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I Knew the War Was a Mistake...

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Rocketman95, Jun 12, 2003.

  1. Rocketman95

    Rocketman95 Hangout Boy

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    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A46688-2003Jun11.html

    <B><font size=5>Iraqi Boy Band Hopes Saddam's Fall Spells Stardom</font></B>

    <I>Reuters
    Wednesday, June 11, 2003; 9:04 PM



    By Andrew Marshall

    BAGHDAD (Reuters) - They call themselves Unknown To No One, but the five Iraqis bidding to become the world's next chart-topping boy band are not exactly famous. Yet.

    Despite being so short of places to rehearse that they often have to practice their singing while driving around the bomb- scarred streets of Baghdad crammed into an old Volkswagen Passat, the five young men have attracted the interest of a British pop consultant who thinks they can make it big.

    The toppling of Saddam Hussein has given them the chance to chase their dream. But militant Muslim groups are growing in influence in Iraq -- and the last thing they would want to see is an Iraqi boy band singing and dancing in matching outfits.

    Cinemas, breweries and alcohol stores have been threatened and attacked by militant groups, and in many areas women have been told not to walk outdoors without a veil. But Unknown To No One say they won't let extremists get in their way.

    "We lived under dictatorship for 35 years. I'm not prepared to go through that again, and I don't think anybody is," said lead singer Nadeem Hamed, a 20-year-old biology student. "If people attack us for being in a band, that's terrorism."

    The band's members -- they chose five as it is the standard boy band size -- span Iraq's religious and ethnic spectrum.

    Founders Art Haroutunian, 25, and Shant Garabedian, 24, are Armenian Christians. Diyar Diler is a 21-year-old Sunni Muslim Kurd. Hamed and 21-year-old Hassan Ali al-Falluji are Shi'ite Arabs.

    "We are all brothers here," said Haroutunian, who writes the band's songs. "There is no racism. No civil war."

    TRENDY HAIRCUTS

    Haroutunian and Garabedian formed the band in 1999 and advertised for members on Voice of Youth FM, the only radio station which played Western pop music during Saddam's rule. It was owned by Saddam's notorious playboy son Uday.

    "We were inspired by boy bands like the Backstreet Boys, Westlife, those guys," said Falluji, who is studying chemistry at university. "They're famous and their music is really cool."

    But the band's trendy haircuts, Western clothes and their decision to sing in English were frowned on.

    "Saddam and his regime were hostile toward the West, and anything coming from Western culture was considered destructive to our society," said Haroutunian, who works for the trade ministry.

    "They said the youth should be soldiers, must be ready to fight. Not ready to sing, to have love songs and such things."

    A CD they recorded sold less than 2,000 copies. But one reached Peter Whitehead, a British pop consultant who runs an Internet database of aspiring bands. He was so impressed by one of their songs, "Hey Girl," that he plans to come to Baghdad.

    The band believe that with professional backing, they can polish the single and make it a global chart-topper.

    "I'd like to be the most famous rock star in the whole world," Hamed said. "I know it's a dream, but I dreamed people would hear of us outside of Iraq and it's happened, so why not try to push the dream further?"

    Haroutunian said he was less concerned about selling millions of records than sending the right message about Iraq.

    "The most important thing for me is not to get to the UK charts, but to reach the public in the West," he said.

    "We want to show that Iraq is not a bad country. There are people who are educated, and cultivated, who really want to live in peace. We are not terrorists."

    ANGRY PARENTS

    But while they may one day have to deal with the pressures of fame, the band have more pressing things to worry about for the moment -- the chaos of postwar Iraq, a lack of instruments and equipment, and the disapproval of their parents.

    "They told us we should get a job, earn a living, not spend our lives as musicians," said Garabedian, a goldsmith. "They told us being pop musicians had no future here in Baghdad."

    There are few places they can practice. They usually sing while driving, or in Falluji's bedroom in a modest two-story Baghdad house. The room's walls are covered with posters of rock bands and a picture of U.S. actress Sarah Michelle Gellar.

    "There's nowhere else to go," Haroutunian said.

    All of the group have jobs or study at university, making it difficult to find time for music.

    "We were in college, and we were working, and we were singing. We didn't have that much time," Haroutunian said.

    "If you ask a pop band how long they are rehearsing each day, it's eight hours or 10 hours. We didn't have the time, just two or three hours. We didn't know if we were doing it right. We had no training. We just listened to CDs we liked and tried to create songs. It was very difficult for us."

    Garabedian says that despite the difficulties, if the band is given a chance it will prove it can reach the top.

    "As an Iraqi band who suffered all these years under the embargo and the sanctions and the regime, if we just reach the lowest position in the UK charts our dream would come true," he said. "Once we get there, with more help from big record companies, we could get to number one. I'm sure of that."
    </I>
     
  2. rockHEAD

    rockHEAD Member

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  3. Mulder

    Mulder Member

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    [​IMG]

    Uh... ya.
     
  4. boomboom

    boomboom I GOT '99 PROBLEMS

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    Hey...they're definitely no 'Meaty Cheesy Boys' for sure!
     
  5. RocketMan Tex

    RocketMan Tex Member

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    Where is my laser guided missile now that I need it most?
     
  6. X-PAC

    X-PAC Member

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    At least no one has decided this would be a good photoshop pic to drop the image of the dude on the bicycle in the backdrop... yet.
     
  7. coma

    coma Member

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    Someone needs to photoshop YoYao's pic into that one.
     
  8. Mr. Clutch

    Mr. Clutch Member

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    This is the real collateral damage.
     
  9. rockHEAD

    rockHEAD Member

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  10. Lil Pun

    Lil Pun Member

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    HAHAHAHA!!!!! :D It just doesn't stop! :D
     
  11. red

    red Member

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    rH...you tha man...keep rocking on!
     
  12. coma

    coma Member

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    Lol.

    That's a good job rH. I wish I had some photoshop skills.
     
  13. ima_drummer2k

    ima_drummer2k Member

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    Thanks Rockhead. I'm now cleaning Coke off my keyboard...yet again.

    I'm telling you, it just never gets old. Sorry, YoYao.
     
  14. coma

    coma Member

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    Exactly 84 minutes for this to turn into a YoYao picture thread.

    YoYao, hope you know this is all in good fun. But if I ever see you out on the streets, I can't promise that I won't start cracking up.
     
  15. Rocketman95

    Rocketman95 Hangout Boy

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    He seems to have a really good attitude about it. :)
     
  16. Oski2005

    Oski2005 Member

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    We need to break his spirit by having a YoYao photoshop off.
     
  17. Band Geek Mobster

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    [​IMG]

    Edit: Oh...nevermind...
     
  18. pgabriel

    pgabriel Educated Negro

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    "We were inspired by boy bands like the Backstreet Boys, Westlife, those guys, " said Falluji, who is studying chemistry at university , . "They're famous and their music is really cool."



    Maybe Falluji knows where the weapons of mass destruction are.
     
    #18 pgabriel, Jun 12, 2003
    Last edited: Jun 12, 2003
  19. MoBalls

    MoBalls Member

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    WMD Could be their new name......

    With thier first hit....remake of The Gap Bands "You Dropped the Bomb on Me"
     
  20. coma

    coma Member

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    Boooooo.....

    Off the stage!
     

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