Showing posts with label reveal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reveal. Show all posts

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Hichkas Freestyle with new Candis designs


I don't know what he's saying, but Hichkas has a certain charm. Hichkas and Reveal perform in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia this Saturday night.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Hichkas & Reveal Perform Live Together for First Time

This will be Hichkas' first legal live concert!



Iranian rapper Hichkas, the "President of Iranian Hip Hop", performs in the Cannes Award winning film, "No One Knows About the Persian Cats" currently showing in New York and soon to open nation-wide. Hichkas recently released the track, "Ye Rooze Khoob Miad" which implicitly shows support for democracy in Iran while at the same time showing support for Iranians' reconciliation. I'm on the edge of my seat waiting to see what Hichkas says and does next, now that he is outside of Iran! The Fred Khoshtinat video for Hichkas' Ye Mosht Sarbaz is one of the reasons that I visited Iran last May. I hope that while he is in Malaysia he makes another video!


Hichkas has featured British-Iranian rapper Reveal on some of his most amazing, Mahdyar Aghajani-produced tracks--including "Dideh & Del". Hichkas and Reveal were both featured recently by British-Iraqi MC Lowkey, on "Long Live Palestine--Part 2" which was a smash hit and climbed to the top of the charts. (Lowkey recently performed at Southpaw in Brooklyn together with DAM, the Narcyssist, and Shadia Mansour.)

This concert is sure to be epic!!!!!!!! I hope they come to New York soon!

Facebook Event Page:
"HICH-KAS AND REVEAL LIVE IN CONCERT
"Friday, May 14, 2010 at 9:00pm


Saturday, May 15, 2010 at 2:00am
Dragonfly
Jalan Kia Peng
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

"For the first time ever, live in concert all the way from Tehran Iran, we are proud to present an event of truly epic
proportions...

"For years Hich-kas has dominated the Persian rap scene even though circumstances have been such that he has been unable to ever perform live in concert.

"Now, for the very first time, Hich-kas will be performing live alongside special guest Reveal all the way from London, UK for one night only at the exclusive Dragonfly venue in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

"This performance marks the start of the international Hich-Kas tour , the dates of which will be announced shortly...

"Make sure you do not miss this truly historical event!!!!"

THIS EVENT IS SELLING OUT VERY VERY QUICKLY, PLEASE MAKE SURE U BOOK EARLY TO AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT!



FOR MORE INFO AND TICKETS CALL:
006017-2053 079
006017-2053 360
006017-2053 361
This event is organized by SEDAYE NOU and sponsored by GULLY GARMZ.








Monday, October 5, 2009

Seeking Refuge: Mahdyar Flees the Crackdown on Iran's Hip-Hop

Photo by Farbud Akhtarry

by Julie Ashcraft (A.K.A. Jigsawnovich)
18-Oct-2009

At the tender age of 17, Mahdyar Aghajani produced the critically acclaimed, top-selling album, Jangale Asphalt (Asphalt Jungle) by Iranian rapper, Hichkas. Taking an art form that sprang from the streets of New York into their own hands, Mahdyar and Hichkas teamed up to create a uniquely Iranian Hip Hop sound, with Mahdyar incorporating traditional Persian instruments and tonalities. Yet, Hip Hop is forbidden in Iran, and the authorities there soon came looking for Hichkas and Mahdyar. Hichkas remains in Tehran, but Mahdyar fled the country. He spoke with me a few days ago, from Paris.

What are you working on now?

Mahdyar: Six albums, one film. The albums are Reveal, Quf, Bahman Ghobadi, my own instrumental album, a London based alternative band, and Hichkas' new album. And the film is 60 Seconds about Us by Bahman Ghobadi.

Plus, you told me that you made two songs for, and play yourself in, Ghobadi's film, No One Knows About Persian Cats--which won the Un Certain Regard and the Special Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival. This film is about the underground music scene in Tehran. Do you miss Tehran yet?

Mahdyar: Sometimes...somethings...'someones.' But the thing is, right now I have lots of things to think about. I'm in a kind of survival mode.

Was it a culture shock coming to Europe--women wearing fewer clothes, etc.?

Mahdyar: Not at all. My friends in Berlin, they were like, "Look at this building, look at this bar, look at these chicks--why aren't you surprised?!" And I was like, "I traveled outside of Iran a few times when I was a kid. Maybe that's the reason."
Where did you go when you were a kid?
Singapore, Malaysia, Emirates and Turkey. But I think that's not the reason.

Are private parties in Tehran like parties in other countries?


Mahdyar: They are like parties here in Paris, exactly the same.

You are finding it easy to adapt to living in Europe?

Mahdyar: Because of cultural differences, or because of starting a life from zero?

I was thinking of cultural differences. Starting a life from zero would probably be hard anywhere.

