Recently feted as a ‘Breakthrough Artist of 2022’, New Zealand artist Georgia Lines deserves even more attention. The singer-songwriter has a powerful voice which make her so evocative.
She has just released a new acoustic EP titled Falling. The 6-track project includes pre-released songs, a Billie Eilish cover and a new piece (and title-track) “Falling”
“I wanted to create a project that reflected how my songs were originally written (on the piano) and to also capture how they have been interpreted for my live shows when I am playing solo,” says Georgia. “The songs carry a different life when played how they were originally written; with just piano.”
Being stripped-down, each track showcases her raw vocals and emotion-imbed songwriting.
Somewhere between the Twin Peaks opening score and the tonal palette on Slowdive’s iconic record, Souvlaki GAINES’ latest single, I JUST WNT YOU, starts to unravel. Vocally and lyrically, the conceptually dark and disenfranchised single veers close to the emo genre. Yet, affixing that genre label to such a visceral triumph of a release that pushes the envelope further than most dare to feels derivative.
This abstraction of loneliness and almost primal pain exhibited is profoundly resonant. It is a testament to GAINES’ ability to execute his expression so that it translates into a strikingly artful demonstration of a sense of ennui that we can all relate to.
The synth sequencing towards the outro is an efficacious demonstration of the twilight of desperation that unrequited love can drive us to before the dandelion hands-Esque spoken-word verse delivers one final evocative blow.
The New Orleans-based artist has been writing and producing since 2020; the experimentation within his string of singles is definitive proof that his music is a project of deeply intrinsic passion driven by a desire for artistic connection. We can’t wait to hear what comes next.
With another seven days in the books, we’re back catching you up on the best new music with the 319th installment of our Weekly Dope playlist.
On the artwork this week, I ran with a mix of Ab-Soul‘s Herbert, Ransom + V Don‘s Chaos Is My Ladder, Little Simz‘ No Thank You, and the late Young Dolph‘s Paper Route Frank albums.
On top of that, there’s also new music from Boldy James, The Alchemist, G Perico, Your Old Droog, Mickey Factz, Flatbush ZOMBiES, Diddy + PartyNextDoor, Jacquees, and more.
Updated every Monday morning, the playlist can be heard below and is available on Apple Music, Spotify, and TIDAL.
Weekly Dope: Ab-Soul, Ransom, Boldy James & More was last modified: December 19th, 2022 by Shake
Hit-Boy has put together another banner year behind the boards for 2022 and he’s not done just yet.
The HipHopDX 2022 Producer of The Year teased another project or song output of some sort on Instagram to set the tone for the final week of the year and fans can expect the care package to arrive on Friday (December 30).
“I got more to say this year 12/30,” he captioned a photo of himself at the podium getting ready to make a presidential speech.
Bun B and The Game filled Hit’s comment section to give the producer a salute on the epic run he’s been enjoying.
It hasn’t been confirmed exactly what Hit-Boy has up his sleeve, but fans can expect another late gift underneath their Christmas tree before 2022 expires on Friday.
The West Coast native has been on a scorching winning streak as he book-ended 2022 reuniting with Nas for a pair of projects with Magic on Christmas 2021 and King’s Disease III to close out the year in November.
Hit-Boy also produced full-length projects for Pacman Da Gunman (Bulletproof Soul) and Dreezy (HITGIRL) and notched placements on The Game’s Drillmatic – Heart vs. Mind and worked with Dom Kennedy and Beyoncé, the latter of which earned him a Grammy nomination on Renaissance.
The grind didn’t stop there as EA Sports took note of Hit’s run where he was also tapped to curate the soundtrack to Madden 2023.
With another decorated campaign under his belt, the 35-year-old took home honors for the HipHopDX 2022 Producer of the Year over the likes of Alchemist, ATL Jacob, Harry Fraud and Metro-Boomin. It’s Hit-Boy’s second time receiving the award in three years as he also won HipHopDX Producer of the Year in 2020.
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Following his Color Me In EP, which dropped in October, Mokita returns with a new single. He named this song “High”. While the track features crispy beats and bouncy production, it’s lyrically broody.
Mokita explains, “The bottom line to all addiction is that it is a day-by-day process. And even after three and a half years there are many days where I still crave the very things that were messing up my life. I can easily romanticize the past and forget how much hurt and pain all those addictions caused.“
This song kickstarts the process that leads to another EP; I can’t wait to hear the next singles.
The folk duo River Knight has been fairly quiet since their 2021 album, Grow. They are back on melodious form in their latest orchestral folk single, Unsprung, which borrows fractions of the melody to Take on Me, but with such a stunning orchestral string ensemble and hints of the Verve and 90s Britpop in the verses, who is complaining?
