Mahraganat


Mahraganat (English: festivals; مهرجانات or electro shaabi is a genre of Egyptian electronic dance music. Mahraganat is a combination of popular shaabi music played at weddings and electronic dance music. DJ Figo made the genre more well known with his team "set dyaba" released during the 2011 Egyptian Revolution. Although this may be the first ever track to go mainstream, Mahraganat was originally conceived first by the DJs El Sadat, Feelo, Zeezo El Noby, Hamo, and Beeka in 2006. They shared their music via MP3 files and phones, and it could be heard playing in taxis, tuktuks and on the street. The first ever Mahragan mix was released by the group of friends in 2008-09 and it was called Mahragan "Mahragan Elsalam" which talked about friendship and how to be mature.

History

The origins of mahraganat lie in the popular neighborhoods and slums of Cairo. In 2006-7, wedding DJs began combining shaabi music and electronic dance music with influences from reggaeton, grime and rap. In 2011, the Revolution began and the genre reflected the political turmoil as DJ Figo, released his first big single entitled "Ana Baba, Y’lla" Initially, mahragan received no airplay on radio or television and spread online by means of such sites as YouTube and SoundCloud. Like mulid it is dance music, not meant for sitting and listening. Mahragan street performances inspire wild, sometimes acrobatic dancing, combining hip-hop moves with raqs baladi. In 2014, mahragan DJ Souissy signed a record deal and artists such as EEK brought the genre to the mainstream in Egypt. By summer 2014, mahraganat had become popular throughout all of Egypt. Outside of Egypt, the genre was popularised by alternative culture magazine Audio Kultur and the Cairo Liberation Front. Dance music blog Generation Bass also helped introduce mahraganat to European audiences. In 2014, a group of mahragan DJs toured the Netherlands.
In 2016, Mahragan DJ Zola was shot and killed on the street during celebrations of the Revolution's fifth anniversary. The government announced Muslim Brotherhood protesters were responsible for the shooting, while DJ Sadat held the police responsible.
The genre was considered vulgar by some older and more conservative Egyptians. This is because of the social status of the performers and fans, the controversial topics and style of lyrics, use of obscenities, and personal style of the sarsagiyya In 2016, Nagham FM radio station banned maharagan songs from its programs, citing that they did not "match Egyptian customs and traditions". However, television shows and music producers moved to cash in on the new trend, signing certain artists, such as Oka & Ortega, who have performed more widely since 2013 and recorded some commercials, and many hit songs.
On Valentine's Day 2020, a concert was held in Cairo Stadium featuring Tamer Hosny, Nancy Ajram, Wael Jassar, and others. Hassan Shakoush, a leading Mahraganat singer, was also invited to the concert alongside his co-singer, Omar Kamal, where they performed their superhit, Bent El-Geran. In light of this, there was some momentum on social media criticizing what they called a lack of age appropriateness of parts of the lyrics and a deviation from Egyptian values. Those criticisms were frequently referring to one explicit line stating "I drink alcohol and smoke Hashish". However, the singers reacted by releasing a video where they claimed that what happened was an indvertent mistake. In the video, they apologized and explained that the wrong version was played even though another version had already been recorded where the explicit line was altered. Shortly after, the Egyptian union of musicians decided to ban Mahraganat music in Egypt and to deny Mahraganat singers their memberships, including Mohamed Ramadan.

In popular culture

In 2013, Hind Meddeb released a documentary about the genre entitled Electro Chaabi.

DJS and performers