Saturday, May 14, 2011

Lebanon Festivals 2011

So, the summer is nearly here and the Lebanon Festivals are publishing their programs for 2011:

The Byblos International Festival from 18 June to 23 July:
28 June - 30 July: Don Quixote (Play by Marwan, Ghadi and Oussama Rahbani)
5 July: MOBY (Electronic Music)
6-7 July: SCORPIONS (Rock band)
9 July: Florent Pagny (best selling French artist)
12 July: Jamie Cullum (Pianist, crooner, showman)
16 July: Thirty Seconds to Mars (Alternative Rock band)
20 July: Amadou et Mariam (best selling act from Africa)
23 July: Les Mysteres Lyriques (playful and interactive introduction to Opera)

Beiteddine festival from June 24 to August 5th, 2011:
24-25 June « Sabah », a musical comedy
8 July Roberto Alagna, ténor Franco-Italian
15 -16 July Kazem al-Saher, Arabic singer
19 July George Benson, R&B and Guitarist
22 July « Babel » of Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, contemporary dance show
27 July Ibrahim Maalouf Quintet, électro beats, rock, jazz and oriental melody
30 July « Stabat Mater », "chant choral de la liturgie byzantine, les maqâms, incantations soufies et transes des derviches tourneurs dans un hommage chrétien et musulman à la Vierge Marie"
4 August Farida, « La voix de la Mésopotamie », traditional Iraqi mâqam

The Tyre Festival from 1-18 July:
Flying Tzars, July 1-3
Lebanese Spoken Language Poetry, July 9
Abdallah Al Ruwaished, July 10
Pan Arab Poetry night, July 16
Amir Yazbeck, July 17
Assi El Hellani, July 18

The 19th Al Bustan Festival will take place from 21 February to 25 March, 2012. The theme of the Festival will be: The Music of Latin America.

The Baalbeck international festival program 2011 will be announced soon.

For more info, links to festivals:
Byblos Festival: http://www.byblosfestival.org
Beiteddine Festival: http://www.beiteddine.org
Baalbeck Festival: http://www.baalbeck.org.lb
Al Bustan Festival: http://www.albustanfestival.com
Tyre Festival: http://tyrefestival.com

Tuesday, May 03, 2011

achtART.com for Lebanese Arts & Crafts



achtART.com is an E-Commerce concept for Arts and Crafts aimed at helping regional and Lebanese artists and crafts-people showcase their unique artistic creations through an online plate-form and offer those creations for sale.

All their artists are selected and approved.

Interested artists should email webmaster@achtart.com for more details or to set up a meeting.

achtART.com are pleased to announce their new blog, http://blog.achtart.com/, where you will find news and articles about Arts & Crafts in Lebanon and the world! achtART.com will happily publish any articles their fans want to submit as long as they fit the concept of achtART.com!

You can join achtART.com fan base here:
www.facebook.com/achtART
www.twitter.com/achtART

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Dancing in Beirut International Airport

On March 5th, 2011, Beirut's Rafic Hariri Intl. Airport came to life when someone captured this video of a dance group along with employees, security staff and passengers of all ages dancing to a mix of Lebanese folk & modern dance music!


Check out the youtube link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qr_IQy0MZ9s&tracker=False


Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Phoenicia from the ashes

Pots of bones and diving for treasure – the quest for the Phoenicians
Alice Fordham , NOW Staff , December 5, 2008

“I made a voyage to Tyre in Phoenicia, hearing there was a temple of Hercules at that place, very highly venerated. I visited the temple, and found it richly adorned with a number of offerings, among which were two pillars, one of pure gold, the other of emerald, shining with great brilliancy at night…They said that the temple was built at the same time that the city was founded, and that the foundation of the city took place two thousand three hundred years ago.” Herodotus, ca. 440 BC
“Its merchants were kings, honored all over the world.” Isaiah, 23:8

“We are still looking for the royal tombs,” says Ali Badawi, the archaeologist who oversees every bone fragment and temple pediment unearthed in South Lebanon.

The glory of the Phoenicians is in the Bible, they are claimed as ancestors by snooty Lebanese, and they were ancient millionaires who shipped purple dye and cedar wood to the world’s wealthy. Their main cities were Sur and Saida, and, the thinking goes, somewhere in South Lebanon these kingly traders must be buried in tombs gleaming in purple and gold. The South has had many distractions from its archaeological heritage, but as violence has ebbed, the hunt for Lebanon’s past is afoot again.

Grave news
One site south of the Litani has lately seized the imagination. Just east of Sur this autumn, a Spanish team discovered a graveyard with dozens of earthenware urns and cremated Phoenicians. One of them, Laura Trelliso, sits outside in the sunshine in the Al-Bass ruins in Sur and peers into a pot of what used, more than 2,000 years ago, to be a person.

“We can learn a great deal from looking at their remains,” she tells NOW Extra. “We will take them back to Spain and reconstruct their position in the urn. We can see whether they were well nourished, whether they had any diseases.”

