Source:
Campaign Iran, UK
Shabnam Yazdi speaks to British rapper of Iranian
origin Reveal about Iranian hip hop and his work with rappers in Iran Reveal,
from the hip-hop outfit Poisonous Poets, was the winner of the 2000 UK Freestyle
Championships. He will be performing at the Beats Beat Sanctions fundraiser in
aid of Campaign Iran next week.
How long has hip-hop been around in Iran
and how widespread is it?
It's a really new thing. Iranians became aware of
hip-hop through Satellite TV and the internet and it has become one of the most
popular music styles since then. The first Iranian rappers started appearing on
the internet around six years ago, but have gained extraordinary popularity
since then. I recorded a track with Hichkas, the godfather of Persian rap, in
2003. He was not known then, but in the space of a year the track had become so
popular he couldn't walk down the street without being mobbed.
What are the issues being rapped about?
There are essentially two kinds of hip-hop in
Iran. Party hip-hop which is similar to American hip-hop-about clubs and women
and street hip-hop which focuses on social issues. The rappers on the street
scene focus on social issues inside Iran as well rapping against western
interference in Iran-something that they have in common with other rappers in
the Middle East. They see their music as being against the commercial hip-hop
scene coming out the US.
Tell me about the street hip-hop scene
It started off in Tehran and is still mainly
based there, but pockets of rappers are emerging all over Iran.
There are severe restrictions on musicians in
Iran and it is very hard for even a traditional musician to gain permission to
put on public performances. Rap artists are even more restricted and are never
given such permission, because officials see their music as Western and
decadent.
Because of this, the hip-hop scene is
underground, there's no structure to it or support system-essentially it's a
bunch of young kids making music for the love of it. They get their music out
via the internet and don't make money out of it. In some ways this makes the
music very pure.
What is the future of hip-hop in Iran?
It all depends on what happens in Iran generally.
I'd like to see a situation where the music is allowed to flourish in the way
the Arabic and Turkish hip-hop scene has. Hichkas, who has the biggest selling
Persian language album on Itunes, had to go through a third party to be able to
sign the contract and was ripped off.
We are now setting up a record label in Europe,
which will enable Iranian rappers to sell their music easily and we will be
showing the latest video from a female rapper, Salome, at the
Beats Beat Sanctions gig next
Thursday.
See Reveal perform at the Beats Beat
Sanctions gig on Thursday.
Book here
... Payvand News - 02/20/10 ... --