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‘IT HIT ME I MIGHT NEVER GO BACK HOME AND THEN SONG JUST GUSHED OUT OF ME’

▶ Maya Youssef picked up her qanun in an act of defiance against the horror unfolding in her Syrian homeland – and her music has struck a universal chord, writes Rob Garratt

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Maya Youssef had never written a piece of music before when she sat down at her qanun, fighting the tears rolling down her face, and began playing the first notes of what would become Syrian Dreams – the title track of her debut album – an uncontroll­able emotional outpouring inspired by watching the images of war ravaging her homeland.

“It was 2012, I was sitting in my apartment in London, watching the news, and there was this moment when I saw a little girl, the same age as my son – about three-and-a-half, four – dead in her bedroom in Damascus,” remembers the 33-yearold former UAE resident. “It hit me at that moment that I might never go back, that I might lose my country – it was really dark, I was in tears, I held the instrument and Syrian

Dreams just gushed out of me.” Born and raised in Damascus, Youssef had arrived in the British capital earlier that same year, after years living in Dubai and Muscat.

Despite unfamiliar­ity with her 78-string instrument globally, her songs have struck a universal chord

Now thousands of miles away, connected to her homeland only through frantic messages and tragic news reports, the music began to flow. “I never felt the need to write before, but music became a real outlet for me to just speak about everything I was feeling,” she says. “It was very raw, and it came from a place of sheer vulnerabil­ity.”

Despite the global unfamiliar­ity of her 78-string, traditiona­l, Arabian instrument, Youssef’s fragile, heartfelt compositio­ns have struck a universal chord. Released late in 2017, Syrian

Dreams recently earnt Youssef a nomination for Best Artist at the Songlines Music Awards 2018, one of world music’s highest-profile events. The only Arab, and the only instrument­alist, to be singled out for the honour, she will compete against establishe­d African superstars Vieux Farka Toure, Boubacar Traore and Oumou Sangare at October’s awards show in London.

“I came to understand that there is a massive power in showing how you really feel, and being vulnerable. It’s a powerful record because there’s a story behind each piece of music,” she says. “Also, it’s not what you expect from an Arabic qanun player – it challenged what you expect from a woman playing a very traditiona­l instrument – it broke the stereotype­s.”

After that first, dark night, the music continued to flow. The exterior chaos she witnessed enveloping her beloved homeland was mirrored in the interior terror of an abusive relationsh­ip, an experience relieved in the poignant Bombs Turn

into Roses, inspired by waking abruptly from a haunting dream. “I was going through domestic abuse at the same time as the situation in Syria had been getting really dark, and I had been losing family and friends,” she remembers. “I had a nightmare, a vision, that I was looking up to a sky full of bombs – they were falling down in slow motion, and just before they hit me they turned into white rose petals – and I woke up at 3am, half asleep, and wrote the main theme of the piece. I couldn’t finish it until 2016 because every time I tried to come back to it was a full circle.

“It was a really dark place from all dimensions – it was the fear of not finding my way, the fear even of dying. When I hit that stage, I heard a voice in my head, saying ‘right, there’s two choices here – do something about it, or perish’.”

Throughout the record, Youssef’s stark, piercing qanun melodies are sympatheti­cally framed by cello, oud and percussion, organic acoustic layers credited in part to Joe Boyd, the legendary rock, folk and world music producer whose credits include early Pink Floyd, Nick Drake, Eric Clapton and REM.

Not all the material comes from such a sombre place. Youssef warmly describes the nostalgic longing of Seven

Gates of Damascus as a 10-minute “sonic journey through my city”. Meanwhile the musician’s “mischievou­s side” is displayed in Hi-Jazz – a play on the hijaz mode otherwise known as the phrygian dominant scale – too-often employed to add flourishes of exoticism, from Hollywood movies to western pop songs.

“It’s basically me having a bit of a laugh at stereotype­s about Arabic music,” Youssef says with a giggle. “Whenever you want to evoke ‘the exotic east’, you just play the scale hijaz – and there’s so much more to Arabic music than this.”

Such an assuredly playful approach could only come from a certified musical omnivore with a rebellious streak. Today, Youssef laughs about the taxi driver who told her at the age of nine, on the way to Damascus’s Solhi al-Wadi Institute, that women should not play the qanun – a rebuttal which only fuelled her resolve to revolt, soon after ditching the violin she was carrying.

This oft-toted anecdote serves to underline both the prejudices and the energy she expended rallying against them. It was only after moving to Dubai in 2007 that Youssef began her career as a soloist, performing at prestigiou­s locations including the Burj Al Arab and Sharjah’s Al Qasba, and receiving wide exposure on Arabic TV channels.

“The UAE was the beginning for me,” she says. “As a musician you go through two phases – copying other people’s styles, and then finding your own voice. When I was in Damascus, I was within that bubble, I didn’t find it necessary to find my voice. In the UAE, I started playing by myself for 12 hours at a time – I would just do nothing but play, play, play – it was really crucial, because that was the beginning of me finding my unique voice.”

Two years later, Youssef was invited to teach Arabic music and qanun at Oman’s Sultan Qaboos University. Frustrated by the lack of opportunit­ies to continue her performanc­e career, after two years she emigrated to London as part of the Arts Council England’s Exceptiona­l Talent scheme, and she is currently pursuing a PhD at the University of London’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS).

Work is also already under way on a second album – which is likely to prove a less sombre affair.

“Right now, I’m full of hope, and in a lovely peaceful space in my life,” she added. “Everything I do is intuitive flow – I am not very good at doing stuff from here – everything I do comes from my heart and gut. I am the feely type, so if it doesn’t flow naturally, it’s not going to work for me.”

 ?? Photos Igor Studio ?? As a female musician playing a traditiona­lly male instrument, Maya Youssef is eschewing custom
Photos Igor Studio As a female musician playing a traditiona­lly male instrument, Maya Youssef is eschewing custom
 ??  ?? Maya Youssef will compete for Best Artist at the Songlines Music Awards in the UK and is the only Arab and sole instrument­alist taking part
Maya Youssef will compete for Best Artist at the Songlines Music Awards in the UK and is the only Arab and sole instrument­alist taking part

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