Tag Archives: activism

Music activism in Sudan

Music and politics in Sudan have been intertwined for many decades. During the colonial era, musicians played a key role in the struggle for independence. Later on, as music was embraced by the masses, successive post-colonial governments sought to clamp down its influence on politics and society.

Sudanese music legend Mohammed Wardi.

Since the onset of the Second Sudanese Civil War in 1983, the government began increasingly censoring musicians, leaving many artists frustrated over their freedom of expression. As musicians fought for artistic freedom, many of them faced state oppression, which ranged from bans on public performances to physical attacks, with many forced to flee the country.

Activism in pre-independence Sudan

Musicians have contributed immensely to Sudanese culture and have used their public presence to magnify the country’s rich cultural diversity and socio-political conditions. Artists played a crucial role in fuelling the resistance against foreign intrusion, exploitation and dictatorships during both the colonial and post-colonial periods.

As early as 1924, poet and educator Obeid Abdul Nur’s poem ‘Umm Dhafayir’ (The Lady with Plaited Hair) challenged young people to rise up and fight the British colonial administration. The poem would later inspire musicians to highlight the plight of the masses in their songs.

Established in 1938 to challenge colonialism, the Graduates’ General Congress, an association of the educated class, adopted the song ‘Sahi Ya Kanari’ (Wake Up, Canary) and others to enhance its campaign for reforms and to expedite the end of British colonial rule.

Hawa Jah al-Rasoul Mohammed, popularly known as Hawa al-Tagtaga, was one of the earliest female music pioneers and is remembered as a fearless freedom fighter whose politically charged songs inspired the anti-colonial struggle. 

Aisha Musa Ahmad, also known as Aisha al-Falatiya, made a name for herself as a singer during the Second World War when she toured the camps of the Sudan Defence Force across North Africa to boost troop morale

Activism in post-independence Sudan

On 1 January 1956, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan became the independent Republic of Sudan. Since independence, Sudan has been ruled by a series of unstable parliamentary governments and military regimes.

Respected singer Mohammed Wardi’s song ‘October Al Akhdar’ (Green October) was performed during the 1964 revolution when power transitioned from military to civilian rule. The song urged the government to concentrate on agriculture, hence the reference of ‘green’ in the title of the song [2].

Another military coup in May 1969 brought military ruler Jaafar Nimeiry to power. At first, Wardi agreed with the new administration, due to its leftist leanings, but later had a fallout with its leaders and was detained in 1971. In 1983, Nimeiry imposed a strict version of Islamic Sharia law, which further diminished the influential voices of musicians and poets in the country.

In response, Wardi released another political song, ‘Ya Sha’aban Lahabak Thouritak’, which loosely translates to ‘Oh People Your Flame Is Your Revolution’. The song encouraged the masses to shape their own destiny. The regime then called for his imprisonment and the artist fled to the US before moving to Cairo, Egypt. He returned home before passing away in 2012 at the age of 79

Enemies of the state

Sudanese governments throughout the years have sought to influence musicians for their own political agendas. Artists whose songs and lyrics expose social issues such as poverty, disease, civil war and injustices have historically been branded as ‘enemies of the state’, with various governments taking drastic measures to suppress ‘dissident voices’.

By the 1990s, during the early days of former president Omar al-Bashir’s rule, the government removed off the airwaves all music that did not support political and religious ideology. Singer Abu Araki al-Bakheit was banned from performing political songs. He was arrested and forbidden to perform publicly, after which he retired. News of his retirement prompted intense reactions from his fans, which eventually led him to continue performing in defiance of the authorities. He played with nightclub bands like Rejaf Jazz and The Skylarks. 

Female musicians have also suffered government attacks and threats by the Sudanese public who accused them of crossing gender lines by exposing their bodies in spite of Sharia’s rules.

Female musicians like Hanan Bulu Bulu were harassed and detained by government authorities, while groups such as Al Balabil came under close surveillance in the 1970s and the 1980s. Al Balabil was formed by three Nubian sisters, and although their songs were banned under Sharia, the group found a large audience in Ethiopia and other African countries.

