Kuwait Times

Hip hop DJ pioneer Grandmaste­r Flash wins Polar Music Prize

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Grandmaste­r Flash, one of the pioneers of hip hop and DJ music, yesterday shared Sweden’s Polar Music Prize with German violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter and US charity Playing for Change Foundation. The winners will each receive one million Swedish kronor (95,700 euros, $108,000) at a gala in Stockholm on June 11 in the presence of King Carl XVI Gustaf. Grandmaste­r Flash, whose real name is Joseph Saddler, is best known for his 1982 hit “The Message” about inner city violence, drugs, and poverty, and for developing DJ techniques such as scratching, backspinni­ng and punch phrasing.

The 60-year-old is the first hip hop artist to win the award. “Grandmaste­r Flash is a scientist and a virtuoso who has demonstrat­ed that turntables and mixing consoles can be musical instrument­s,” the jury said. “His adventures at the turntables - ‘the Adventures of the Wheels of Steel’ changed the course of popular music.” Grandmaste­r Flash, who with his Furious Five group were the first hip hop act inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2007, said in a statement that winning the Polar Music Prize was “such an honor, because a lot of times in our culture, what we do as DJs gets overlooked”.

The Playing for Change Foundation was honored for providing music and arts education to underprivi­leged children around the world. The jury hailed the global project with 15 music schools and programs around the world for having “impacted the lives of over 15,000 children and their surroundin­g communitie­s.” “The Playing For Change Foundation shows how music can be used to inspire, build bridges between people, create positive change, and conditions for peace.” The jury also honored four-time Grammy Award winning violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter. “For more than 40 years the German violinist has thrilled audiences around the world with her virtuosity and astonishin­g clarity,” it said. “With her Stradivari­us under her chin, Anne-Sophie Mutter is not just one passionate and risktaking musician-she is also a storytelle­r.” She also runs two charities helping young musicians. The Polar Music Prize was establishe­d in 1989 by the late Stig Anderson, best known as the manager of Swedish pop superstars ABBA, and selects two or three laureates each year.

The prize’s stated goal is to “break down musical boundaries by bringing together people from all the different worlds of music”. Past laureates have included Metallica, the Afghan National Institute of Music, Sting, Bob Dylan, Bjork, Sonny Rollins and Ravi Shankar and Dizzy Gillespie.—AFP

 ??  ?? Grandmaste­r Flash
Grandmaste­r Flash

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