Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Palestinian_hip_hop> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 44 of
44
with 100 triples per page.
- Palestinian_hip_hop abstract "Palestinian hip hop reportedly started in 1998 with Tamer Nafar's group DAM. These Palestinian youth forged the new Palestinian musical subgenre, which blends Arabic melodies and hip hop beats. Lyrics are often sung in Arabic, Hebrew, English, and sometimes French. Since then, the new Palestinian musical subgenre has grown to include artists in Palestine, Israel, Great Britain, the United States and Canada. Borrowing from traditional rap music that first emerged in New York in the 1970s, "young Palestinian musicians have tailored the style to express their own grievances with the social and political climate in which they live and work." Palestinian hip hop works to challenge stereotypes and instigate dialogue about the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Palestinian hip hop artists have been strongly influenced by the messages of American rappers. Tamar Nafar says “when I heard Tupac sing “It’s a White Man’s World” I decided to take hip hop seriously”. In addition to the influences from American hip hop, it also includes musical elements from Palestinian and Arabic music including “zajal, mawwal, and saj” which can be likened to Arabic spoken word, as well as including the percussiveness and lyricism of Arabic music. Historically, music has served as an integral accompaniment to various social and religious rituals and ceremonies in Palestinian society (Al-Taee 47). Much of the Middle-Eastern and Arabic string instruments utilized in classical Palestinian music are sampled over Hip-hop beats in both Israeli and Palestinian hip-hop as part of a joint process of localization. Just as the percussiveness of the Hebrew language is emphasized in Israeli Hip-hop, Palestinian music has always revolved around the rhythmic specificity and smooth melodic tone of Arabic. “Musically speaking, Palestinian songs are usually pure melody performed monophonically with complex vocal ornamentations and strong percussive rhythm beats”. The presence of a hand-drum in classical Palestinian music indicates a cultural esthetic conducive to the vocal, verbal and instrumental percussion which serve as the foundational elements of Hip-hop. This hip hop is joining a “longer tradition of revolutionary, underground, Arabic music and political songs that have supported Palestinian Resistance”. This subgenre has served as a way to politicize the Palestinian issue through music.".
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageExternalLink www.mcgaza.com.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageExternalLink -7-.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageID "10071785".
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageLength "11046".
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageOutDegree "21".
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageRevisionID "676216550".
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink 2008_Sundance_Film_Festival.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Acre,_Israel.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Arabic.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Arabic_hip_hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Arabic_music.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Category:Palestinian_hip_hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink DAM_(band).
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Hebrew.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Hebrew_language.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Hip_hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Israeli_hip_hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Israeli–Palestinian_conflict.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Jackie_Salloum.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Old-school_hip_hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Old_school_hip-hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Shadia_Mansour.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Slingshot_Hip_Hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Stereotype.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Tamer_Nafar.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Yedioth_Ahronoth.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLink Category:Arabic_Hip_hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageWikiLinkText "Palestinian hip hop".
- Palestinian_hip_hop hasPhotoCollection Palestinian_hip_hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:He_icon.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Hiphop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Middle_Eastern_music.
- Palestinian_hip_hop subject Category:Palestinian_hip_hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop subject Category:Arabic_Hip_hop.
- Palestinian_hip_hop type Art.
- Palestinian_hip_hop type Concept.
- Palestinian_hip_hop comment "Palestinian hip hop reportedly started in 1998 with Tamer Nafar's group DAM. These Palestinian youth forged the new Palestinian musical subgenre, which blends Arabic melodies and hip hop beats. Lyrics are often sung in Arabic, Hebrew, English, and sometimes French. Since then, the new Palestinian musical subgenre has grown to include artists in Palestine, Israel, Great Britain, the United States and Canada.".
- Palestinian_hip_hop label "Palestinian hip hop".
- Palestinian_hip_hop sameAs m.02q0vnq.
- Palestinian_hip_hop sameAs Q7127417.
- Palestinian_hip_hop sameAs Q7127417.
- Palestinian_hip_hop wasDerivedFrom Palestinian_hip_hop?oldid=676216550.
- Palestinian_hip_hop isPrimaryTopicOf Palestinian_hip_hop.