Hey, Mom! The Explanation.

Here's the permanent dedicated link to my first Hey, Mom! post and the explanation of the feature it contains.

Monday, September 9, 2024

A Sense of Doubt blog post #3492 - What I Posted Last Year on August 28th - Music Monday for 2509.09


A Sense of Doubt blog post #3492 - What I Posted Last Year on August 28th - Music Monday for 2509.09

I am going to do a series of these. What I published on August 28th.

Because now, August 28th is a significant day in my life.

And I have many posts to share from August 28th, including one during the t-shirts year.

But when I checked what I published last year on 8/28, I found it to be a reprint of a music post, which seemed fitting for this day as I am still in reprint mode and may be for a while longer.

Thanks for tuning in.


COUNTDOWN!!!



The link to the original post that I am reprinting below:


Monday, August 28, 2023




A Sense of Doubt blog post #3114 - SoD Reprint - Fatima Al Qadiri - "Malaak" - MUSICAL MONDAY from 2105.03

A reprint today.

Just chosen at random.

Thanks for tuning in.
 

LOW POWER MODE: I sometimes put the blog in what I call LOW POWER MODE. If you see this note, the blog is operating like a sleeping computer, maintaining static memory, but making no new computations. If I am in low power mode, it's because I do not have time to do much that's inventive, original, or even substantive on the blog. This means I am posting straight shares, limited content posts, reprints, often something qualifying for the THAT ONE THING category and other easy to make posts to keep me daily. That's the deal. Thanks for reading.



Monday, May 3, 2021


A Sense of Doubt blog post #2267 - Fatima Al Qadiri - "Malaak" - MUSICAL MONDAY for 2105.03

I cannot remember when Fatima Al Qadiri hit my radar. Maybe as early as 2010, though I doubt it. I bought Asiatisch, which came out in 2014 and then I missed Brute, sadly. Her new album Medieval Femme is due next week. I am pre-ordering.

I came across this preview (below) when I was compiling some Brian Eno content that I haven't posted, and I found The Quietus, which is a great site.

The image above is from her EP called Shaneera, which came out in 2017.

Video featured today (below) from the new album, "Malaak," is really great!!





https://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/may/05/fatima-al-qadiri-interview-kuwait-invasion-saddam






#hyperdub #fatimaalqadiri
Fatima Al Qadiri, Malaak
5,265 views•Mar 31, 2021






Hyperdub
42.1K subscribers
Fatima Al Qadiri,  Malaak, taken from the album 'Medieval Femme' 
Release date: 14th May 2021 CD + Digital /  LP to follow on July 23rd 2021.
 
Music, Lyrics and Vocals by Fatima Al Qadiri
Artwork by Thuraya Al-Baqsami
Visualizer by Abdullah Al Mutairi
Cover Design by Hussein Nassereddine
Mixed by Chris Tabron, Mastered by Matt Colton

Please subscribe to Hyperdub https://bit.ly/2Z2UFfW​

Follow Hyperdub on Social Media:
#hyperdub​ #fatimaalqadiri




https://thequietus.com/articles/29797-fatima-al-qadiri-new-album-medieval-femme-hyperdub

Fatima Al Qadiri Details New Album, 'Medieval Femme'
Christian Eede , March 31st, 2021 14:28

Hyperdub will release the producer's latest album in May



Fatima Al Qadiri has a new album on the way.

The 10-track Medieval Femme is the producer's third studio album and sees her return to Hyperdub for the first time since 2017's Shaneera EP. The new album takes inspiration from the classical poems of Arab women from the medieval period. You can listen to lead track 'Malaak' above.

Hyperdub will release Medieval Femme on May 14, 2021






Art & Photography

Fatima Al Qadiri Interview: Art Came First But Music is My Forte

From sons playing their mothers to politics as performance and dance music about dissent, the work of Fatima Al-Qadiri is an assault on the sensibilities of her age.

16 September, 2016



Fatima Al Qadiri is a Kuwaiti musician and artist, and one of the nine members of GCC, an artist collective that takes its name and inspiration from the Gulf Cooperation Council. 2016 saw the release of her second album, “Brute”, on Hyperdub records. A mixture of off-kilter beats, gunshots, explosions, news samples, moody chord progressions and icy strings, it was created in Kuwait while Al Qadiri recovered from a knee-injury, watching the post-Ferguson protests unfold, transforming their dissent into her record’s message. Sleek caught up with the multi-talented artist at the European School of Management and Technology in Berlin, one of the locations for the 9th Berlin Biennale.  