The earworm brings the ragged and rough timbres through the acoustic guitar strings and percussion while the smooth can be found in the gloss of the orchestral crescendos, which are as close to heaven as the impious are likely to get.
Each new progression is a brand-new opportunity to fall in love with the duo who banded together in 2017 as a form of therapy for Darren Knight after the tragic passing of his wife. Stone River was there for unwavering support and to offer the Ying to Knight’s songwriting Yang. The duo are well known on the London, Portsmouth and Southampton live circuit, but it’s only a matter of time before they take their international-level approach to indie folk rock to the status it beckons.
Unsprung officially released on December 16th. Catch it on Spotify.
A welcome addition to the growing Griselda camp, Rome Streetz released his KISS THE RING just in time for Hoodie Season weather. He now shares a video for the project’s opening track, “Big Steppa.”
The clip, directed by Hidji Films of AWGE, follows Rome throughout his adventures in the city but mostly from the perspective of his giant ring. It actually quasi-reminds me of the “views from the gun” perspective of Nas’ 1996 track “I Gave You Power,” which is admittedly pretty cool to see.
Rome Streetz Drops “Big Steppa” Video was last modified: December 21st, 2022 by Meka
What connects the lives of the great pre-Independence film star and singer Kundan Lal Saigal, Pakistani ghazal singer Iqbal Bano who stood up to her country military establishment in the 1980s with her performance of the banned anthem Hum Dekhenge and the popular television music show Coke Studio Pakistan?
All three, straddled across generations, have adapted and performed an unusual five-couplet Persian ghazal Ma Ra Ba Ghamza Kusht… (Killed by Coquetry…), attributed to a little-remembered poet Mirza Mohammed Hasan “Qateel” Lahori (1759-c.1825).
Qateel, a man of prodigious Persian literary output, was born Diwani Singh in a family of Punjabi Hindu Khatri munshis. When he was 18, he converted to Shia Islam under the influence of his teacher, the poet Mohammed Baqir “Shahid” Isfahani, whom he followed to Iran.
He spent some time traveling widely in Central Asia and becoming acquainted with the Persian spoken there before eventually settling in Awadh, where he established his reputation as a prominent linguist, poet, philologist, munshi and devout Shia.
The Dancing Peacock
A series that charts the literary tradition and indigenous roots of Indo-Persian as well as its enduring legacy today.
Qateel and Persian
Qateel held forth on a diverse range of matters – not just amatory verse but on everything from religion to the linguistic variations in Persian and the proper usage of obscenities. A non-native, near-fluent speaker of Persian, his situation was similar to that of early Indian writers in English.
He was one of the earliest Persian-language writers to point out that there were considerable differences between Indian Persian usage, which he recognised as a distinct category. Coming, as he did from a highly accomplished lineage of munshis, whose work was mostly in Persian, he deferred in most matters to sahib-e-zaban (native speakers).
Yet despite being a linguistic purist, obsessed with pedantry and proper speech, he noted that the usage of Persian in India diverged from the standards in Iran and Turan (Central Asia) through which he had traveled.
Yet, despite being a linguistic purist, obsessed with pedantry and proper speech, he noted that the usage of Persian in India diverged from the standards in Iran and Turan in Central Asia through which he had traveled.
As numerous Persian scholars have noted, Qateel emphasised taqlid (emulation) of the Iranians. But he also wrote, as the Italian scholar, Stephano Pello noted in translation, “When speaking and writing normal correspondence, one must choose the current usage of the people of Iran; when composing poetry…in solid ornate style, one should not tie oneself to a single current usage. As a matter of fact, by doing so, one would contradict the way of the masters, and a forced attempt to look Iranian…keeps poetry far from refinedness: a written Persian which follows the use of the masters of the past is good.”
Qateel, KL Saigal and Coke Studio
Little of Qateel’s work is read today beyond a rarefied scholarly audience, but surprisingly, some of his poems continue to be rediscovered and recited in the subcontinent.
KL Saigal sang a handful of ghazals in his lifetime, only two of which were in Persian. Ma Ra Ba Ghamza Kusht… (Killed by Coquetry) was one. It is often mistakenly attributed to the 12th century poet Nizami Ganjavi (d. 1209) from present-day Azerbaijan, who is best remembered for his version of the romance Layla-wa-Majnun.
Qateel would have been amused, because it omitted the signature verse that would have identified him as the author.
Saigal’s version, released in the early 1940s is a short three-minute performance set in Raag Desh. The accent, pronunciation and stress are entirely Indian in form, not reflecting modern Persian pronunciation with some verses omitted, or reworked.
A generation later, Iqbal Bano reintroduced this ghazal in the 1980s, attributed again to the poet, Nizami and also omitting the signature verse.
In 2011, it re-entered popular imagination when Farid Ayaz, the Pakistani qawwal, included it as a digression in a song titled Kangana performed for Coke Studio. This version has been viewed almost seven million times on YouTube.
