黑料社区

Live debut of all-female Saudi band Seera showcases the electrifying power of women

Live debut of all-female Saudi band Seera showcases the electrifying power of women
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The rock fusion band Seera (left to right): Meesh, Nora, Haya, and THING. (AN/Huda Bashatah)
Live debut of all-female Saudi band Seera showcases the electrifying power of women
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Bassist for the band Seera, Meesh, on stage at their debut show in The Warehouse on May 4. (AN/Huda Bashatah)
Live debut of all-female Saudi band Seera showcases the electrifying power of women
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Lead singer and pianist, Nora, on stage at Seera鈥檚 debut show in The Warehouse on May 4. (AN/Huda Bashatah)
Live debut of all-female Saudi band Seera showcases the electrifying power of women
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Seera鈥檚 lead guitarist, Haya, on stage at their debut show in The Warehouse on May 4. (AN/Huda Bashatah)
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Updated 09 May 2023

Live debut of all-female Saudi band Seera showcases the electrifying power of women

Live debut of all-female Saudi band Seera showcases the electrifying power of women
  • The 4-piece Saudi band delivered a captivating performance to a delighted audience of more than 200 people at The Warehouse in Riyadh on Thursday night
  • Guitarist Haya said: 鈥業t鈥檚 still kind of a male-dominated field 鈥 (as) an all-woman band, we really want to support women to be more out there and to take up space鈥

RIYADH: As the profile of women continues to rise in the contemporary music industry in 黑料社区, and the wider Middle East, all-female rock-fusion band Seera is boldly pioneering a largely untapped psychedelic sound on the Kingdom鈥檚 local scene.
After a warm-up by DJ Haffs, the Saudi band delivered a captivating performance to an audience of more than 200 people at The Warehouse in Riyadh on Thursday night in their debut live show. The venue echoed to the unique sounds of the four-piece band: guitarist Haya, bassist Meesh, THING on drums, and Nora on lead vocals and keyboard. The audience was duly impressed.
鈥淭hroughout the whole performance, my phone was always in my pocket; I never took it out, and I never took any pictures or any videos,鈥 Nadir Al-Fassam, lead guitarist of Saudi psychedelic punk band Sound of Ruby, told Arab News.
鈥淚 was just concentrating on the performance. The truth is that doesn鈥檛 happen a lot.鈥
Beyond their music, however, Seera鈥檚 greatest impact might lie in the influence they have on other Saudi women.
Meesh said: 鈥淲e haven鈥檛 even launched yet and I鈥檝e already had women come up to me and (say), 鈥業鈥檝e been picking up an instrument but I haven鈥檛 felt like I could really put myself out there until seeing you guys,鈥 or, 鈥榊ou guys inspired me.鈥欌
The band hopes their live debut will encourage others to take to the stage.
鈥淚t鈥檚 still kind of a male-dominated field globally, and here, too鈥 (as) an all-woman band, we really want to support women to be more out there and to take up space,鈥 said Haya.
The story of the band began a year ago, when Haya met sisters Meesh and Nora through Instagram and they got together for a jam session.
鈥淲ithin a minute, we had written a song, and when Nora also came and met up with us we were just going and going,鈥 Haya told Arab News.
Nora added: 鈥淢e and Meesh started playing music a long time ago. Since we鈥檙e sisters, we鈥檝e always felt there was a missing piece. We were looking for a band and people to connect with through our music. We were on the hunt.
鈥淲hen Haya reached out to Meesh, it was the perfect opportunity to form a band, especially since our music tastes are very similar. We like uniqueness in music and we love diversity in sound.鈥
Drummer THING was the missing link, she said, and they met her at a music event later that summer.
Meesh said: 鈥淚鈥檝e played with a lot of people before but when I played with the girls, I expressed myself freely in a way that I鈥檓 not used to. I felt myself progress 鈥 Playing together really helped us all develop ourselves as musicians, as people, as a band.鈥
The group鈥檚 sound, which combines their interests in jazz, funk, soul and Turkish psychedelic rock, is reminiscent of performers from the 1970s such as Jefferson Airplane and Janis Joplin, but they add their own spin by infusing it with Arabic and English influences.
鈥淲hen I started writing lyrics, I used to always write in English but I wanted to get more in touch with my culture,鈥 said Nora.
鈥淪o, I really looked into the writing process and I ended up loving it. Arabic Fus鈥檋a (classical Arabic) is beautiful, and I wanted to incorporate that more into the music. That鈥檚 when we mixed both languages together.鈥
Some of their lyrics also feature Ammiya, or colloquial Arabic, in an effort to modernize the sound while remaining true to their roots and upbringing.
鈥淲e really wanted to represent an original sound,鈥 said THING. 鈥淚t was really important for us to focus on our culture, on local Arabic sounds mostly, and then mixing it together because we鈥檙e influenced by a lot of things.鈥
As they performed original tracks on Thursday night, including 鈥淲oman,鈥 鈥淛unoon Almal鈥 (鈥淢oney Craze or Greed鈥) and 鈥淜haleek Ba鈥檈ed鈥 (鈥淪tay Away鈥), the band really played to the crowd, complete with free-flowing moves and headbanging, often inviting the audience to clap along. 鈥淲e鈥檙e about to take you guys to dreamland,鈥 Nora told them between songs.
The crowd went wild when Seera concluded their set with the track 鈥淪lapping,鈥 calling out for more.
鈥淲e were so overwhelmed by the audience and their energy and how they felt the music,鈥 said Nora.
鈥淚 could see in their faces that they were connecting with it and that just meant the world to me. This doesn鈥檛 stop here and it鈥檚 just fueling our fire for the future.鈥

Decoder

Seera

It's the name of an all-female Saudi rock-fusion band that's beginning to make waves across the Kingdom. Some of their lyrics also feature Ammiya, or colloquial Arabic, in an effort to modernize the sound while remaining true to their roots and upbringing.