In 1998, the National Islamic Front government enacted a new law banning women from dancing with men, or in their presence, during folklore celebrations or wedding parties.

Singer Abazar Hamid suffered the wrath of Bashir after he embarked on a solo career in 2004. His 2007 album Sabahak Rabah (Good Morning Home), which discusses a wide range of topics such as peace, unity and genocide, led to his exile due to direct threats on his freedom

Sudanese poet, composer and writer Mahjoub Sharif was well known for advocating for gender equality and against dictatorship and the military government. He was repeatedly detained by several leaders in Sudan, including Nimeiry and Bashir, and spent a total of 17 years in prison. He died at his home in Omdurman in 2018 at the age of 66.

The fall of Bashir and return of dissidents

In 2019, Sudanese citizens, protesting against soaring living costs, forced the military to overthrow Bashir’s government. During this time, protesters used the unifying power of music to usher in change. Several dissident musicians returned from exile to celebrate the fall of Bashir’s rule. For the first time in decades, several musicians held concerts urging young people to shape their destiny.

The collapse of Bashir’s hardline government had offered a glimmer of hope for a more free and vibrant cultural space. But in October 2021 army chief Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan led a coup that removed from power the country’s transitional government. On 15 April 2023, Sudan descended into another civil war in a conflict between rival factions of the military government, once more bringing the country’s cultural activities to a halt.

This article was written by Moses Abeka and originally published on the Music In Africa website on 18 of March 2024. It is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercialCC BY-NC licence.

EXCLUSIVE ALBUM PREMIERE: Take The Rad Pill by Mat Ward

The veteran protest musician takes a break from concept albums with his latest release – although all the songs are united in protest.

Mat Ward. Photo courtesy of the artist.

Since releasing his debut album, Slow Car Crash – a jungle album about financial markets- in 2017, Australian-based musician Mat Ward has been anything but lazy. He has released seven topical protest albums in that time, covering themes such as surveillance, the media, and the climate crisis. He also produced the G.O.D. EP by his friend and collaborator, Aboriginal rapper Provocalz. On July 26, Ward is set to release his new album, Take The Rad Pill.

When I asked Ward about what set the new album apart from his previous releases, he told me that one of the main differences is that this is his first album that doesn’t revolve around a specific theme. However, although Take The Rad Pill is not a concept album, all the songs on it are bound together by one thing – protest.

Protest music is something that is dear and close to Ward, not only through his music, but as a journalist. For the last decade or so, he’s been publishing a monthly column for an Australian media outlet, Green Left, in which he shares contemporary protest music while covering political news from around the world. He has also published a book about Aboriginal rappers that was called a “must-read” by Britain’s I Am Hip-Hop magazine.

Another big difference with the new album is how Ward is exploring new genres. He told me he was listening to a lot of Rancid while making the album “which resulted in a lot of catchy punk songs.”

“I also had Happy Mondays on repeat, so that resulted in several songs that are like house music with indie vocals. One of these is about a notorious political staffer and tobacco lobbyist called Bruce Lehrmann. He has been making headlines in Australia for years for all the wrong reasons. It’s called ‘Bruce Is Snorting A Line’ and has been getting played on the radio, with the result that people have been ‘shazamming’ it – identifying the song with their phones.”

I asked Ward about his extra curricular activity, i.e. his activism outside of his music or his passion for hiking, and he told me that he can regularly be found on the streets, using his voice in protest:

“You can see me doing that in the video for one of the lead singles off the album, ‘Your Vote’s A Joke’, which has also been getting radio play. The idea behind this song is: If you live in a democracy, you’re lucky, right? But then why do so many people in democracies hate politics and politicians? I’d say a big reason is that they’re allowed to break their promises as soon as they’re elected.

“[The song is] mainly inspired by an interview I did with an author about accountable democracy years ago: He said: ‘The commonly held notion of democracy is not the accountable version originally defined by the ancient Greeks – democratia comes from demos “the people” and kratia “power or rule”. Instead, it is more like the version defined by Harvard political scientist and sometime government adviser Samuel Huntington. His widely cited definition of democracy is profoundly unambitious. He defines it as a system whose most powerful decision-makers are chosen through fair, honest and periodic elections… Huntington’s democracy is nothing like what we could enjoy with truly accountable governance, something we deny ourselves by accepting his democracy-lite version.”

