The Rough Guide to Arabic Revolution

The Rough Guide To Arabic Revolution is a world music compilation album originally released in 2013 featuring music relating to the contemporaneous Arab Spring revolutionary wave. Part of the World Music Network Rough Guides series, the album contains two discs: a compilation Disc One featuring protest songs ranging from traditional music to Arabic hip hop, and a "bonus" Disc Two highlighting Ramy Essam, whose song "Irhal" (Leave) is widely considered the anthem of the Egyptian Revolution.[1]

The Rough Guide To Arabic Revolution
Compilation album by
Various artists
Released26 March 2013
GenreWorld, Arabic
Length103:12
LabelWorld Music Network
Full series chronology
The Rough Guide To Irish Music
(2013)
The Rough Guide To Arabic Revolution
(2013)
The Rough Guide To African Disco
(2013)
Complete list

Disc One features four Egyptian tracks, four Palestinian tracks, two Tunisian, and one each from Libya, Lebanon, and the UK. The album was compiled by Daniel Rosenberg, who also wrote the sleeve notes. The compilation was produced by Phil Stanton, co-founder of the World Music Network.[2][3]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
PopMatters[4]

The album was met with generally positive reviews. Tony Hillier of Australian music magazine Rhythms called it "one of the more intriguing recent compilations from the admirable World Music Network label."[5] David Maine of PopMatters commended the producers for "expanding the bounds of its musical series in this fashion" and especially praised the hip hop as "the best stuff here".[4]

Track listing

Disc One

No.TitleArtist (Country)Length
1."Taty Taty"Ramy Essam 2:01
2."Kelmti Horra (My Word Is Free)"Emel Mathlouthi 6:27
3."Heela Heela"El Tanbura 3:41
4."Hon Enwaladet - Born Here (Arabic Version)"DAM Feat. Abeer Al Zinati 3:34
5."State of the Nation"El Général feat. Mr Shooma 4:02
6."Sout El Horeya"Cairokee 4:01
7."I'm Your Hope"Sami Yusuf 2:44
8."Calling the Libyan Youth"Ibn Thabit 2:42
9."Metlak Mesh 3ayzin"May Matar 3:30
10."Kafkef Domouak"Ramzi Aburedwan and The Palestine National Ensemble of Arabic Music 4:37
11."Rahil"Ramzi Aburedwan 6:56
12."Ya Masr Hanet We Banet"Mustafa Said 10:05
13."Et Nous, Nous Aimons La Vie"Ramzi Aburedwan and Dal'Ouna 8:30

Disc Two

All tracks on Disc Two are performed by Ramy Essam.

No.TitleLength
1."Etma3zam"3:05
2."Action"2:35
3."3ahd Mubark"3:10
4."3oksha"2:56
5."Bata2ty"2:50
6."Sabona w Khazoo2"1:37
7."Shay El-Thawra"2:50
8."8 April"1:18
9."Mal3oon"2:47
10."El-Masala"2:34
11."Bta2ty Acoustic"2:16
12."Dabora w Short"2:18
13."El-Ga7sh Wel 7omar"2:38
14."Nafadt"2:02
15."Tartoor"2:59
16."Al-Masry Al-Asly"2:27
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gollark: Does anyone know what "error -117" means on Linux?
gollark: Do I? Do I REALLY? Why is this Pi not booting? So many questions.
gollark: I tried loading in a known-to-be-probably-good boot partition and that still failinated.

References

  1. Mctighe, Kristen (8 December 2011). "Out of Protest, an Anthem for Egypt's Revolution". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 Dec 2013.
  2. World Music Network. "About Us - The WMN Story". Retrieved 2013-12-21.
  3. "Various Artists: The Rough Guide To Arabic Revolution". Allmusic. Retrieved 23 Dec 2013.
  4. Maine, David. "Various Artists: The Rough Guide to Arabic Revolution". PopMatters. Retrieved 21 Dec 2013.
  5. Hillier, David. "Various Artists – The Rough Guide To Arabic Revolution". Rhythms. Retrieved 23 Dec 2013.


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