Native Name: | Arabic: بشار مراد |
Landscape: | yes |
Birth Date: | 1993 2, df=y |
Birth Place: | East Jerusalem, Palestine |
Genre: | Pop |
Years Active: | 2015–present |
Bashar Murad (Arabic: بشار مراد; born 7 February 1993) is a Palestinian singer-songwriter and video artist based in East Jerusalem. His music addresses societal norms, the Israeli occupation, and gender equality in the Middle East. He is best known for his collaboration with Icelandic techno-punk band Hatari on the song "Klefi / Samed", which was released shortly after Hatari raised banners featuring the Palestinian flag at the final of Eurovision Song Contest 2019 in Tel Aviv.[1] [2] [3] [4] Murad released his debut EP Maskhara in June 2021.
Murad was born in East Jerusalem in 1993, to parents Said Murad and Fadia Daibes. Murad's father, Said, is the founder of the Palestinian musical group Sabreen, the first Palestinian group of its kind.[5] Sabreen was founded in 1980, and Murad was born during the height of their career. Music helped Murad to overcome the pressure from growing up in an occupied territory.[6]
Upon graduating from the Jerusalem American School, Murad pursued a bachelor's degree at Bridgewater College, Virginia.[7] In the United States, he realized that not a lot of his co-students knew much about Palestine, yet they wanted to know more about it. This made him realise that he did not want to escape politics and started covering these issues in his music. Since returning to East Jerusalem in 2014 and after publishing several singles in Arabic and English on his YouTube channel, Murad has built an online following.
Murad started his career by uploading cover versions of popular songs on his YouTube channel which he created in 2009. Later, he added a Middle Eastern touch to the songs by using traditional instruments in his covers before he started creating his own songs.[8] He studied at Rimon School of Jazz and Contemporary Music in Israel for a year, and was the first Palestinian from the West Bank to study there.[9] [10]
The majority of his songs are produced by himself in the local record studios of Sabreen Association for Artistic Development. Occasionally, Murad gets grants or other support by organisations and programs, such as the Culture Resource Production Awards Program, that enabled him to produce the song "Shillet Hamal (Bunch of Bums)". The song is about the feeling of being different and not fitting in. The music video features several people that chose alternative paths of life and can thus identify with this feeling.
For his single "Ana Zalameh (I'm a Man)", Murad worked together with the United Nations. The UN Women's "Men and Women for Gender Equality Regional Programme" produced the song which is about the developments of gender roles in Palestine and told from the perspective of a 10-year-old boy.
Murad's collaboration with the Icelandic techno-punk band Hatari on the song "Klefi / Samed" helped him reach a wider audience. The song was released shortly after the Eurovision Song Contest 2019, which took place in Tel Aviv, and is about the wish for freedom and calls attention to the systematic oppression of Palestinians. Hatari was the only entrant in that year's contest who openly took a stance on the conflict.
During the Eurovision Song Contest 2019, Murad was part of the protesting artists that participated in the alternative event GlobalVision that was broadcast online during Eurovision week.
In May 2019, Murad participated in the Canadian Music Week in Toronto, Canada.
Murad released his debut EP Maskhara on 11 June 2021, which included four tracks: "Maskhara", "Antenne" feat. Tamer Nafar, "Intifada on the Dance Floor", and "Ana wnafsi".[11] Three years later, he released his second Arabic-language EP, Nafas.[12]
In 24 January 2024, it was announced that he would be among the contestants of Söngvakeppnin 2024, the Icelandic national selection for the Eurovision Song Contest 2024.[13] He competed with the song "Vestrið villt" / "Wild West",[14] qualifying for the final and ultimately coming second.[15] Amid the Israel–Hamas war and calls for Israel to be excluded from the contest, Murad's participation was the subject of multiple controversies, both with accusations that Icelandic broadcaster RÚV was politicising the event as well as allegations of racism against him.[16] [17]
Murad resides in East Jerusalem with his younger brother and his father Said Murad, the founder of music group Sabreen. He is openly gay, and has characterized his artistic journey as a struggle against both homophobia in Palestinian society and the Israeli occupation.[18]