CAIRO: A singer who has shot to fame in the Middle East with songs about Islam says his music is quenching a thirst for spirituality in pop. Sami Yusuf combines English, Arabic and Turkish lyrics with Middle Eastern and Western instruments in his songs.

Brought up in London but of Azeri descent, 25-year-old Yusuf has achieved celebrity status in Middle Eastern countries including Egypt, where his CDs sell alongside traditional pop and are played in shops and cafes.

“Spirituality is missing in the vast majority of most songs,” Yusuf said. “The art world has been hijacked by the commercial environment. That’s why we have a vacuum in producing positive art with positive messages, promoting good values.”

“I’m not a preacher,” he adds.

Yusuf made his first album, “Al-Muallim”, for Muslim minorities in the West, who he says are in need of role models from their own faith. “In the West, we don’t have enough Islamic celebrities who would make minority Muslims proud,” he said. “In my father’s time we had Cat Stevens, Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali. Now you find that a lot of people think: ‘Islam. Ah, Osama bin Laden,’ You find some youth who are confused, who might feel disillusioned,” he said.

Although it was mainly aimed at Muslims in the West, “Al-Muallim” has sold widely across the Muslim world. The title is the Arabic word for teacher and is a reference to the Holy Prophet (peace be upon him).

“We were shocked when we realised it had become a success in Egypt, and not just in Egypt, in the whole Muslim world,” Yusuf said in Cairo, during a recent tour.

He says his work is popular in Arab countries because both the arrangement and lyrics offer listeners something new and different from Arabic pop, which typically deals with love and romance.

“We need something different — new concepts in the Arab world.

“I feel that a lot of the messages, if there are any messages, are just a blind imitation of the West,” he said.

Yusuf plays several instruments including the violin, piano and the Arabic lute. His style at times evokes a traditional form of Islamic chanting called nasheed.

“What genre is it? I don’t know. We’re blending Western harmonies with Eastern modes. You’ll find a lot of Turkish influences, Arabic, Western and Indian.

“I want to show that Islam represents a huge amount of people and cultures,” he said.—Reuters

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