They were buried, Trelliso says, with wine jars and plates, possessions or gifts taken to the grave. Badawi says, too, that he worked on the excavation of a cemetery discovered in 1997, where many of the graves had cremated remains in one jar, buried alongside an empty jar – perhaps kept for the soul. Among the dead they found carved Egyptian-style scarab beetles and comic art. The Phoenicians, it seems, were as adept at adopting international trends and making jokes as the modern Lebanese. “They didn’t take life seriously,” says Badawi. However, he says, “We would like to find more artistic material from the Phoenicians and more inscriptions.” It’s a romantic, and indeed a Romantic, idea, and Badawi points to lumps on the hilly horizon where settlements were and where he would eventually like to dig. The Phoenicians are credited with inventing the alphabet, but there is precious little in the way of written material to analyze.

Wrecks appeal
But there is plenty for wistful souls to romanticize, as marine archaeologists have been diving the sea around Sur. The seafaring Phoenicians were a trading people, and the floor of the Mediterranean around South Lebanon is thick with ancient wrecks. “There are columns over there…and there…” says Badawi, standing on the magnificent ruins at the harbor and gesturing out at the water. Another Spanish archaeologist, Constanza Rodriguez Seguovia, has been diving the area and is now working to preserve the artifacts. She picks up a terracotta statue, pulled this year from the sea after more than two millennia. “This is Astarte, a fertility goddess, from the fifth century BC” she says.

Of course, it is conflict that has stilted progress in unearthing the Phoenicians and their descendants in Lebanon. Badawi tells how the Directorate General of Antiquities (DGA) was originally run by Maurice Chehab, who devoted himself to the archaeology of South Lebanon from 1928 to 1982, during which epic span his work was often interrupted by war.

Archaeology stopped in 1978, and didn’t really start again until the mid 1990s. Badawi points out a site that was bombed in 2006, and says that his primary goal for the sites near the border, and under the Rashdiyeh Palestinian camp, is not to dig them for the moment, but just to protect them from harm until the area is more stable.

Politics and Phoenicia
Asked about the politics of the Phoenicians excavations, the way that since the 1800s, the Lebanese have idealized the Phoenician civilization and claimed it as their ancestry, Badawi is dismissive. “Effective people,” he says, “do not do that anymore.” It is understandable for south Lebanese to claim a magnificent ancestry when years of war have left Saida and Sur battered and impoverished. But, ancestors or not, the ongoing discovery of Phoenician material remains has offered the people of the area some civic pride.

“The government and the municipality are pouring money into our projects,” says Badawi as he strolls along a newly-restored sea front, “because they see how much potential there is for tourism. We didn’t have too many people visit in 2006 or 2007, but the numbers were up this year.” Next year, or the year after, he hopes to have glass-bottomed boats and diving trips in the harbor so people can see the sunken columns. Of course, it is not just Phoenicians who built in the area – there are magnificent Roman ruins also. There is an 18th century library and seafront houses revamped by the DGA, and plans for a proper museum.

“We started renovating buildings,” says Badawi, “but now people are applying to renovate places themselves and building apartment blocks. People are coming back to the area.”

Rich imagination
In his reconsideration of the history of Lebanon, historian Kamal Salibi said that the way some Lebanese lean on Phoenicia as part of the country’s identity, “developed more as a cult than a reasoned political theory,” and featured in tourist pamphlets. A recent report by the Genographic Project reported that Phoenician ancestry is by no means unique to Lebanon. As many as one in 17 men living today on the coasts of North Africa and southern Europe may have a Phoenician direct male-line ancestor.

But while one could argue that it is unhealthy for an unstable country to invent a glorious past for itself, few could deny the excitement of unearthing evidence of an ancient and puzzling people. Looking out at on the sea at Sur, it would take a hard heart not to picture boats full of purple and Phoenicians pulling out of the harbor. Turning back to the war-worn houses of Sur being renovated by people who want a sea view of the newly touristy promenade, it seems like good news that the dream of the Phoenicians is still drawing people to come, like Herodotus, to stand in their ruins and imagine their glory.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Josiane El Zir, A Shinning Lebanese Star

Josiane El Zir was recently described by one publication as "the business woman with the purple hair... or pink". Having studied cinema at USEK, she started her artistic career as a presenter for Dubai TV, MBC, etc.... and honed her audience-interactive talents as a karaoke animator. She performs "shows" -as opposed to being a simple singer- acts and is active in the business community through her company "PINKISH".

A philanthropist at heart, Josiane donates her time and talents to benefit many and has been nominated as the Goodwill Ambassador of a charity called Y.A.N.A. (You Are Not Alone) which focuses its efforts on helping Lebanese families, mothers and children deal with the hardship of life. www.facebook.com/yanaccu ; www.twitter.com/yanaccu ; http://www.yanaccujm.org/

You can usually see Josiane on a local tv station (MTV) every Monday night in "Ktir Salbe", a comedy show. Additionally, Josiane participated and sang on MTV's new talents show "Hek Minghanneh" so visit this link to watch the show online and judge for yourselves!!



You can watch Josiane interpreting her favorite songs on http://www.youtube.com/ or click here for her version of "Hot Stuff".



Join Josiane's FB fan page here: www.facebook.com/josianeelzir
or follow her tweets on http://www.twitter.com/josianeelzir

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Elie Saab Dresses Celebrities Worldwide



From Beyonce, Rihanna, Angelina Jolie, Sandra Bullock, Gwyneth Paltrow,.., to HRH Princess Victoria of Sweden... Check out the photo album here.

for more information click here.

Naharnet Lebanon News

iloubnan.info

Marketing in Lebanon