Arab News

From Syria to Detroit, we are all migrants, sings bluesman Bibb

-

LONDON: “Migration Blues,” a new album from veteran bluesman Eric Bibb, uses the sounds of the American South to tell the tale of everyone from 1920s farmers fleeing the Dust Bowl for California to refugees crossing the Mediterran­ean to Europe in the 2010s.

Along the way are Mexicans seeking a future in the United States, families moving from land the government has just seized for corporate expansion, and a Cajun jig reminding listeners of the expulsion of French Canadians south down the Mississipp­i.

“We are all linked by one migration or another. We are all connected to migrants,” Bibb told Reuters ahead of the album’s release. “The hysterical reaction against migrants is really hard to understand. Have we really forgotten our history?“The album’s most contempora­ry subject is to be found in “Prayin’ For Shore,” a blues about the plight of millions of Syrians and others who have fled civil wars in the Middle East on sometimes fatal journeys to Europe across the Mediterran­ean. “In an old leaky boat, somewhere on the sea/trying to get away from the war/Welcome or not, got to land soon/Oh lord, prayin’ for shore,” run the lyrics. The song, Bibb wrote in an accompanyi­ng booklet, is about rememberin­g the drowned. But the fleeing migrants of today are nothing new. Fo r Bibb, an African American, another key moment in history was “The Great Migration” of millions of southern blacks away from America’s segregated South.

 ??  ?? Eric Bibb
Eric Bibb
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia