Arab Times

Cairo choir sends musical message of hope amid virus gloom

-

EGYPT, Sept 15, (AP): The video is colorful, the tune cheerful and the lyrics promise better times ahead.

“The day will surely come, near or far it will come,” the singers belt out in Arabic.

“A new dawn shall shine. Everyone shall rejoice. ... That day shall be a feast. Hand in hand, we will return,” they sing, waving at each other from their on-screen tiles. In a corner of the screen, a sign language interprete­r performs the song.

With their concerts on hiatus and their usual routine of rehearsals upended by the coronaviru­s, members of the Cairo Celebratio­n Choir joined virtually with musicians and soloists to put out a hopeful message amid the virus gloom.

“The main comments we received: it’s joyful and it gives hope,” said choir founder and artistic director Nayer Nagui, who wrote the lyrics and had composed the music years ago for another project.

“Lots of friends they told me, ‘you know, when I don’t feel very well, I put the song.’... It is spreading a joyful spirit, and this is what we want.”

The video has garnered about 324,000 views on the choir’s Facebook page since August, with many praising its cheerful message and style. The song also has been released on digital music platforms and aired on the radio in Egypt.

Participan­ts individual­ly recorded the song — titled “El Youm” or “The Day” — on mobile phones. The sound engineer is “the real hero,” Nagui said.

The seeds for the upbeat song were planted in downbeat days. Lockdown time was a struggle for Nagui, a self-described “workaholic” with a schedule normally planned months ahead.

“I didn’t know whether this career will come back again or not, will we do music again or not,” he said. “It was very frustratin­g and confusing.”

Two of the choir’s concerts were canceled in March, and Nagui found himself unable to work. He watched hundreds of similar-style virtual music videos that circulated in those days, and reflected on the concept of time in lockdown and how it should be spent.

“And then it evolved to when this time will pass, I should definitely be a different person,” he said. “I have to be a better version of myself.”

Passion

And so the choir sings: “When that day comes, I will have surely reconsider­ed many beliefs. Young or old, this is the time for growth.”

Comprised of more than 100 members, the choir brings together people from different profession­s, bound together by their passion for music.

Miriam Benyamein has been singing with the choir for more than 15 years. Each week, she looked forward to rehearsals, a reprieve from the pressures of work and life.

“For us to get together and to hear each other’s voice and see each other is something that we took for granted,” she said. “But it is really a blessing.”

Taking part in the project, she said, was an uplifting experience. The yearning for togetherne­ss has helped make the song relatable to many, she said.

“We are telling people: ‘Don’t worry, There’s hope.’”

UNITED NATIONS:

Also:

The United Nations has enlisted a slew of celebritie­s including multi-Grammy winner Beyoncé, actor Don Cheadle and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai for a film promoting actions to tackle the world’s biggest issues from the COVID-19 pandemic to poverty and inequality.

The 30-minute film entitled “Nations United: Urgent Solutions for Urgent Times” is set for broadcast globally, and will premiere on the UN YouTube channel on Sept. 19 at 09:00 EDT (13:00 GMT), the UN announced Monday.

The UN said the film sets out the actions needed to build a better world as the coronaviru­s pandemic threatens global progress to end extreme poverty, achieve gender equality, promote human rights, tackle injustice and address climate change.

The film “will take audiences on a dynamic exploratio­n of the times we live in, the multiple tipping points our planet faces, and the interventi­ons that could transform our world over the next 10 years,” the United Nations said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait