KAZAMADA
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KAZAMADA

Beirut, Beyrouth, Lebanon | INDIE

Beirut, Beyrouth, Lebanon | INDIE
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"Bands to watch: Kaza Mada"

Halfway through their rollicking Monday night performance at the Cairo Jazz Club, two things became immediately obvious about Kaza Mada. Firstly, their invigorating sound stems from a unique and hard-to-pull-off blend of multiple musical styles, equally balancing the experimental and the accessible. Secondly, for a band that’s only been around for three weeks, they’re pretty great. So good, in fact, that celebrated composer Omar Khairat felt compelled to drop by just to check them out (although Al-Masry Al-Youm failed to spot him in the crowd).

With a sound that combines traditional Middle Eastern music with a wide variety of genres—predominantly electronica, rock and jazz—Kaza Mada are far removed from the growing horde of local and regional acts vying for the title of the Arab Radiohead or Oriental Pink Floyd. Those two bands do feature on Kaza Mada’s long and diverse list of influences, but they’re kept company by the likes of Djemil Tamboury, Sheikh Mohamed Rifaat, Portishead, Tchaikovsky, The Bug and Mohamed al-Asabgy.

This diversity is what best characterizes Kaza Mada, and is evident in the band’s name, which means Multiple Horizons, as well as its members’ disparate musical backgrounds. They were selected by Tamer Abu Ghazaleh, the 24-year-old musical virtuoso who contributes his remarkable oud and buzuq skills to the band’s multi-layered sound.

Abu Ghazaleh’s bandmates are equally accomplished in their own fields. Guitarist Mahmoud Radaideh gained attention as founder and frontman of the hugely poplar Jordanian rock ensemble Jadal, while Lebanese electronics wizard Zeid Hamdane has numerous credits to his name, mainly as a music producer and driving force behind acclaimed underground outfit Soap Kills.

Folk singer Donia Massoud, on the other hand, never imagined she’d be involved in any project that relies so heavily on electronics. Already enjoying a sizable fan base in her native Alexandria, Massoud explains, “I come from a purely acoustic background. Before I met the members of this group, I was against electronic music. It wasn’t even that I wasn’t a fan—I opposed the concept of it.” After initial meetings and jam sessions, however, Massoud quickly came to realize that, “it’s not necessarily about the genre, it’s about what the artist produces.”

The four musicians first met in the summer of 2010, when Abu Ghazaleh invited the others to join a five-day workshop in Athens, organized by Eka3, a company he founded in 2007, dedicated to “the production, distribution, booking and licensing of independent Arabic music acts.” With their styles and sensibilities immediately gelling, the group fell into a comfortable work routine.

“We worked in shifts,” recalls Hamdane. “Tamer and Donia would stay up all night coming up with different melodies, and then they’d sleep all day long,” during which Hamdane would mull over their compositions, adding his own unique touch. “I prefer to start working early in the morning,” Hamdane shrugs. Despite the differences in work methods, at the end of the workshop, the group had nine songs ready to be performed for a live audience. As Radaideh puts it, “What we had in common was stronger than our differences.”

The drive behind Kaza Mada came out of a need to “break boundaries and defy limitations,” explains Abu Ghazaleh. “The question we faced originally was how to combine all these wildly different styles, how do you sustain that and succeed at coming up with a new sound?” Like Massoud, Abu Ghazaleh also found inspiration in his bandmates. “I’ve learned a great deal from each member and what they’ve brought to the music,” he says. “From Donia’s presence as a vocalist, to Zeid’s sensitivity, to Mahmoud’s roughness and impulsive, raw power. All these elements were like individual light bulbs flashing on in my head.”

The group’s obvious chemistry and ease with one another extends offstage as well. Despite having known each other for only a few weeks, the band members interact—and perform—like a well-oiled machine.

“You know Radaideh can’t really play the guitar,” Hamdane whispers when his bandmate momentarily leaves the table. “It’s all just really well-synchronized playback.” Of course, he’s joking. Radaideh not only plays his guitar, that night at the Jazz Club he literally shred it, tearing a string at the climax of the band’s thumping performance of “Bye Bye Azizi,” or, as the guitarist mutters into his mic at the song’s end, “bye, bye, strings.”

The rest of the band’s set was equally energetic, even during quieter moments such as “Mish Mohem,” a song that revolves around Massoud’s soaring vocal performance. Commanding yet fragile, her voice was improbably complemented by Abu Ghazaleh’s hypnotic strumming and Hamdan’s bursts of electronic bleeps and whistles, in one of many examples of Kaza Mada’s successful incorporation of a seemingly complete musical history in the span of a few minutes.

