
    stepping toward a door with a schedule of appearances taped to
    it. "This is from before the war," he says, running a finger down
    the list. "This haunted us. This was a reminder to us every day." It
    seems to have worked.

    "We Live ... " is available at CD-Theque, the Virgin Megastore
    and online. For more information, please see www.fwdprod.com or
    www.faithlebanon.blogspot.com

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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