Playlists
continental drift 4/12/23: lebanon
Continental Drift is proud to take you to Lebanon this week. Find the playlist here.
The Lebanese Republic is a country in Western Asia situated between Syria and Israel on the Mediterranean Basin. With an area of just 4,036 sq miles, it is the second smallest country in continental Asia, beating only singapore. The official language of Lebanon is Arabic, though French is also recognized.
Lebanon was originally part of the Ottoman Empire, and then came under French rule after the Ottoman Empire collapsed in World War I. Lebanon declared independence in 1943. Following World War II, there was an explosion of music and arts culture in the country.
Elias Rahbani was a musician, composer, songwriter, and TV personality responsible for many of the hits coming out of Lebanon in this period. These songs I’m playing for you are from his first solo album, “Mosaic of the Orient,” released in 1972. Rahbani studied to become a pianist, but upon injuring his right hand at 19, shifted to production. He died in 2021 at age 83 from Covid.
Elias Rahbani segment:
Sweet Eyes // Elias Rahbani
Leila Leila, Jolie Fille // Elias Rahbani
Up next we have several selections from Habibi Funk Records, which is masterminded by Jannis Sturtz. I’ve featured Habibi before, but only because they’re the best in eclectic sounds from the arab world. The first featured artist here is Issam Hajali, known for jazz funk fusion with a unique arabic sound. He is also the singer and lead composer of Ferkat Al Ard, which we’ll hear from later. This album was recorded in one day in Paris in 1977, when Hajali was away from Lebanon due to political unrest. Less than 100 copies of the tape were made, of which Hajali kept one, which is where the digital versions come from.
Habibi Funk Segment:
Yawma Konna // Issam Hajali
Express Line // Rogér Fakhr
Lahnon Lemra’ati Wa Beladi // Ferkat Al Ard
Tayyara Warak // Charif Megarbane
Rogér Fakhr left Lebanon for France at the same time as Issam Hajali, and actually contributed as a musician on the record we just heard from. This was made in the late 70s in Beirut, before he eventually moved to the US.
Charif Megarbane’s Tayyara Warak is Habibi Funk’s first contemporary release. He describes his music as “Lebrary music,” a Lebanese spin on Italian Library music. He’s made over 80 albums in the past 10 years, releasing only a handful, and often under different names with fake band histories to match. He rejects theoretical knowledge of music, going so far as to deliberately not know the names to chords he plays. “I work better from an abstract manner. I can’t even remember the names of chords, I have no idea what they are called and refuse to learn more because as soon as you start intellectualizing those abstract ideas, you start to corrupt them in a way. Before you turn it into written theory and numbers, and words, sometimes it’s good just to make the music.”
Lydia Canaan is often credited as the “first rock star of the middle east.” Indeed, she was the first internationally successful artist from Lebanon. She performed rock music in English during the Lebanese civil war, often in the dangerous parts of the country. She was known for defying tradition, challenging conventions, and reversing gender barriers in Middle Eastern music and culture. Big in the MTV era. She was raised by conservative parents who forbade her from musical training, so she developed the ability to create and retain melodies and lyrics in English from memory. Her break came as a teenager when she joined a metal band as the singer, and then she launched her solo career from there. Eventually, she transitioned to pop music.
Female Pop segment:
Lydia Canaan – Hey Richie
Diamonds not For Me // Khaled, Diana Haddad
My Loved One // Najwa Karam
Aayshalak // Elissa
Get It Right // Yasmine Hamdan
Diana Haddad hit her peak during the late 90s and into the early 2000s. In the middle of her career, she got a degree in computer science.
Najwa Karam is one of the biggest celebrities in Lebanon, though she began her career as a teacher of Geography and Arabic. She got her break on a TV program “Lebanese Nights,” in which she won the singing competition. Her career took off in the mid 90s.
Yasmine Hamdan was part of Soap Kills, an influential rock group that was part of rebuilding Lebanon’s music scene after the civil war. Known for underground influence.
Rap sample:
Njoom ‘Am Te’rab // Fareeq El Atrash
Indie sample:
Bearable Lightness of Being // Sandmoon
Atmospheric Sample:
So long lover // Charbel Haber
100 wreks #50
Thanks for tuning in to the 50th episode of 100 wreks! It has been my pleasure to bring you a weekly dose of hyperpop! Thank you all for listening, and I’m looking forward to the next 50 episodes of 100 wrek! -DJ Snootles
For tonight’s set I played some of 100 wreks’ top hits from over the years, some of my favorite fun and bouncy songs. Here’s the tracklist:
what's known now - gupi just like you - saoirse dream c2.0 - Charli XCX Time - Petal Supply I'll Text Your Phone - shyburial LESS4BOUTU (feat. LUCY LOHAN) - 4kmirage (prod. elxnce + kurai) idea for song - trndytrndy 2MUCH - Petal Supply armor - kiryano (prod. glumboy + kiryano) My Longing Pulse - Reserv Windows - A. G. Cook crush - Planet 1999 "Everybody's dead!" - underscores The Flag Is Raised - Bladee + Ecco2k FARAWAY199X/TAPE 2 - six impala Wanted - namasenda (prod. Himera) Frog On The Floor - 100 gecs
the music of sports: sunday special 4/9/23
Continental Drift takes on Sunday Special!
