http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/11/24/mideast/saudi.php


A Saudi girl group that dares to rock 
By Robert F. Worth

 
Monday, November 24, 2008 
JIDDA: They cannot perform in public. They cannot pose for album cover 
photographs. Even their jam sessions are secret, for fear of offending the 
religious authorities in this ultraconservative kingdom.
But the members of Saudi Arabia's first all-girl rock band, the Accolade, are 
clearly not afraid of taboos.

The band's first single, "Pinocchio," has become an underground hit here, with 
hundreds of young Saudis downloading the song from the group's Web site. Now, 
the pioneering young foursome, all of them college students, want to start 
playing regular gigs - inside private compounds, of course - and recording an 
album.

"In Saudi, yes, it's a challenge," said the group's spiky-haired lead singer, 
Lamia, who has piercings on her left eyebrow and beneath her bottom lip. (Like 
other band members, she gave only her first name.) "Maybe we're crazy. But we 
wanted to do something different."

In a country where women are not allowed to drive and rarely appear in public 
without their faces covered, the band is very different indeed. The prospect of 
female rockers clutching guitars and belting out angry lyrics about a failed 
relationship - the theme of "Pinocchio" - would once have been unimaginable 
here.

But this country's harsh code of public morals has slowly thawed, especially in 
Jidda, by far the kingdom's most cosmopolitan city. A decade ago the 
cane-wielding religious police terrorized women who were not dressed according 
to their standards. Young men with long hair were sometimes bundled off to 
police stations to have their heads shaved, or worse.

Today, there is a growing rock scene with dozens of bands, some of them even 
selling tickets to their performances. Hip-hop is also popular. The religious 
police - strictly speaking, the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the 
Prevention of Vice - have largely retreated from the streets of Jidda, and they 
are somewhat less aggressive even in the kingdom's desert heartland.

The change has been especially noticeable since the terrorist attacks on the 
United States of Sept. 11, 2001, when the Saudis confronted the effects of 
extremism both outside and inside the kingdom.

More than 60 percent of Saudi Arabia's population is under 25, and many younger 
people are pressing for greater freedoms.

"The upcoming generation is different from the one before," said Dina, the 
Accolade's 21-year-old guitarist and founder. "Everything is changing. Maybe in 
10 years it's going to be O.K. to have a band with live performances."

Dina said she first dreamed of starting a band three years ago. In September, 
she and her sister Dareen, 19, who plays bass, teamed up with Lamia and Amjad, 
the keyboardist.

They were already iconoclasts: Dina and Dareen wear their hair teased into 
thick manes and have pierced eyebrows. During an interview with the band at a 
Starbucks here, they wore black abayas - the flowing gown that is standard 
attire for women - but the gowns were open, showing their jeans and T-shirts, 
and their hair and faces were uncovered. Women are more apt to go uncovered in 
Jidda than in most other parts of the country, though it is still an uncommon 
sight.

"People always stare at us," Dareen said, giggling. She and her sister are also 
avid ice skaters, another unusual habit in Saudi Arabia's desert.

The band gets together to practice every weekend at the sisters' house, where 
their younger brother sometimes fills in on drums. In early November, Dina, who 
studies art at King Abdulaziz University, began writing a song based on one of 
her favorite paintings, "The Accolade," by the English pre-Raphaelite painter 
Edmund Blair Leighton. The painting depicts a long-haired noblewoman knighting 
a young warrior with a sword.

"I liked the painting because it shows a woman who is satisfied with a man," 
Dina said.

She had thought of writing a song based on the "Last Supper" by Leonardo da 
Vinci but decided that doing so would be taking controversy too far. (In Saudi 
Arabia, churches are not allowed, and Muslims who convert to Christianity can 
be executed.)

Dina held out her cellphone to show a video of the band practicing at home. It 
looked like a garage-band jam session anywhere in the world, with the sisters 
hunching over their instruments, their brother blasting away at the drums and 
Lamia clutching a microphone.

"We're looking for a drummer," Lamia said. "Five guys have offered, but we 
really want the band to be all female."

Although they know they are doing something unusual, in person the band members 
seem more playful than provocative. Unlike some of the wealthier Saudi youth 
who have lived abroad and tasted Western lifestyles, they are middle class and 
have never left their country.

"What we're doing - it's not something wrong, it's art, and we're doing it in a 
good way," Dina said. "We respect our traditions."

All the members are quick to add that they disapprove of smoking, drinking and 
drugs.

"You destroy yourself with that," Lamia said.

Yet rock 'n' roll itself is suspect in Saudi Arabia in part because of its 
association with decadent lifestyles. Most of the bands here play heavy metal, 
which has only added to the stigma because of the way some Western heavy metal 
bands use images linked to satanism or witchcraft. In Saudi Arabia, people are 
sometimes imprisoned and even executed on charges of practicing witchcraft.

The first rock bands appeared here about 20 years ago, according to Hassan 
Hatrash, a 34-year-old journalist and bass player who was one of the pioneers, 
and their numbers gradually grew. Then in 1995, the police raided a performance 
in the basement of a restaurant in Jidda, hauling about 300 young men off to 
jail, including Hatrash. They were released a few days later without being 
charged. (There is no actual law against playing rock music or holding public 
performances here.)

"After that, the scene kind of died," he said.

Hatrash, who has graying shoulder-length hair, recalled how the religious 
police used to harass young men who advertised their interest in rock 'n' roll. 
He was once taken to a police station where his head was shaved.

In recent years, with the religious police on the defensive, bands have begun 
to play concerts, and a few have recorded albums. Occasionally young men even 
bring their guitars and play outside the cafés on Tahlia Street in Jidda, where 
young people tend to congregate in the evenings.

Although the music is mostly familiar to heavy metal fans anywhere - thrashing 
guitars and howling vocals - some of the lyrics reflect the special challenges 
of life and love in this strict country.

"And I Don't Know Why," one of the songs by Hatrash's band, Most of Us, has 
these lyrics:

Why is it always so hard to get to you

When it's something we both want to do

Every time we have to create an alibi

So that we can meet and love or at least try ...

As the Saudi rock scene grew, Dina gathered the courage to start her own band. 
The Accolade plans to move slowly, she said, with "jams for ladies only" at 
first. The band members' parents support them, though they have asked them to 
keep things quiet.

Eventually, Dina said, they hope to play real concerts, perhaps in Dubai. "It's 
important for them to see what we're capable of," she said.

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