黑料社区

Arab hip-hop culture takes center stage at BeatRoots in Riyadh

BeatRoots is a creative experience developed by Museland鈥檚 founder, Ali Al-Saeed. (Supplied)
BeatRoots is a creative experience developed by Museland鈥檚 founder, Ali Al-Saeed. (Supplied)
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Updated 06 July 2022

Arab hip-hop culture takes center stage at BeatRoots in Riyadh

BeatRoots is a creative experience developed by Museland鈥檚 founder, Ali Al-Saeed. (Supplied)
  • Hip-hop artist and rapper Dattune told Arab News: 鈥淲e already had a hip-hop culture (in the Kingdom) but we didn鈥檛 have enough spaces to either perform or connect with each other

RIYADH: The Saudi hip-hop music scene was in the spotlight at the weekend when local talent took to the stage in Riyadh at BeatRoots, a special music event that took place on Friday at AlMashtal Creative Space, in collaboration with Bahraini record label Museland.

The event, inspired by New York-style block parties, featured live performances by six Saudi and Bahraini artists, plus graffiti artists, b-boy dancing, and a market selling sneakers, street fashion and vinyl records.

AlMashtal, a creative incubator, regularly hosts collaborations with creators of various kinds, including musicians, visual artists and fashion designers. Its goal is to provide a platform to help creative talents to develop their crafts, grow and showcase their work.

鈥淲e really like to focus on these local talents, these up-and-coming artists that need a space to express themselves, to have their own audience, a chance to showcase themselves in front of an intimate audience; the right type of audience, the right type of space,鈥 Elham Ghanimah, AlMashtal鈥檚 creative labs curator, told Arab News.

The night began with a mellow performance by Bahraini musician and graffiti artist Du$t. His music is inspired by diverse elements such as B-boy dancing, graffiti and surrealist art. He explained that it is important for his craft that he thinks outside of the box when creating his music, and said that he is pleased to see his style of music building a following in 黑料社区.

鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing to see it growing here as well,鈥 he told Arab News. 鈥淚n Bahrain (we鈥檝e done) the same event there, so to bring it here and to see that everyone is involved brings a nice feeling.鈥

BeatRoots is a creative experience developed by Museland鈥檚 founder, Ali Al-Saeed. It is already a regular event in Bahrain and now the label is expanding to other parts of the region.

鈥淓veryone鈥檚 happy; the energy is really good, everything is positive, the crowd is really enjoying it,鈥 Ghanimah said. 鈥淚 think at the end, that鈥檚 really what matters.鈥

Many people assume the hip-hop scene is relatively new to 黑料社区 but its origins can be traced back at least as far as the early 2000s, with interest in the genre fueled by the growth of the internet.

鈥淚n general, everyone focuses on hip-hop in English 鈥 It鈥檚 OK to get inspiration from the West but it鈥檚 also good to see what you have here, to connect with your own culture, with your roots,鈥 Ghanimah said.

Hip-hop artist and rapper Dattune told Arab News: 鈥淲e already had a hip-hop culture (in the Kingdom) but we didn鈥檛 have enough spaces to either perform or connect with each other. That鈥檚 what I love about these kinds of events. I鈥檝e met a lot of people that I wouldn鈥檛 have met if we didn鈥檛 have these spaces. The talent is already there; all we need is a chance to perform.鈥

In addition to Dattune and Du$t, the BeatRoots lineup included Fizzy, Septemba, Str8tup Rkls, and hip-hop artist, rapper, and crowd-favorite Albakri, who gave a hardcore yet heartfelt performance that included two as-yet-unreleased songs.

Albakri said his inspiration comes from looking inward, citing his culture and personal identity as huge influences on his work.

鈥淚鈥檓 a guy of mixed identity: I鈥檓 Jordanian, I鈥檓 Palestinian and I鈥檓 Saudi. I鈥檓 all of these. So it鈥檚 just about how I can connect with those three cultures,鈥 he told Arab News.

When it comes to his unique sound, he said his main inspirations come from around Riyadh, in particular his producers Leo, Mufasa and Dice, as well as DJs and friends such as Bucky Grooves, Vinylmode and Baloo. The rapper said he hopes to establish his own record label one day.

鈥淚鈥檓 very happy that someone from Bahrain looked into (Riyadh) and was digging for artists 鈥 Seeing people open up to the genre, seeing collaborations between the hip-hop genre, the dance/house/minimal genre 鈥 and having a space, being a collective 鈥 all of that matters to the genre and the music in general,鈥 he said.

AlMashtal鈥檚 stated aim with cultural events such as BeatRoots is to open the doors for discussions, cultural and artistic exchanges, and the promotion of creative ventures across the Arab region.

鈥淲e wanna do more collaborations just to put everything forward in a positive way,鈥 Ghanimah said.

鈥淣ot everyone gets a chance and if people do get a chance, not everyone gets the right chance and the right type of support.

鈥淪o, you鈥檙e getting to showcase yourself not just at any space but at a creative incubator where the whole goal is to nurture these creatives and help them reach their goals.鈥