A ghazal, a callous lover
An extraordinary ghazal that covers a number of themes revolving around coquetry, mischief and jealousy, the song features a lover making excuses and going to extraordinary lengths to play hard to get. The lover kills Qateel with coquetry, burns him with jealousy by favoring another, pretends to pray to avoid him and finally even in a rather hyperbolic metaphor, uses his blood to apply henna on their feet.
ma ra ba ghamza kusht-o-qaza ra bahana sakht khud su-ye-ma nadeed-o-haya ra bahana sakht
Their coquettish eyes killed us, and blamed destiny, They did not even look at us, claiming modesty as an excuse.
The radif (ending rhyme) that ends each couplet – “ra bahana sakht” – is hard to translate but runs something on the lines of “make an excuse” or “to feign”, or “pretend”. Even harder to translate is the term ghamza, which conveys a range of suggestive meanings involving movements of the eye, from a wink to a flirtatious glance, and denote coquetry and flirtation.
Steingass’ Persian-English dictionary, for instance, defines it as “a wink or a signal with the eye; an amorous glance, coquetry, ogling; the eyelid”.
They put their arm on another’s shoulder lovingly And on seeing us, blamed a slip of the foot.
While Qateel emphasised the importance of emulating the ancients, and authored several poems using tropes borrowed from the Persian masters, he reworked their themes into newer forms.
Persian scholar from Lahore, Zahida Parveen, who wrote a thesis on the poet in 2009, points out that several lines of this ghazal that appear as a footnote in some of Qateel’s manuscripts have been authored by someone else and that he reworked the theme in imitation and added other lines as homage.
All subsequent works have attributed this to Qateel, adding to the confusion regarding general authorship.
The lover’s callous, uncaring persona is contrasted with the delicateness and majesty of their beauty, which is too hard for the pious to bear. Two stock characters make an appearance in this ghazal – the raqeeb (rival) who is alluded to in the second verse as “ghair” or the other, and as someone the beloved favours by putting their hand on his shoulder. The poet thinks it is because they like the rival, but they blame it on an attempt to steady a slippery foot.
Qateel uses sarcasm to great effect, and sometimes an interspersed verse appears in some sung versions, which mocks the zahid (the dry, boring ascetic). He says that even someone who had renounced everything was unable to handle the temptation of the lover’s fairy-like face, so pretended to resort to solitude and remembering god.
The ghazal itself ends with a signed verse containing a rather graphic image of the lover rubbing Qateel’s blood on their feet, as if it were henna. Perhaps the striking image of an uncaring lover applying henna was too much for performance, so it is almost invariably omitted in song.
Qateel and his ghazal have been long forgotten in India and he is now an obscure figure in literary history. But he continues to enjoy wide popularity in countries such as Afghanistan and Tajikistan, where modern-day native Persian speakers – actual sahib-e-zaban whom he imitated – continue to recite Ma Ra Ba Ghamza Kusht… as if it were one of their own.
Adhiraj Parthasarathy is a writer who grew up on Imam Khomeini Road in Hyderabad and studied some Persian. Mohammad Dawood has a PhD in Persian Literature from Jawaharlal Nehru University.
The Dancing Peacock is a series on the enduring existence of Persian in modern India-in film, music, books, religion and culture. Views expressed are personal. Read the other parts here.
Nigerian artist Kizz Daniel scored another mega-hit with his latest single, “Cough (Odo)”. He has since created a stunning visual to accompany the euphoric afropop song.
“Cough (Odo)” is smooth and intoxicating. Kizz says, “For this song I wanted to highlight the feeling of new love. The song itself is energetic and celebratory, and it really captures what it’s like to fall for someone new”.
It’s one of the focus tracks on the compilation album, Where We Come From (Vol. 1) by EMPIRE.
Dropping an astonishing track to get all moods boosted to maximum capacity, TwoMinutesHate sends our minds into a whole new world of fantasy on the excellent new single fuXmas.
TwoMinutesHate is a Norwegian pop punk band who roars through with music to shake the soul alive with on each of their energetic singles.
”TwoMinutesHate’s debut EP Restless, Nervous And Way Too Loud has already earned them a significant amount of airplay on one of Norway’s largest radio channels NRK P13, and even landed them a spot on the soundtrack of the Norwegian comedy Jentetur.” ~ TwoMinutesHate
Bringing that punk heavy Christmas cheer to us all and thundering in with a glorious energy, TwoMinutesHate sound in top form on fuXmas and has that insatiable lip-licking vitality to awaken us all from any sleepy slumber.
fuXmas from Norwegian pop punk band TwoMinutesHate is a hugely motivating track which shall spark so many memories to explode with excitement. Charging through with much velocity and showing us their elevating progression, to thrill our hearts into a happier place.