"Hisham
Aidi's new book is a sort of musical tour around the world. It's called
Rebel Music: Race, Empire, and the New Muslim Youth Culture. From
hip-hop in Brazilian favelas, to Pakistani punk rock, to Gnawa-reggae in
North Africa, it's a look at young urban Muslims and the music they
make and listen to.
Speaking with NPR's Rachel Martin, Aidi
recalls meeting a French band called 3ème Oeil — "Third Eye" — at a
music festival in the Bronx, the birthplace of hip-hop.
"I was talking
to them about how they came out there to meet with Afrika Bambaataa and
Grandmaster Flash, and they were very choked up and moved to be there
and said, 'This is the mecca of hip hop,' and so on," Aidi says. "And
just in talking to them, I began thinking about how youth, Muslim youth,
minority youth in Europe, tend to romanticize the United States and the
civil rights movement — and then the role of the U.S. government in
selling the American dream in the European urban periphery."
interview and article here
via Rhetoric Race and Religion
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