โYou escape the slaughter. But thereโs a long tail of sadnessโ: musician Bedouine on the strangeness of Arab life outside the Middle East
With roots in Armenia, Syria and Saudi Arabia, the singer-songwriter now lives in the US. But despite her Carole King-style sound, her homelands are never far from her mind The title song to Azniv Korkejianโs fourth album as Bedouine, Neon Summer Skin, recreates a perfect day from childhood. โBeing taken to the pool, where my only worry is being dragged away when the sunโs setting,โ she says, calling from Los Angeles. โLater on, mom and dad wash me in the tub and put me to bed.โ Steeped in dreamy 70s soft pop, the track isnโt merely an exercise in nostalgia. โI wanted to paint a picture of what itโs like to feel safe,โ she says. โSo much of the record is about not having the luxury to not consider your own safety. I think about this a lot when it comes to the children in Palestine and Lebanon, who are not afforded that right.โ The conflicts that have ravaged the Middle East are context for Neon Summer Skin, but the albumโs themes of displacement, identity and insecurity โ wrapped in the deceptively soft sound of 1970s-style MOR pop โ are also personal. Korkejianโs family are Armenian, but she and her parents were born in Syria, while her brothers were born in Saudi Arabia, where the Korkejians lived, โon a US compound that was like a gated communityโ, until 1995. That year, unnerved by the proximity of the recent Gulf war, the family successfully applied for the green card lottery and relocated to the US. โAnd thank God, because we would eventually have had to return to Syria,โ Korkejian says. โI donโt know what would have happened to us then.โ Continue reading...