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From a Tehran jail to victory in British ‘song contest'
By Susannah Tarbush
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 18 - 05 - 2009

In August 2007, the members of the Iranian indie-rock band Font were thrown into jail for 21 days after police swooped on an underground concert at which they were performing in Karaj, near Tehran.
Now, in a dramatic turnaround in their fortunes, Font have won Britain's first-ever Immigrant Song Contest. The contest, held over four evenings last week, was organized and televised by the BBC 2 TV channel's daily current affairs program Newsnight. Font's five members entered the contest while living in London on six-month artists' visas.
The Immigrant Song Contest was timed to coincide with the build-up to last Saturday's final of the 54th annual Eurovision Song Contest in Moscow. As presenter Tim Samuels explained, it aimed to “put a human face” to some of the millions of immigrants who come to Britain. The contest featured bands from six countries – Iran, Afghanistan, Somalia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Zimbabwe and Poland. Each band was given a classic Eurovision Song Contest entry to perform. Font were asked to cover “Congratulations”, which Cliff Richard performed in the 1968 Eurovision, and they gave a punk rock style interpretation, a world away from Cliff's version.
The contest had three judges: singer Sandie Shaw, who in 1967 was the first-ever British winner of Eurovision, with “Puppet on a String”; Conservative MP and former Shadow Home Secretary David Davis, and former immigration officer Steve Bateman - who is now a musician.
Each evening from Monday to Wednesday last week, Newsnight featured performances by two of the six competing bands. On Thursday the judges considered the entries, and announced their decision. Sandie Shaw said they had chosen Font as the winner for both musical and political reasons, picking “the people we thought really need someone on their side.”
The contest highlighted the immigrant musicians' backstories as much as it did their music. Somali rapper Dhalad said that had he not fled the Somali civil war for Britain, “I would either be dead by now, or I would have killed many people and become one of the warlords.” Dhalad performed the song “Save Your Kisses for Me”, with which Brotherhood of Man won Eurovision in 1976. This was a far cry from his usual repertoire of Somali and Yemeni - influenced fusion music.
The Afghan singer and musician Hashmat Ehsanmand arrived in Britain in 1995 during a time of fierce mujahedin fighting. From London he has built up a career performing at Afghan weddings, concerts and other events. He said that many artists and singers had been killed over the years in Afghanistan, and described how “well known faces vanished all of a sudden without anyone having any news of them”. He said that through watching news on TV people in Britain tend to see only the bad side of Afghanistan, and “I'd like them to experience Afghan music and the nice side of Afghanistan too.”
Singer-songwriter Ya Freddy Wanga escaped the conflicts of the Democratic Republic of Congo to come to Britain. He put a Congolese spin on his performance of Sandie Shaw's “Puppet on a String”, complete with girls gyrating in the background. Sandie commented generously, “I thought it was really good, much better than my version.”
Talking about immigration
Alongside the judges' deliberations, Newsnight held a studio discussion on immigration. It featured the former British ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Sir Andrew Green, who chairs the Migration Watch think-tank, and the Bangladesh-born novelist Tahmima Anam.
Sir Andrew agreed that the stories of the migrant musicians were quite remarkable, but added “You will not get the kind of welcome that these people deserve, especially refugees but other migrants as well, unless people are at ease with the numbers.” He said that the government's own figures suggest there will be another seven million in the next 20 years. “This is having a huge impact on our whole society,” he added.
But Tahmima Anam was more upbeat, and found it striking that the immigrant bands not only performed the Eurovision songs “very earnestly and with enthusiasm”, but that they also “expressed a kind of optimism about Britain that I really haven't heard anywhere else.”
She asked why - in the absence of reliable numbers on immigration - there is a preying on people's anxieties. “Why can't we talk about the great contribution that migrants have made to this society over many generations?”


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