Arab Times

Afghan institute & metal pioneers Metallica win music’s ‘Nobel Prize’

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STOCKHOLM, Feb 14, (AFP): An Afghan music institute that has empowered girls in the war-torn country and metal pioneers Metallica on Wednesday shared the Polar Music Prize, often called music’s Nobel.

The laureates will each receive one million Swedish kronor (101,000 euros, $125,000) at a televised gala in Stockholm on June 14 in the presence of King Carl XVI Gustaf.

The Afghan National Institute of Music was honoured along with its founder, Ahmad Sarmast, who started the school in 2010 in a rare coeducatio­nal initiative in the war-torn country.

The institute, which teaches both Afghan and Western music, helped generate the country’s first all-female orchestra which performed last year at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

Sarmast, who has faced substantia­l risk in a country where both music and girls’ education was banned under the repressive 1996-2001 Taleban regime, said he was “very excited, honoured and privileged” to win the prize.

“We believe that our two recipients, although from very contrastin­g worlds, exemplify the mission of the Polar Music Prize, and that is to honour musicians and music organisati­ons whose work has made a difference to people’s lives,” Marie Ledin, managing director of the award, said in a statement.

“Metallica is loved and admired by millions of hard rock fans across the globe,” she said.

Sarmast and the music institute, meanwhile, have worked “to restore the joy and power of music to children’s lives,” she said.

Metallica is one of the most influentia­l bands in heavy metal, helping bring the angry and aggressive music to the mainstream and preserving an avid fan base for decades.

Lars Ulrich, the California band’s Danish-born drummer, called the Polar Music Prize “a great validation of everything that Metallica has done over the last 35 years.”

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