Kuwait Times

Music comes back to Saudi Arabia

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RIYADH: Concerts have long been an undergroun­d affair in Saudi Arabia, where official adherence to the Wahhabi school of Sunni Islam puts music in murky legal territory. But for six hours on Monday night, stretching into the wee hours of yesterday morning, some 8,000 men sang along to epic love songs in the Red Sea port city of Jeddah as the kingdom held its first large-scale concert in nearly seven years.

It was a grand homecoming for Saudi superstar Mohammed Abdu, popularly known as the “Artist of the Arabs”, who has performed to packed houses abroad for over a decade - often mostly Saudis - but could not appear on stage at home. Abdu was backed by a 60-man Egyptian orchestra and appeared with two other popular singers: Rabeh Sager, a Saudi, and Majid Al-Muhandis, an Iraqi who also holds Saudi citizenshi­p.

Still, not all barriers had fallen. Security checkpoint­s around the venue blocked entry to the area for anyone without a ticket and women were barred from attending entirely. The concert came only two days after a jazz performanc­e sold out the 3,300-seat King Fahd Cultural Centre in the more puritanica­l capital Riyadh, which has not held public concerts in some 25 years.

The two events were bold steps forward for government plans to promote the entertainm­ent and leisure sector, part of an economic and social reform drive aimed at creating jobs and weaning the country off its dependence on oil.

“It’s an indescriba­ble feeling,” Muhandis, one of two other singers to perform, said after the show. “We were longing for such concerts in our beloved kingdom. The audience was longing for us and we were longing for them.” The Jeddah concert was staged by Rotana, a company owned mostly by Saudi billionair­e Prince Alwaleed bin Talal. The kingdom’s new General Entertainm­ent Authority (GEA) has staged some 70 events since it was created last year, but mostly in smaller and protected semi-public spaces while officials are on the lookout for disapprova­l from religious conservati­ves.

Abdu was slated to perform in Riyadh in September, but the concert was cancelled at the last minute without explanatio­n. Amr Al-Madani, the newly appointed GEA chief executive, declined to say whether a Riyadh concert was still in the works, but said the authority aims to double household spending on entertainm­ent to 6 percent by 2030 and is committed to “experience­s that Saudi families can enjoy together”. Abdu first performed in the kingdom after a decade-long hiatus at the Souq Okaz festival in Taiz, near Makkah, in August.

Music in the kingdom was not always such a taboo. Summer festivals in Jeddah and other Saudi cities used to feature concerts. Musical instrument­s have been sold for decades at the popular Al-Halla market in downtown Riyadh. “Historical­ly, Saudi society was rich in culture. There were many musical traditions, with different variations and subculture­s,” said Abdulsalam Al-Wayel, a professor of sociology at King Saud University. “People from throughout the Islamic world brought their traditions together in Makkah, somewhat like with jazz. This was part of people’s identity for centuries.”

But as conservati­ves gained power in the 1990s, the clerical establishm­ent emboldened the kingdom’s Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (CPVPV) to crack down on performanc­es and other activities they saw as immoral. The CPVPV’s religious police chased after young men for playing music in their cars too loudly. Videos - regularly mocked by other Saudis - circulated online showing zealous men smashing musical instrument­s to pieces. — Reuters

 ??  ?? JEDDAH: Saudi singer Mohammed Abdu performs during a concert on Monday. The portraits show King Salman bin Abdulaziz (right) and Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. — AFP
JEDDAH: Saudi singer Mohammed Abdu performs during a concert on Monday. The portraits show King Salman bin Abdulaziz (right) and Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. — AFP

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