Mahdyar: There is no cultural difference, I think. I mean, we were living the same, except we were living "underground" that way.

The big difference is your music is not illegal in the West. You don't have to fear being arrested and imprisoned just for making a particular genre of music. That's a big change.

Mahdyar: Yes it is. And it's the main reason I got out of Iran.

What is it like to have freedom of expression now?

Mahdyar: I always had freedom of expression. When you really don't care about being arrested or dying--you always, wherever, whenever you are--you are free.


I heard Hichkas was arrested a while back. Was the Iranian government looking to arrest you too?

Mahdyar: I was always on the list. I was making all of Hichkas' music. He was mentioning my name in his lyrics. But their first goal was to arrest Hichkas, because he had the most influence on people.

When did they first arrest him?

Mahdyar: Two or three years ago, after releasing the Jangale Asphalt album.

Were there lyrics to songs on Jangale Asphalt that the government didn't like? Or did they dislike it because Hip Hop is "Western music?"

Mahdyar: Both. Mainly because of the political lyrics, but there are so many rappers rapping political lyrics. The thing is, he was so famous. Everyone was listening to his tracks. They liked it, and he had lots of fans.

Which songs had political lyrics the government didn't like?

Mahdyar: "Ghanoon" and "Ekhtelaf." But they didn't say it was because of the lyrics. They said there was a problem because he is a rapper, and he is polluting the culture! And because he was the most known, he was targeted in their efforts to destroy Iranian Hip Hop.
Ghanoon is about things happening in the streets. Everyone is aggressive and all, but it's not their fault. It's because of the government that we have, that everyone hates everyone. And in the chorus he says, "Look, don't handcuff me. Why do you say, 'Shut up,' when you arrest me? I'm just a sacrifice from the jungle," --someone who they kill in Islam like a sheep for the god. I dunno the word in English. He says "I'm ghorbani from the jungle." Ghorbani: the animal they kill for the sake of god.

When he was rapping about them treating him like a sacrifice, did people listening to it think he was criticizing the Islamic regime in a religious way too?

Mahdyar: Yes, of course. He, himself, believes in Islam. But he knows that the government is using and changing Islam against people. He finishes one of his verses in "Ghanoon" like this: "I'm innocent, God is my witness. Or did someone pay God a bribe too?"

Do you express love in your music sometimes?

Mahdyar: Not really. Most of my songs, like 99%, have a sad theme. And I haven't made any tracks about a girl, or love.

There is a lot of "sadness music" in Iran. I think sadness is part of the culture.

Mahdyar: It is.

But the sadness is beautiful.

Mahdyar: I love it. Sometimes I want to be sad. I kinda like the feeling. But for some time now, I'm already so sad, that I'm looking hard for happiness.

It can't be easy, being an artist fleeing political persecution.

Mahdyar: My first night in Berlin was very hard. I was told that someone would pick me up with his car from the airport, and put me in a ready home studio--with a fridge full of food, and a cell phone, and money, and all the things that are needed for a life. So I should only think about my music, and do my music--completely focused and free. But when I came to Berlin, there was nothing, no one.
I rented a room in an apartment. I got to the apartment with the metro--carrying all of my tools and life with me. When I got to the room, the owner wasn't there. Someone showed me my room, and said, "You sleep here." Every door was locked. Just my room and toilet. No food in the kitchen.
The owner was an artist. I didn't know that. In the room there was a lot of blood on the ceiling and walls. And the apartment was in the ghetto. Some drunk guys were fighting each other in the street, yelling.
What happened in that room!? What was the blood from?!!
It was paint, I think. But he put it there like blood. I will tell you about him later. In that situation, I was thinking, "What did I do--leaving the life I had made in Tehran with my own hands for this." But it became right the second night. The artist was a 30yr old, cool guy. He listened to some of my music and he was so excited. We became friends.
In Berlin, after one month, I made a life again. I had a home studio. I had friends and artists around me. The city was great. Everything seemed to be going well again, until my visa expired.
They told me don't worry. You'll go to Paris--again the same--you go straight to your ready home studio and lawyers are going to get you a two year business visa in a day. But when I came, again there was nothing. I couldn't even find a place to sleep.
I found a lawyer the day after, and talked with him. He told me to forget getting a long visa. The only way is to ask for refugee status, and that is so hard to get.

Mahdyar's case is in court. Reveal's album, and Quf's album, will be released soon. Mahdyar is looking for a studio, to master Quf's album.


AUTHOR
 Julie Jigsawnovich is an artist who visited Iran a few weeks before the election. She lives in New York, and can be contacted at Jigsawnovich1 (at) gmail.com. This article was first published in Persianesque Magazine, and later published on Iranian.com http://www.iranian.com/main/2009/oct/seeking-refuge