Which came first for you, art or music? My mother, Thuraya Al-Baqsami, is an artist, and my role model. She worked at the Ministry of Communication in Kuwait and would bring in stacks of old communiqués, and we’d draw on the back of them. So my first exposure was to visual art. During the occupation of Kuwait, when I was nine, my sister Monira and I wrote our first song. That’s when I started making music. So I guess art came first, but I feel like my forte is music!How was GCC founded? What was the first work you made collectively?Khalid al Gharaballi and I have been collaborating since 2006, and in 2012, we won a grant from the Arab Fund for Arts and Culture for the piece “Mendeel Um A7mad (NxIxSxM)”. The project was a large-scale installation of a Kleenex box, which contained a film about the Kuwaiti ritual of Chai Dhaha, a meeting of women for pre-noon tea. But, in a twist, these are young men in drag performing their mothers, and the film is narrated from the point of view of a tissue box. It’s now against the law to “imitate” the appearance of the opposite sex in Kuwait, but that wasn’t always the case. The protagonists are seated in a ballroom with the box in the middle, and a maid pushing a trolley of tea and biscuits, while the women gossip and discuss their lives. Every now and then, a woman gets up and takes a tissue. We hired almost all current GCC members to work on the piece, and it’s the most successful work that we had done at that point, too. After that we realised how well we function as a unit, and decided to become a collective.  

Is GCC’s output a critique of contemporary Gulf culture and politics, or are you participating in it as well commenting on it?Imagine that question being asked of you. How are you engaging or contributing to German culture or Western culture? It’s so broad. For us, the Gulf region is a closed society. It’s not really a region that embraces outsiders, with the exception of Dubai, which is the Gulf version of Vegas. But, while in the Gulf there’s a culture of hospitality, you’re not going to access the society’s rituals because they are closed to outsiders, and that’s the one part of the Gulf that we’re really interested in. Without getting into the ‘native informant’ scenario or into the simplistic polarities of East vs. West, we’re trying to understand these processes as much as anyone else is. There’s a huge gap between the rich and the poor, between the expat labourers and which jobs they have access to. Being a woman I wanted to get out of there as soon as I could. Strangely, the governments of the Gulf region always seem to be ten steps ahead. Positive Pathways (+), for instance, is about co-opting self-help and self-optimisation as a path to economic prosperity. And a month before the opening of the Berlin Biennale, the Dubai government opened a Ministry of Happiness!


What about Positive Pathways (+), is it a comment or a cultural artefact?It’s not intended as an artefact. Many of our works are about how the government positions itself, and how politics is like a drag act. I loved the theme of the Biennale, “The Present in Drag”. There’s so much drag in our work.Especially in works such as your 2013 work, “Inaugural Summit, Morschach”.That piece is about governance as a type of performance. It’s about diplomats performing their ‘work’ of handshakes, drinking champagne and eating caviar. We were looking at the performativity of diplomatic and bureaucratic summits; here the photo op is the work. And we feel that what we represent is so universal, so relatable, because so many governments and politicians operate this way. They wear a different outfit, a different costume, or eat something different. But, fundamentally, they’re all performing the same act.

You made a track, Nothing Forever for “Anthem”, the soundtrack for the Berlin Biennale, with Hito Steyerl and Juliana Huxtable. How did that happen?They [the biennial curators] approached me and said, ‘We’re making an album, we would love for you to collaborate with Hito.’ She’d already used my music for one of her installations at the 2015 Venice Bienniale. I’d never met her in person, but when we started talking it was obvious that we were both obsessed with the subject of the apocalypse. I wanted to write a national anthem for the end of the world. The one thing that connects all these types of anthems is this idea that we fight and sacrifice ourselves for the greater glory of the nation. But what is the function of glory when there’s nothing to glorify? When all your plants are dead, and humanity is dead, and the world is extinct, what is its purpose?  





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- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 2409.09 - 10:10

- Days ago: MOM = 3456 days ago & DAD = 012 days ago

- New note - On 1807.06, I ceased daily transmission of my Hey Mom feature after three years of daily conversations. I plan to continue Hey Mom posts at least twice per week but will continue to post the days since ("Days Ago") count on my blog each day. The blog entry numbering in the title has changed to reflect total Sense of Doubt posts since I began the blog on 0705.04, which include Hey Mom posts, Daily Bowie posts, and Sense of Doubt posts. Hey Mom posts will still be numbered sequentially. New Hey Mom posts will use the same format as all the other Hey Mom posts; all other posts will feature this format seen here.

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