The Japan Times - A rave of their own: Egypt's women DJs creating inclusive dance floors

EUR -
AED 4.254039
AFN 72.440766
ALL 95.933853
AMD 435.626678
ANG 2.073543
AOA 1062.206441
ARS 1618.265961
AUD 1.662266
AWG 2.08503
AZN 1.965325
BAM 1.955462
BBD 2.327208
BDT 141.775525
BGN 1.979978
BHD 0.437383
BIF 3427.123166
BMD 1.15835
BND 1.478351
BOB 7.984656
BRL 6.060605
BSD 1.155506
BTN 107.993823
BWP 15.789342
BYN 3.440621
BYR 22703.660648
BZD 2.323909
CAD 1.593096
CDF 2632.929536
CHF 0.913411
CLF 0.026701
CLP 1054.295166
CNY 7.970024
CNH 7.986511
COP 4300.31658
CRC 538.909294
CUC 1.15835
CUP 30.696276
CVE 110.246444
CZK 24.459836
DJF 205.765367
DKK 7.472007
DOP 68.568459
DZD 153.694034
EGP 60.628276
ERN 17.37525
ETB 180.413234
FJD 2.574722
FKP 0.865345
GBP 0.864401
GEL 3.144921
GGP 0.865345
GHS 12.640872
GIP 0.865345
GMD 84.559929
GNF 10128.295263
GTQ 8.85051
GYD 241.739312
HKD 9.075366
HNL 30.583852
HRK 7.532518
HTG 151.344527
HUF 389.20566
IDR 19613.18276
ILS 3.609013
IMP 0.865345
INR 108.466627
IQD 1513.738682
IRR 1523288.210956
ISK 143.588617
JEP 0.865345
JMD 181.999367
JOD 0.821239
JPY 183.823171
KES 149.751724
KGS 101.29835
KHR 4630.220667
KMF 492.298982
KPW 1042.481609
KRW 1739.245175
KWD 0.355104
KYD 0.96293
KZT 556.925778
LAK 24836.819607
LBP 103478.183136
LKR 362.848927
LRD 211.454409
LSL 19.592902
LTL 3.420306
LVL 0.700674
LYD 7.396755
MAD 10.800282
MDL 20.209598
MGA 4809.190544
MKD 61.632498
MMK 2432.10526
MNT 4134.118112
MOP 9.322791
MRU 46.126236
MUR 53.944518
MVR 17.896561
MWK 2003.262822
MXN 20.683452
MYR 4.569113
MZN 74.03046
NAD 19.591127
NGN 1586.418349
NIO 42.522843
NOK 11.314172
NPR 172.789917
NZD 1.985052
OMR 0.445383
PAB 1.155506
PEN 4.019706
PGK 4.98916
PHP 69.466489
PKR 322.55241
PLN 4.264471
PYG 7550.729104
QAR 4.225389
RON 5.095005
RSD 117.498369
RUB 94.898293
RWF 1689.315664
SAR 4.348618
SBD 9.326707
SCR 17.725312
SDG 696.168046
SEK 10.861431
SGD 1.480881
SHP 0.869063
SLE 28.437469
SLL 24290.033558
SOS 660.388847
SRD 43.248734
STD 23975.506985
STN 24.495877
SVC 10.110211
SYP 128.550844
SZL 19.585703
THB 37.829972
TJS 11.040642
TMT 4.054225
TND 3.405227
TOP 2.789028
TRY 51.368209
TTD 7.843969
TWD 37.132646
TZS 3005.918362
UAH 50.734961
UGX 4362.265768
USD 1.15835
UYU 47.082075
UZS 14087.568051
VES 528.791835
VND 30514.994096
VUV 138.374442
WST 3.184159
XAF 655.846612
XAG 0.01723
XAU 0.000266
XCD 3.130499
XCG 2.082432
XDR 0.815663
XOF 655.846612
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.440193
ZAR 19.635944
ZMK 10426.539011
ZMW 22.387232
ZWL 372.988238
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    3.5800

