Screen shot from Kabul Dreams, one of the featured bands, second music video for Sadae Man.
Afghanistan’s first rock festival since 1975 is going on now.
SOUND CENTRAL IS BILLED as a “stealth festival” – the specific locations and times are secret. The bands featured include groups from Iran, Uzbekistan, Kazhakstan with a variety of Afghan bands playing rock, blues, and death metal.
One of those groups is Kabul Dreams, who claim to be (and I’ve no reason to disagree with them) the only rock and roll group from Afghanistan. Watch their music video below.
I work on a college campus in the States, where it seems like everyone you ask has a friend of a friend who’s in a band, and nearly every bar has live music by local bands at least one night of the week. And it’s easy to take that for granted. But these guys have to create and perform without easy access to venues, instruments, or fans — not even fans necessarily, but just someone to play for. In addition to security concerns in case there are any large crowds.
There is traditional music and instruments available, but modern music is much harder to come by.
The festival is organized in part by Daniel Gerstle, manager of The Hive, and Travis Beard, musician in White City, a band also performing at the festival. The goal of the festival is:
“…to ignite youth to be interested in modern music,” said the organiser, Travis Beard, who dreamed up the festival four years ago and has been working on it in earnest for the last two years.
“What we are trying to do is to expose them to new kinds of music so they can get into those styles of music, and also just start playing music. Hopefully we’ll get some kids saying: ‘Hey this is really cool! Dad, can I get a drum set?’ or ‘Mum, can I get a guitar?’,” Beard said. (The Guardian)
There is, of course, a war still going on in Kabul – a kink in any music festival’s organizational process.
Their promo materials play up the war connection –”You’re used to the sound of bombs. Now get used to the sound of metal,” you hear the Afghan death metal group District Unknown growl at the start of their video. But, at the same time, it’s clear that these artists see rock music as a way to escape from war, even of finding some kind of normalcy or apoliticism in an environment inevitably viewed, in the West, through the prism of the “conflict zone.”
The festival is a global one; it started in New York with the “Illegal Rock Bunker Party.” There was a weeklong musician’s workshop in September with performances in Kabul at the Institute Francais Afghanistan.
But it’s the main event the organizers hope will bring in the big audience: they’re look at around 2,000. It doesn’t seem like a big number, but in a country where music was illegal for years under the Taliban, it’s small but significant. The specific locations and times for the main event are being kept secret for security issues – word of mouth is the only way to get details.
Performers: DISTRICT UNKNOWN (Afghan metal) KABUL DREAMS (Afghan indie rock) WHITE PAGE (Afghan hard rock) MORCHA (Afghan blues rock) EKLEKTIKA (Kazakh emotional guitar rock) MARAL (Iran progressive) MASSA CYGENT (Australia indie) POOR RICH BOYS (Pakistan indie rock) TEARS OF THE SUN (Uzbek funk) WHITE CITY (UK, Australia, Sweden, Afghanistan-based punk rock)
Kabul Closing Night presented by Sound Studies When: October 9 Where: Institute Francais Afghanistan
Global Closing Night When: October 21 Where: New York. Specific location TBA
Global Post-Festival Celebration When: November 2011. Specific date TBA Where: Los Angeles. Specific location TBA
Live coverage of the Taliban's coordinated attack across the Afghanistan capital Kabul, in which Nato's headquarters and the US embassy are among those targeted.
• Blasts and gunfire across Afghan capital Kabul • Taliban claims responsibility for attack • Fighters dressed in burkas, police say • Seven Afghans dead, 15 wounded. No Isaf casualties. • Afghan police hunt insurgents in high-rise building
22.48 Ben Farmer in Kabul's story for Wednesday's Telegraph on the Kabul attacks:
By nightfall at least six people were dead and 10 wounded as the standoff continued, with Afghan forces reportedly backed by Nato special forces soldiers clearing the building floor-by-floor trying to dislodge the surviving militants. At least six insurgents were also killed.