In terms of hiking, as with his music, there is no lack of productivity there for Ward. He is about to finish a 250 km long hike from Sydney to Newcastle which he describes as having been “incredible”. Prior to that, Ward walked 110 km from Barrenjoey lighthouse to Bondi beach during which time he came up with the lead song of the new album, “I Wanna Be Like Violet CoCo”. Ward explained to me how he uses an app that reduces webpages to text only so he can read heavy loads of news offline while out and about and without all the distractions the internet has to offer. For that reason, he’d read news about Violet CoCo, a rather famous activist in Australia, but he didn’t know what she looked like.

“Violet CoCo was so inspiring to me because, like many protesters, I had been going to rallies for years, trudging the same tired streets, with seemingly little to show for it. This person was approaching protest in a whole new, innovative, creative way, that grabbed attention in ways less imaginative activists like me could only hope for. I wanted the song to capture the same emotion as one that had intrigued me in my childhood, The Jam’s cover of The Kinks’ ‘David Watts’. That song and its main lyric, ‘wish I could be like David Watts, conduct my life like David Watts’, left a big impression on me because it was such an unusual admission. Amid so many songs of braggadocio that boast of the writer’s greatness, here was a frank insight into a state most people feel but never share – the desire to be more like someone else.

“When I got home from that day’s walk and began Googling Violet CoCo to flesh out my verses, I gazed in wonder at the screen. I was shocked to find that she was nothing like the person I had imagined. She was young, photogenic, charismatic. The soft edges of her quiet, sweet personality contrasted with her jagged, wonky, lopsided rock star haircut. I hadn’t even realised she was the protester who had set fire to a pram outside parliament in Canberra. That iconic image had seared itself into my mind for eternity the moment I saw it.

“I was inspired and fascinated by one particular video of her outside court. Prodded by her interviewer, she admitted that, far from being hard as nails, she was ‘actually a very fearful person’.

“This is our problem. We’re all too stupid to be scared. Violet CoCo is one of the few people with the fear we should all have. That’s why I wrote this song.”

We’re thrilled to be able to offer a platform for the premiere of Ward’s new album, Take The Rad Pill, which can be streamed exclusively below.


TAKE THE RAD PILL

Out July 26, 2024 Genre: EDM / Punk

TRACKLISTING

1. Who Are Ya?
2. Your Vote’s A Joke
3. Stoop So Low
4. I Wanna Be Like Violet CoCo
5. Bruce Is Snorting A Line
6. Quiet Quitting
7. She’s Fighting On
8. PwC – Prison Waits for Criminals
9. Why’s It Always Us Who Get The Blame?
10. Low-Rung Thinking
11. You Gotta Be Kiddin’ (Bandcamp download-only bonus track)
12. Where Were You? (Bandcamp download-only bonus track)
13. Musk And Murdoch (Bandcamp download-only bonus track)

Check out more of Mat Ward’s music and work here: linktr.ee/MatWard

Sensitive little kings: Thai musician sentenced to 4 years in jail for insulting the monarchy

Protesters displaying three-finger salute in front of Democracy Monument at August 16 protest.

A Thai court has sentenced Chaiamorn Kaewwiboonpan, also known as Ammy, lead singer of The Bottom Blues, to four years in jail for insulting the monarchy.

The sentence is relating to the 2021 burning of a portrait of the country’s king, which Kaewwiboonpan admitted to doing, although he argued that the act did not violate the royal insult law.

Also in 2021, according to the website Thai Political Prisoners, Kaewwiboonpan was arrested for performing a modified version of the national anthem at a protest in front of the Thanyaburi Provincional Court.

These charges, which are frequently used by the government to stifle dissent, are used under the so-called lèse-majesté, a crime according to Section 112 of the Thai Criminal Code which states that it is illegal to defame, insult, or threaten the monarch of Thailand (king, queen, heir-apparent, heir-presumptive, or regent).