    71.88

    +4.98%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    25.76

    -0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.6300

    15.97

    +3.94%

  • JRI

    -0.0900

    11.68

    -0.77%

  • CMSD

    0.0816

    22.74

    +0.36%

  • RELX

    0.4500

    33.81

    +1.33%

  • CMSC

    0.2300

    22.88

    +1.01%

  • RIO

    2.6900

    85.84

    +3.13%

  • NGG

    0.0700

    82.06

    +0.09%

  • GSK

    0.1500

    51.99

    +0.29%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    14.48

    +1.04%

  • AZN

    0.4700

    184.07

    +0.26%

  • BTI

    0.5500

    57.92

    +0.95%

  • BP

    -1.2100

    43.57

    -2.78%

A rave of their own: Egypt's women DJs creating inclusive dance floors
A rave of their own: Egypt's women DJs creating inclusive dance floors / Photo: Khaled DESOUKI - AFP

A rave of their own: Egypt's women DJs creating inclusive dance floors

Laser beams illuminate a darkened restaurant turned dance hall in Cairo as revellers move to thumping beats from female DJs -- part of a generation of women shaking up Egypt's underground electronic music scene.

Text size:

"All my life, I've seen men behind the decks," said party-goer Menna Shanab, 26, as psychedelic visuals reflected off the waters at the Nile-side venue.

"It's good to see the music scene evolving," said the young Cairo resident, decked out in fashionable streetwear.

In Egypt's patriarchal society, the music industry remains male-dominated, while the conservative country's cultural establishment marginalises and even bans electronic music artists.

Female party-goers for years have complained about harassment on the dance floor, while many revellers find mainstream venues too pricey.

Now, a generation of young women DJs are forging their own path, seeking to create more inclusive spaces for performers and party-goers alike.

A small but vibrant electronic music scene is "booming" in the Egyptian capital, according Yemeni music journalist and occasional DJ Hala K, asking like others AFP interviewed to be identified only by her stage name.

"A lot of female talents feel more confident and empowered to pursue DJing," the Amsterdam-based Hala K said by telephone.

Aspiring artists are taking inspiration from female DJs from the region, she added -- such as Palestinian Sama Abdulhadi, who has performed from Egypt to France and at premier US festival Coachella.

In Cairo, there are "powerful, talented women at the turntables: they know how to make people dance", Hala K said.

- 'Party in peace' -

DJ and promoter A7ba-L-Jelly decided to establish her own collective as part of making the underground electronic dance music scene more inclusive.

"I wanted to organise events where I would feel safe myself, without harassment," said the 32-year-old.

"I just wanted to go and party in peace."

More than 90 percent of women in Egypt aged between 18 and 39 said in 2019 that they had experienced some form of sexual harassment, according to the Arab Barometer public opinion research network.

"In some places in Egypt, where they play more commercial music... you won't enter because you are single, or because you don't look rich enough," A7ba-L-Jelly added.

"I book male and female DJs to create dance floors that are inclusive in terms of music, gender and social class," she said.

From the Nile-side dance venue, DJ Yas Meen Selectress complained that regardless of gender, "there are no dedicated spaces for us where we can play our music".

Locations are often gardens or other makeshift sites, organisers told AFP.

"Traditions, society and other factors mean that there are fewer women than men in the scene," Yas Meen Selectress added. Less than 20 percent of women are officially employed in the country of 104 million.

For the DJ in her late 20s, who lives between Cairo and New York, however, "to be only defined by one's gender is reductive".

For others like Dalia Hassan, it is a selling point.

Over the past two decades, she has made a name for herself playing at women-only events from Cairo to the Yemeni capital Sanaa and Riyadh in Saudi Arabia.

Hassan said she DJs at bachelorette parties, gender-segregated weddings and anywhere a female audience wants to "get dressed up and dance as they please".

Having a woman at the turntables allows other women to let loose -- "especially those who are veiled", she added.

- 'Dominated by men' -

For France-based researcher Hajer Ben Boubaker, the lack of women DJs runs counter to Egypt's strong tradition of women performers.

"Female singers have always been well represented in the Arab cultural scene," she told AFP.

"The symbol par excellence of Egyptian music is still the mythical Umm Kalthoum," she added, referring to the 20th-century diva revered around the Arab world.

But "women are barely represented in the Egyptian electro scene of mahraganat, which is the most popular music today," she added.

Mahraganat relies heavily on computer-generated and synthesised beats and features blunt lyrics that tackle topics including love, power and money.

The country's musicians' union announced late last year it was abolishing the genre as part of a campaign to "preserve public taste".

Frederike Berje from Germany's Goethe-Institut in Cairo noted that Egypt's "music industry, especially the electronic scene, is heavily dependent on private initiatives and the commitment of individual artists".

Despite rising numbers of women DJs, however, it "remains dominated by men -- especially when it comes to production and management", she added.

S.Yamamoto--JT