All posts by Shouts - Music from the Rooftops!

Shouts - Music from the Rooftops! is a media project that publishes news, exclusive content, and interviews with protest musicians, socially and ecologically conscious artists, and activists from around the globe.

Iranian musician who was imprisoned for his music receives 74 lashes as part of his punishment

Image retrieved from Mehdi Yarrahi’s YouTube profile.

Flogging, or lashing, is strictly prohibited under intenrational human rights laws. That did not stop Iranian authorities from carrying out the brutal punishment against Mehdi Yarrahi, the Iranian musician, who in 2023 released the song Roosarito – and was consequently arrested for “acting unlawfully.”

We covered Yarrahi’s arrest back in 2023 and we are deeply saddened to learn about the punishment which was carried out last Wednesday, 5 March 2025.

Read also: Iranian protest singer arrested after releasing a song dedicated to Iranian women’s movement

Yarrahi originally released “Roosarito” (Farsi for “your headscarf”) on the one-year anniversary of the “Woman, Life, Freedom” human rights movement in Iran.

Yarrahi commented on the punishment on his X profile, saying, “I am ready to receive the sentence of 74 lashes, and while I condemn this inhuman torture, I make no request to cancel it.”

News of the torturous punishment has caused outrage by many, such as like Novel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi who called it “a whip on the proud, resistant women of Iran.”

Read also: I am little Iran, another name for displacement

While this hopefully, and soon, concludes the harrasment and oppression Yarrahi has had to endure, other Iranian artists are still imprisoned for their music, like Shervin Hajipour, and others are either in hiding, have disappeared or worse.

Fold set to release a new single, reflecting on Eisenhower’s words of power, war, and peace

The activist music collective out of Leeds, England, will soon release their new single, and we here at Shouts HQ have been spinning it all day. The words of the former US president resonate hard today, as they most likely will for an unforeseeable future, as the military-industrial complex and the psychopaths in charge of it are not going away anytime soon. That is, unless the people, with the help and unity of music and art, come together and tear it down.

Also read: Amplifiying Humanitarian Perspectives Through Music: An Interview With Fold

But as the band explains, this song is not only a history lesson, but also a commentary on the duality of someone so powerful as the US president, and, while protecive of democratic ideals, Eisenhower’s administration was also complicit in covert CIA operations that installed oppressive regies across the globe.

“This duality is woven into the track’s DNA, inviting listeners to critically reflect on the broader narrative. The track’s eerie, distorted guitars were recorded in 1998 on a 4-track cassette recorder in a suburban New York basement, giving it an anachronistic, nostalgic edge. The bass was created by pitch-shifting an electric guitar through a Korg Pandora FX unit, and the overall sound carries echoes of Portishead’s experimental 90s influence.”

“We pray that in the goodness of time all people will come to live together in a peace guaranteed by the binding force of mutual respect and love.”
— Dwight D. Eisenhower

In the Goodness of Time is out on all digital platforms + limited edition 7″ vinyl with Forever War B-side (25 uniquely adorned copies) on 21st of February, 2025. Hit that ‘Wishlist’ button on Bandcamp and better yet, ore-order the track. One little British pound is not much for a song that helps fuel the revolution.