Coalition officials sought to downplay the success of the attack saying it was a propaganda ploy that had failed to inflict casualties on its intended targets.
Taliban leaders are unlikely to engage in peace talks if the West intends to pull out of Afghanistan at the earliest opportunity.
The Taliban’s deadly terror attacks against a number of high-profile targets in Kabul yesterday should alert Western leaders to the worrying reality that the Nato-led mission to Afghanistan is running into serious trouble. The fact that insurgents were able to attack the American embassy and Nato headquarters, as well as other key facilities, is a graphic illustration that, 10 years after the September 11 attacks, they continue to pose a considerable threat to that country’s well-being.
20.00Hillary Clinton, US secretary of state, on the Kabul attacks:
The civilians who serve are dedicated, brave men and women, committed to advancing our mission. They will not be intimidated by this kind of cowardly attack.
We will take all necessary steps not only to ensure the safety of our people but to secure the area and to ensure that those who perpetrated this attack are dealt with.
19.20 Two attackers are still hiding on the 10th floor, using hand grenades, according to the BBC's Bilal Sarwary - via twitter - in Kabul.
Hearing from multiple sources, attackers had stored weapons in advance.
17.45 The attackers used burkhas and travelled to the highly-patrolled embassy district in a mini-van, Gen Ayub Salangi, the police chief of Kabul, is quoted as saying, adding the force lacks female search teams to frisk women passengers.
Police teams are now on the eighth floor of the building used to mount the attack but are progressingly slowly because the area is "dark" and "full of cement, steel and paint."
Source: Bilal Sarwary, BBC producer, Kabul
17.23 Locals report heavy gunfire and explosions continue to be heard close from the embassy district.
17.14 Nato has released this footage of Isaf forces inside their Kabul compound firing on militants who attacked their base and the US embassy. They appear to be from a number of countries, including the US.
15.24 Six people have died and 15 wounded in the attacks in Kabul, the Afghan interior ministry said. The dead are thought to number four policemen and two civilians, who were killed in four seperate locations.
Afghan Police fire on militants in Kabul
15.12Brigadier General Carsten Jacobson, a Nato spokesman, said today was the first time Afghan National Air Force had used its helicopters in such an anti-terrorist operation.
An Afghan military helicopter fires on a building which is occupied by Taliban insurgents during a coordinated assault in Kabul
He said the attack proved the security of the Nato and US embassy compounds, which were not breached, and said the Afghan forces responded "very well" and quickly.
He said the situation in Kabul was "under control and now winding down."
15.05 Afghan policemen fire on the insurgents
An ANAF Hind gunship circles over the complex where gunmen have taken up positions
14.58 A statement from Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, saying the attacks won't halt the transition from Nato to Afghan control of security:
The attacks cannot stop the process from taking place and cannot affect, but rather embolden our people's determination in taking the responsibility for their country's own affairs
14.57 A potted history here of recent attacks on Kabul from Associated Press:
14.48 Isaf say the fighting is ongoing in Kabul but insurgents have not breached the "green zone" of the embassy perimetre.
14.40 This is the schoolbus which came under attack in Peshawar, Pakistan, this morning. The Taliban in Pakistan are understood to have claimed responsibility for the attack which killed four children, a teacher and the driver, saying they belonged to "a pro-government tribe".
Eighteen people, including 15 children, were wounded in the attack using RPG rounds and Kalashnikov rifles.
"Our comrades attacked the bus which was carrying children from the Aka Khel tribe, whose people are fighting against us at the behest of the Pakistani army," Taliban spokesman Mohammed Afridi told Reuters.
"They have been told time and again to desist from any activity against us but they did not listen. We will continue to carry out such attacks."
At Peshawar's Lady Reading Hospital, children lay in beds with shrapnel and bullet wounds from Tuesday's attack, their uniforms soaked in blood.
