DAM
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DAM

Band Hip Hop World

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Music

Discography

LP:
Dedication (2006) by Red Circle Music

Singles:
"Min Erhabi" ("Who's the Terrorist?") (2001) downloaded over a million times within a month of its release

Compilations Produced:
Slingshot Hip Hop: Music From the Documentary Film (2008)

Compilation Tracks:
Checkpoint Rock: Songs from Palestine (2009) featuring "Mali Huriye"
Beit el Hip Hop (2009) featuring "Muwaten Mustahdaf"
Free the P (2005) featuring "Born Here"
Rolling Stone France (2002) featuring "Min Erhabi"

Film Features:
Checkpoint Rock (2009) by Dir. Javier Corcuera and Fermín Muguruza
Slingshot Hip Hop (2008) by Dir. Jackie Salloum

Film Tracks:
Salt of this Sea (2008) by Dir. Annemarie Jacir featuring "Milh Hadha al-Bahr"
Where in the World is Osama bin Laden (2008) by Dir. Morgan Spurlock featuring "Mali Huriye"
Forgiveness (2006) by Dir. Udi Aloni featuring "Mali Huriye"
Ford Transit (2002) by Dir. Hany Abu Assad featuring "Sawaa al Zaman"
Local Angel (2002) by Dir. Udi Aloni featuring "Min Erhabi"

Photos

Bio

Heralded by the major French newspaper Le Monde as “the spokesman of a new generation,” DAM, the first Palestinian hip hop crew and among the first to rap in Arabic, began working together in the late 1990s. Struck by the uncanny resemblance of the reality of the streets in a Tupac video to the streets in their own neighborhood of Lyd, Tamer Nafar, Suhell Nafar, Mahmood Jreri were inspired to tell their stories through hip hop.

After their timely song “Min Irhabi” (“Who's the Terrorist?”) was downloaded over a million times shortly after its internet release in 2001, DAM became a household name among youth throughout the Middle East. Rolling Stone in France distributed the song free in one of their issues, and the song has been featured in various compilations.

DAM’s music is a unique fusion of east and west, combining Arabic percussion rhythms, Middle Eastern melodies, and urban hip hop. Their work has been influenced by artists as varied as Ghassan Kanafani, Ahlam Mosteghanemi, Mahmoud Darwish, Naji al Ali, Tupac, Biggie, Public Enemy, MBS, K'naan, and Pharoahe Monch.

“IHDA” (“Dedication”), DAM’s long-awaited first international album, was released in 2006, and DAM has seen its songs and members featured in films such as “Ford Transit” (Dir. Hany Abu Assad) “Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden?” (Dir. Morgan Spurlock), “Salt of this Sea” (Dir. Annemarie Jacir), and “Local Angel” and “Forgiveness” (Dir. Udi Aloni). DAM's history and influence on the Arab hip hop scene is detailed in the feature-length documentary “Slingshot Hip Hop” (Dir. Jackie Reem Salloum). The group has also been featured in Vibe, National Geographic, Rolling Stone, Q, Basement, Reuters, and The New York Times, and has appeared on MTV, CNN, BBC, and Al Jazeera.

Ten years of performing all over the world has strengthened DAM’s commitment to continue living in their hometown of Lyd – fifteen minutes from Tel Aviv – working to provide the youth of the city and neighboring communities with programs and opportunities that have otherwise been denied to Palestinian citizens of Israel. In addition, they have conducted workshops for young people from the West Bank to Africa, the US, Canada, and Europe.