This sunday special explores the music (and a little bit of history) of international sporting competitions! Find the spotify playlist here. All other songs are linked in this post.
We’re starting with the Olympics. The modern olympics governed by the International Olympic Committee began in 1896 in Athens, Greece. They are held every four years, alternating winter and summer olympics in 2 year periods. Until the 70s and 80s, when eastern bloc countries bent amateur rules, the olympics banned professional athletes outright- training was thought of as cheating. That’s hard to imagine!
Over 200 teams (countries and territories) compete in the olympics each year. The next olympics are the 2024 summer olympics in Paris, France. The olympics are represented by 5 rings: red, yellow, green, blue, black. Every country has at least one of these colors in their flag.
We’ll be starting our journey through the olympics in 1964 with the Tokyo summer olympics. These were the first olympics to be held in Asia, and the first games which excluded South Africa due to their apartheid policies. These were also the first olympics to be televised internationally without the need to ship reels overseas.
Music critic Kuniharu Akiyma made a commposition entitled “environmental music for dining room of athlete’s village in tokyo 1964” which, as the title indicates, was for the athlete’s village dining room. In addition to this piece, Akiyama created another for the olympics, in the same style: music for resting. It follows after the first of such compositions, music for coffee house.
But what is it? These are ambient pieces made entirely of the sounds of sanukite stones. The precursor began in early 1963 when Akiyama was asked to compose “Song of Stone” for a TV progam about Sanuki, Shikoku Island, which is known for granite quarrying. He is quoted, “I was deeply moved when I hit the natural stones of various sizes that had not been modified by artificial elements. Clear beautiful sounds with amazingly long sustain. Each stone had a different tone. Sharp and very powerful. To be honest, I never had thought that stones could have such a beautiful, strong and sharp tone.”
In addition to composing these pieces, he also engineered stone speakers to play them. They were advertised as having a pure sound “because all vibration except for the paper speaker cone can be suppressed to the utmost limit by the weight of the stone.”
1964
Japan:
Kuniharu Akiyama – Environmental Music for Dining Room of Athletes’ Village in Tokyo Olympics 1964
Germany:
Helmut Zacharias Orchestra – Tokyo Melody – 1964 45rpm
The first official song of the Olympics was “Bienvenue à Montréal”, performed by 15 year old René Simard for the 1976 Olympics in Montréal.
1976
Canada:
René Simard Bienvenue à Montréal 1976(first official song)
The winter olympics were first held in 1924 in France to showcase winter sports that logistically were not possible in the summer. Until 1994, the winter olympics were held in the same year as the summer olympics. Now, they are staggered. They are more expensive than the summer olympics, costing 1.3 million per athlete on average. In Sochi in 2014, that figure was 7.9 million.
1988
Calgary, Canada:
Winter games // David Foster
Now we will fast forward 4 years to Barcelona. The 1992 games were the first since the end of the Cold War, and the first to feature South Africa after their 32 year ban due to Apartheid policies. The unified team, made up of former soviet republics, officially won with 45 gold and 112 overall medals.
1992
Barcelona
Barcelona // Freddie Mercury
Free Your Mind // En Vogue
Anita Baker – How Fast, How Far
Now we get to the 1996 centennial olympics, held right here in atlanta! The summer olympics will not have been held in North America since until 2028, LA.
10, 320 athletes from 197 teams competed in 26 sports, and many of them stayed in the North Avenue apartments that are currently Georgia Tech student housing. The 1996 olympics opening ceremonies were the most watched (3.5 billion viewers) live event until 2022, when the state funeral of Queen Elizabeth overtook it.
These olympics were the debut of volleyball, mountain biking, softball, lightweight rowing, women’s swimming, women’s fencing, team rhythmic gymnastics, and women’s association football (soccer). The US won with 101 total medals, 44 gold, the first time since 1984. Notably, the 1996 olympics turned a profit.
The 1996 Olympics were the first to broadcast the Olympic Theme, written by John Williams in 1984. It adds on to “Bugler’s Dream,” written in 1958 by Leo Arnaud.
1996
Atlanta:
The Olympic Spirit // John Williams, The Boston Pops Orchestra
Bugler’s Dream and Olympic Fanfare // John Williams, Leo Arnaud, The Boston Pops Orchestra
Reach // Gloria Estefan
Power of the Dream // Celine Dion
Mary J Blige – Everlasting Love (cover of chaka khan)
Taylor Swift’s “Change” was included on 2008 AT&T Team USA soundtrack, as well as Sheryl Crow, Lady Antebellum, Luis Fonsi, etc. These were the most expensive olympics to date (40-44 billion dollars).