The highlight of the night, however, came in the form of “Allalla,” a pounding, hypnotic beat. The final composition was also impressive, if only for its ability to incorporate a mouth-harp without sounding corny.

Before making their exit, the band’s members reminded the audience of their final scheduled performance, taking place this Thursday at Al-Azhar Park’s Geneina Theater. Judging by Monday night’s show, this will be one concert not to be missed. - Al Masry Al Youm Newspaper


"Musical Fusion Rocks Syria"

A series of firsts happened at Dar al Funoon in Damascus on Thursday evening: the first concert organised by fledgling organisation ABWAB for Arts and Culture; the first Leka@Eka3 concert in Syria: and the first time many of the musicians on stage performed in Syria.

Leka@Eka3 is the brainchild of Tamer Abu Ghazaleh, founder of the Eka3 music label and website specialising in music from across the region. With Leka@Eka3 he wants to create ‘an opportunity for a mutual exchange of ideas, to see what is happening in the other countries musically and for the audiences to see bands and musicians from other countries.’ This time the project aims to create a unique band, Kaza Mada, made up of Donia Massoud (Egypt), Zeid Hamdan (Lebanon), Mahmoud Radaideh (Jordan) & Tamer Abu Ghazaleh (Palestine).

All the musicians involved come from different backgrounds, Zeid from Pop and electronic, Donia from classical Egyptian folk, Mohammed from Arabic Rock and Tahmr from experimental traditional. However somehow the fusion works. Much of this success seems to be down to their personalities, you can tell from their on-stage interaction that they’re really enjoying this project and working with each other, but a lot of it comes from their open-mindedness. Many of them have never tried something like this before, but all are finding it rewarding. As Donia Massoud says, ‘I used to be against any kind of representation of Egyptian folk by electronic music. I discovered that it was just bad luck, I didn’t like the music I heard that was trying this. But now I’ve discovered it’s all about the artist, not the style’.

The music is all original compositions, with occasional fragments of traditional melodies or songs rising to the surface of the mixture and then getting consumed by new ideas and compositions. It felt like the music was evolving as we watched, as if something organic was being created. It’s a work in progress which began 2 weeks ago at the Middle East Sound and Arts festival in Athens, Greece. As Zeid recalls, ‘in Greece, on Oct 2nd we plugged in our equipment and started composing and now, on the 14th, we have almost an album!’ The four musicians each hold their own space on the stage, with Zeid providing trip-hop beats and samples, over which Tamer layers delicate oud and buzuq solos. Mahmoud adds psychedelic guitar leads and Donia brings in drifting, almost Dub-like vocals. As Tamer says of this fusion, ‘the most important thing in Kaza Mada is that we’re trying to reach a state of a new sound, a new kind of ear’.

Although no Syrian musicians were involved in this edition of Leka@Eka3, Syria was well represented through the hypnotically psychedelic and beautiful live animations of Mohammed Ali. Continuing with the organic feeling of the evening, Mohammed’s visuals transported you, making the experience all encompassing, at times you almost felt as if the band were melting away as he drew on them, only for them to suddenly be reborn as great paisley carachatures. As for getting Syrian artists on board with Eka3, Tamer is keen – ‘Syria is a country I’m dreaming to invade in this respect!’ Abwab, promoters of this event in Syria, aim to help make this dream a reality, by bringing world musicians to Syria and supporting Syrian world music. From the crowd’s reaction this is clearly something to be welcomed.

Kaza Mada play in Beirut on 15,16,17,19 & 20 October, followed by dates in Alexandria and Cairo. For more details please visit their website:

http://www.leka-at-eka3.com/
http://www.eka3.org/
http://www.abwabelarts.org/ - Daniel Gorman - Baladna Magazine


Discography

Still working on that hot first release.

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Bio

KAZAMADA (Translated to: Multiple Dimensions) is the first of a kind band in the Arab World, consisting of leading independent artists from different Arab countries; Zeid Hamdan (Lebanon), Donia Massoud (Egypt), Mahmoud Radaideh (Jordan), and Tamer Abu Ghazaleh (Palestine).

KAZAMADA mixes Zeid's advanced electronic sounds with Donia's deep-rooted Egyptian voice, Mahmoud's rock guitar vibes, and Tamer's progressive Oud & Buzuq plucks, with inputs from each of the artists' diverse musical backgrounds, and an output that combines these backgrounds into fresh Arabic sound. The genre of this output can be named Neo-Arabic-Pop.

Since its inception, KAZAMADA toured in Athens, Amman, Damascus, Beirut, Alexandria, and Cairo, has been invited to the SXSW Festival 2011, and has earned respectable feedback from critics, press, and the audience.