Plot
Jaffawiye tells the story of System Ali, a young fresh hip hop band from Jaffa, who through their music find peace and togetherness, in a part of Israel where racial prejudice and political assimilation are on the daily agenda. Singing in Arabic, Hebrew and Russian, System Ali deal with the problems of the young generation living in Jaffa and through their music manage to overcome their cultural and political difference. On the verge of embarking upon a journey beyond the borders of Jaffa, System Ali take their first steps out of their usual surroundings and into, what they define as the music capital of Israel, Tel Aviv.
Keywords: friendship, independent-film, interview, jewish, muslim, politics, prejudice, racism, violence
An Arab-Jewish hip hop band manage to overcome their political differences in Israel.
Plot
Min, a 16 year-old boy always gets moved around from the Thai capital Bangkok to many of the rural provinces because of his father's career. He's a polite and quiet boy, and the local students always make fun of him just because he's from Bangkok. He later becomes friend with Oud, a local bad-boy who is really a good guy inside. Just like any other teenagers, Min falls in love at first sight with Fang, a pretty girl from the same school, but this love is going to be tough because of the opposition of Fang's father.
Keywords: teenage-love
The Oud ( /ˈuːd/; Arabic: عود ʿūd, plural:أعواد, a‘wād; Assyrian:ܥܘܕ ūd, Greek: ούτι; Persian: بربط barbat; Turkish: ud or ut;Armenian: ուդ, Azeri: ud; Hebrew: עוד ud; Somali: cuud or kaban) is a pear-shaped stringed instrument commonly used in North African (Chaabi, Classical, and Andalusian) and Middle Eastern music. The modern oud and the European lute both descend from a common ancestor via diverging paths. The oud is readily distinguished by its lack of frets and smaller neck.
The origin of the name oud (and its etymological cousin, lute) for the musical instrument is uncertain, but the Arabic العود (al-ʿūd) refers literally to a thin piece of wood similar to the shape of a straw, and may refer to the wooden plectrum traditionally used for playing the oud, to the thin strips of wood used for the back, or to the wooden soundboard that distinguished it from similar instruments with skin-faced bodies. Recent research by Eckhard Neubauer suggests that oud may simply be an Arabic borrowing from the Persian name rud, which meant string, stringed instrument, or lute.
Joseph Tawadros (born 1983, Cairo, Egypt) is an oud virtuoso from Australia.
Music scores composed for the following films:
Mahmoud Hassan Ali (born December 15, 1919) was an Egyptian Greco-Roman Bantamweight wrestler. He competed for Egypt in the 1948 Summer Olympics in London, earning a silver medal behind Kurt Pettersén of Sweden and Halil Kaya of Turkey.
Hassan and Ibrahim Orabi were the first wrestlers of Egypt to gain Olympic medals in wrestling.
Mustafa Said is an Egyptian singer, musicologist, composer and a virtuoso Oud player. He has been living in Beirut since 2004. He is one of the few young talents to devote his career to the classical Arabic repertoire while exploring new forms and new sounds.
Former professor at the House of Oud (Cairo), he extends his musical approach from the already existent musical traditions of the east Mediterranean region with the spirit of the two previous musical renaissances: that of the golden age of Abbasid music, and that of the second half of the 19th century. Inspired by the oriental traditional heritage, the compositions and forms of interpretation of Mustafa Said offer a very contemporary approach and place great emphasis on the instrumental and vocal improvisation (Taqsim).[unreliable source?]
Said has composed music for several documentaries and drama and participated in many local and international festivals as a solo performer or as part of an ensemble: Institute of the Arab World (2007), Mugam Festival in Azerbaijan (2009), Songs of Peace and Réconciliation conference in Indonesia (2009), Sounds of Arabia Festival in Abu Dhabi (2010), toured in Japan where he performed 17 concerts and conferences (2010), Fes Festival of World Sacred Music (2010). Mustafa Saïd is also the founder of the Asil Oriental Ensemble and is a lecturer in traditional Arabic ensemble music at the Higher Institute of Music, Antonine University (Lebanon) since 2006.
Om eindelijk af te doen met het gezemel
Van oudjes die, krom en vergroeid
De jeugd beschrijven als een roze hemel
Die door de jongeren wordt verknoeid
En om voorgoed m'n hart te kunnen sluiten
Voor ieder die mijn nachtrust streelt
Die zich alleen maar lijfelijk kan uiten
En mij bij 't opstaan al verveelt
refr.
Ja, zonder angst of spijt
Verlang 'k daarom ijskoud
Heel vurig naar de tijd
Dat 'k op zal zijn en oud
Om eindelijk af te rekenen met de laster
Van elk jaloers en oud serpent
Om mild te zeggen tot zo'n kritikaster
" 'k Vergeef u dat u lelijk bent"
En om de kwezeltjes te repliceren
Die mij zo vaak hebben gelaakt
"Mevrouw, hoe kan ik u ooit pardonneren
U hebt de zonde nooit gesmaakt!"
refr.
Als ik alleen nog souvenirs mag kweken
In alle perken van mijn hart
Dan zal mijn vrouwenhart daar niet van breken
Ik heb het lot getart
Dan zing ik eindelijk mijn kalmer liefdeszangen
Bij snarenspel van tederheid
Dan zal men eindelijk eens niet naar mij verlangen
Alleen om mijn lichamelijkheid
refr.
Om op een dag tot hem te kunnen zeggen
Dat ik mij schikte onder hem
En om hem eindelijk uit te kunnen leggen
Dat 'k vaak gehuild heb zonder hem
Om eindelijk tegen hem te durven zeggen
Dat steeds als 'k hem bedrogen heb
Maar 'k weet niet of ik dat zal durven zeggen
Ik alleen mezelf bedrogen heb