I do not exist on the ID card
A string and a piece of wood are my gunpowder
Without a nationality, without borders
And if you ask me I would say
I play the ´oud
Laissez Passer; your name…your image isn’t familiar
Laissez Passer; your origin…your roots aren’t known
Laissez Passer; your country…your homeland isn’t known
With music I become a flying bird
I change my feathers, I change my strings
Between my letters…words of fire
Arabic, African, ´oud, and guitar
Laissez Passer; your name…your image isn’t familiar
Laissez Passer; your origin…your roots aren’t known
Laissez Passer; your country…your homeland isn’t known
Laissez Passer
A string and a piece of wood are my gunpowder
Without a nationality, without borders
And if you ask me I would say
I play the ´oud
Laissez Passer; your name…your image isn’t familiar
Laissez Passer; your origin…your roots aren’t known
Laissez Passer; your country…your homeland isn’t known
With music I become a flying bird
I change my feathers, I change my strings
Between my letters…words of fire
Arabic, African, ´oud, and guitar
Laissez Passer; your name…your image isn’t familiar
Laissez Passer; your origin…your roots aren’t known
Laissez Passer; your country…your homeland isn’t known
Laissez Passer
inviata da Dq82 - 25/11/2017 - 19:27
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Laissez Passer
Written By Rami Nakhleh & Hasan Nakhleh
Lyrics Translated by Rifaa' Abu Jabal
Dopo un primo album i TootArd nel 2017 si lanciano sul mercato internazionale con l'etichetta Glitterbeat, come però spesso avviene con i dischi di questa etichetta, il prodotto è per un mercato anglo/francofono e spesso i testi sono irreperibili nella loro lingua originale, in questo caso in arabo, ma solo in traduzione.
"A string and a piece of wood are my gunpowder"
Una corda e un pezzo di legno sono la mia polvere da sparo
non ricorda forse: "Il mio mitra è un contrabbasso che ti spara sulla faccia ciò che penso della vita?
It’s hardly surprising that TootArd’s unique situation has shaped their music as it has their lives. In a place like the Golan Heights “politics” is not a dirty word or an annoying pastime for hermits glued to computers and phones, it’s simply a fact of life.
The good news is that Laissez Passer, their second album, is an uplifting, eclectic, funky, highly danceable party of a record. TootArd have combined their various influences –tuareg, West-African, Arabic music and reggae into a unique trademark sound. The lyrics deal with their geopolitical situation in both a matter-of-fact way and a whimsical, romantic, even poetic fashion. A common metaphor is that of a bird, signifying freedom from oppression, the band members’ individual journeys to various parts of Europe, and presumably, their restless quest to combine different styles of music into something all their own.
The closest parallel I can think of musically is Bombino, the Tuareg electric guitarist whose blues-influenced music was brought to a Western audience by Black Keys guitarist Dan Auerbach. A sense of longing, the wide open spaces of the desert and the mountains, and an infectious optimism are all characteristics of this record.
Opener “Laissez Passer” bursts out of the speakers with a driving electro-acoustic beat that suggests an Arabian dance club as much as a party in the middle of the desert. Hasan Nakhleh‘s guitar playing shows how blues and Hendrix-inspired playing can blend perfectly with North African and Arabic melodic sensibilities. ‘I do not exist on the ID card, a string and a piece of wood are my gunpowder’.
folkradio.co.uk