Archive for June, 2007

A night with DAM

They are Palestine’s front-page rap band, and one of the most interesting groups gatheringinternational attention today, but yet, its their first time performing in an Arab city. For you see, Tamer Nafar, Suhell Nafar, and Mahmoud Jreri were born in Il-Led (Lod), descendants of the Palestinians or “Israeli Arabs” who stayed after the forced exodus of their brethren in 1948, and thus have Israeli citizenships, making them unwelcome in the most of the Arab world.

That says a lot about the sort of music they were singing, “We’ve been like this more than 50 years, living as prisoners behind the bars of paragraphs of agreements that change nothing… You won’t limit my hope by a wall of separation, and if this barrier comes between me and my land, I’ll still be connected to Palestine, like an embryo to the umbilical cord.” Musically, DAM’s is a unique mix of East and West, fusing Arabic percussive rhythms, Middle Eastern melodies and urban hip hop/rap, as well as parts of popular music from both worlds. They’re also extremely creative and very charismatic. The sound system at Al-Hussein Parks really needs some tweaking though.

It has been almost two years from when I first blogged about DAM, and I’m really glad I got to hear them live, as a part of the now annual Fete De La Musique (one more reason to love to the French). For more on DAM, check out their homepage or the MySpace page (which also has some samples).



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T’is the Season for Celebration

The other day, we were sitting on the veranda of a cafe across from the university during one of the graduation ceremonies, and the Jordanian-style happiness just filled the air (read: noise pollution, manic driving styles, and suicidal happiness habits).


(notice the guy with the camera in front)



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Reader Survey

Hey, I’d really appreciate it if you take a second to fill out this reader survey that I need for blogging-related reasons, it’s pretty short and will take you only a few minutes. Thanks a lot in advance :)



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Out of this World Ammanite Wedding Trends

Eccentric, and I still really can’t get past trying to figure out why in the world would anyone want a Greco-Roman sword fight at their wedding. Historical influences that the Greco-Roman culture has left in Jordan? Too much of that 800 movie? Al-Resalah style Arab love of sword fights? Mind-boggling indeed.

Personally, I guess I side with the regular (and I suppose boring, I mean, what, no sword fight?!) zaffeh.



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Rima Hamarneh

Picture 868

As you can see, I’ve been putting my degree to good use.

Anyone knows where we can find Caran D’ache brand oil pastels in Amman?



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The Story of a ka3keh

Ka3ek

Ka3ek

Ka3ek

Ka3ek

Ka3ek



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