Now we will shift in focus to FIFA. The FIFA world cup is the international soccer competition. The first tournament was held in 1930, and ever since in 4 year periods (except during world war II), in winter olympic years. The games involve a qualification phase, where for the 3 years leading up to the tournament countries play each other to determine who will go to the world cup. Brazil, who has 5 wins, is the only team to have played in every men’s tournament. The 2022 world cup was held in Qatar, and an estimated 1.5 billion watched the final match where Argentina was crowned champions. The next tournament is to be held in the US, Canada, and Mexico in 2026.
In the 1962 World Cup, Brazil beat Czechoslovakia 3-1 in Santiago to defend their title. The tournament was marred by violence between players on the pitch and a toxic atmosphere; it included the first-round match between Chile and Italy (2–0), which became known as the Battle of Santiago, one of a number of violent matches played throughout the tournament. It was the first World Cup in which the average number of goals per match was less than three (2.78), and this has since been repeated at every World Cup.
1962, Chile
Chile:
El Rock del Mundial // Los Ramblers, best selling single in chilean history
1966, England
World Cup Willie // Lonnie Donegon
England defeated West Germany 4-2.
All 15 African nations who entered the qualifying later boycotted the tournament in protest after FIFA, citing “competitive and logistical issues,” ruled that there would be no direct qualification for any African team. The Jules Rimet trophy was stolen before the tournament, but was recovered by a dog named Pickles four months before the tournament began. This trophy was stolen again in 1983, never to be found.
1994, The US
Gloryland – Daryl Hall (feat. Sounds Of Blackness)
Brazil wins 3-2 over Italy in penalty shoot out after game went 0-0 in regulation, the only world cup championship to be decided entirely by penalty kicks.
1998, France
La Copa de la Vida // Ricky Martin
This was the longest world cup tournament, at 32 days. France eventually won 3-0 over brazil. It was also the subject of a terrorism plot from Al-Queda targeting the English football team.
2002, South Korea and Japan
Let’s Get Together Now~KOREA/JAPAN Ver.
This is the last Brazil victory, 2-0 over Germany. In the third place play-off match against South Korea, Turkey won 3–2 and scored the fastest goal in the FIFA World Cup history (10.8 seconds after kick-off).
2006, Germany
Hips Don’t Lie // Shakira
Italy beat France 5-3 after regulation ended 1-1. The 2006 World Cup is one of the most watched events in television history, with an esimated 26.29 billion views over the entire tournament.
2010, South Africa
Official anthem:
Waka Waka (This Time for Africa) // Shakira
Coke advertising anthem:
Wavin’ Flag // K’naan
Pepsi advertising anthem:
Oh Africa // Akon
Mascot anthem:
Game On // Pitbull, tkzee, and Dario G
Spain went 1-0 over the Netherlands, becoming the first European nation to win a World Cup hosted outside its home continent: all previous World Cups held outside Europe had been won by South American nations.
This was also the first time that the hosts had been eliminated in the first stage. New Zealand, with three draws, were the only undefeated team in the tournament, but they were also eliminated in the group stage.
2022, Qatar
Tukoh Taka // Nicki Minaj, Maluma, Myriam Fares
The last two songs are for horse racing and the Masters.
Where the Turf Meets the Surf // Bing Crosby
This song is dedicated entirely to one racetrack — Del Mar Thoroughbred Club in San Diego, California, which Bing Crosby co-founded. It was written in 1938, one year after it opened.
Augusta // John Story
Thanks for tuning in!
The Mobius – 04.10.2023
00:00:00 Intro
00:00:34 Escape Room by Dascon / The Deadliners^Haujobb
00:03:37 Whisk It! by Juzdie / Artline Designs
00:07:04 Straight Forward by Flex / Artline Designs
00:10:27 Mindful State by Maze & Slaze
00:13:20 Bad Hunter by Apollyon
00:15:47 Vision Re by MmcM^Sage
00:17:51 down the mark by wbcbz7
00:21:01 Macro by mborik/RM-TEAM/sk
00:25:07 Inconvenience Store by Curt Cool/Depth & Nah-Kolor
00:27:56 revuko by chlumpie
00:29:36 Autism Spectrum Disorder by Aki
00:32:43 Overflow by LFT
00:36:12 Rewind the Cassette by Jazzcat/Ghostown
00:39:56 1-Bit High and Rising by Hoffman / Logicoma & The Black Lotus
00:42:34 Extended machine by Virgill / Haujobb
00:46:45 Split My Peach Up by AceMan / Resistance^Agenda^Dreamweb
00:50:21 Digital Espresso by Pator/Joker
SASSAFRAS 2023.04.09
Wish U Had Something – Jonny L
21-41 – Mark Archer
Here and Now – Desired State
Fragments of a Lost Language – Jacob’s Optical Stairway
Relics – Studio Pressure
Defending The Fortress Of Light – duskdriven
My Safe Harbour – Quantec
Sinking – Mr. Projectile
Chardonnay and Jello Salad – Ava*
Currents (220v Offshore) – Phonem