"We were in the van, going home like every day. Suddenly I heard an explosion and gunfire," said 8-year-old Sabir.
14.30 Mark Sedwill, the UK's Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, tweets:
14.24 Afghan policemen arrive at the scene of the rocket-propelled attack in Kabul
Police in Kabul
14.19 The firefight continues in Kabul, with four militants holed up in the building overlooking the US embassy according to local police. It is now a fight to the death, witnesses say. Loud blasts are reported, thought to be rocket propelled grenades.
BBC's Quentin Sommerville says a "massive assault" by security forces is underway.
14.10 Afghan Health Ministry say one civilian has been killed and 16 wounded in the attacks.
14.00 Ernesto Londoño, a Washington Post correspondent, reports an Afghan journalist has been shot in the leg outside the building used as a staging post for the US embassy attack. An RPG has been fired from that building. And he tweets:
13.33 Jerome Starkey, The Times man in Afghanistan, responds to the claim by the head of Nato that insurgents are trying to derail the handover of security to Afghan forces:
Medical Examiners Identify Deceased in Chinook Crash
By Jim Garamone American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Aug. 12, 2011 – All 30 Americans killed in the Aug. 6 crash of a CH-47 Chinook helicopter in eastern Afghanistan have been identified, officials at the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System in Rockville, Md., said today.
Medical examiners were able to identify two of the eight Afghans killed in the crash, said Paul Stone, a spokesman for the medical examiner system. The identification work took place at the port mortuary at Dover Air Force Base, Del.
The Chinook probably was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade as it attempted to land in Wardak province, officials said. The aircraft carried 17 Navy SEALs, five more Navy special operations personnel, three Air Force special operations personnel, five Army aircrew members, seven Afghan commandos and an Afghan interpreter. The remains could not be identified in theater.
At Dover, the medical examiner system mobilized all members to aid in identifying the remains, Stone said, and the scientists and doctors in the system used multiple means to ascertain identities.
“The medical examiner’s office used the full complement of forensic techniques to obtain the identifications, to include fingerprint matching, dental examination, radiology and DNA matching,” Stone said. These identification techniques do not exist in theater, he said.
The team finished identification procedures late last night. The then-unidentified remains arrived Aug. 9 at Dover aboard two C-17 transport jets. President Barack Obama and Defense Department leaders met with family members and rendered honors during the dignified transfer of remains from the aircraft to the mortuary. The identification process took about 48 hours.
The identification team consisted of 10 forensic pathologists,; two forensic anthropologists, six odontologists and dentists, three FBI fingerprint experts, three forensic investigators, two histology technicians, and a three-person DNA team, Stone said.
According to a recent story from ABC News, Admiral Eric Olson (cc/USSOCOM) recently said he’d like to see female SEALs in combat roles. Speaking at the 2011 Aspen Security Forum, he said there was more to being a SEAL than physical strength.
Sgt. Adams, FET 12, 1/8 Marines, Shir Ghazay
“I don’t think the idea is to select G.I. Jane and put her through SEAL training, but there are a number of things that a man and a woman can do together that two guys can’t,” the Admiral told Forum attendees. “…it’s much more important what they’re made of and whether or not they have the courage and the intellectual agility…”
Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- More than two dozen American troops are believed to have died in the deadly helicopter crash in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday, a U.S. military official told CNN.
Many, if not all, were special operations forces, the official said. If the numbers are confirmed, the incident would be the most deadly for coalition forces in the Afghan war, according to a CNN count of international troop deaths.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai issued a statement saying as many as 31 U.S. special forces and seven Afghans were killed and offered "deep regret" to U.S. President Barack Obama.
A great shot of an Air Force PJ and his SEAL counterpart hauling a wounded Afghan trooper up a hillside after an engagement.
I assume this is a “white” SEAL, but can’t be sure. But you can see the emotion on the Afghan’s face in the background that things definitely went tits up during this op.