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Transcripts For BBCNEWS HARDtalk 20240702

creative vision? emel mathlouthi, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. now, you have had phenomenal success around the world since the arab spring, which propelled you to global fame. what is it now that still drives you to want to shake people? so many things. i guess, first of all, my passion for people and music and connecting. i feel that nowadays, more than ever, we need to connect with each other, and i feel that if we have this sense of union and empathy towards each other, i feel that the world could be a much better place. well, let s go back to 2010, 2011, and at that time your music was banned in tunisia. you were on avenue habib bourguiba in tunis, you were surrounded by crowds who were all chanting and then this happened. she sings in arabic. we are seeing you there, singing, with a candle lit in front of you, and to the crowds. when you watch it, how do you feel about that moment now? i ve always felt, um, kind of distant because ijust.me, i just remember the tension

Singer-songwriter
Anthem
Protest-song
Hardtalk
Guest
Sarah-montague
Kelmti-horra
Tunisia
Music
Emel-mathlouthi
Identity
Influences

Transcripts For BBCNEWS HARDtalk 20240607

thank you. now, you have had phenomenal success around the world since the arab spring, which propelled you to global fame. what is it now that still drives you to want to shake people? so many things. i guess, first of all, my passion for people and music and connecting. i feel that nowadays, more than ever, we need to connect with each other, and i feel that if we have this sense of union and empathy towards each other, i feel that the world could be a much better place. well, let s go back to 2010, 2011, and at that time your music was banned in tunisia. you were on avenue habib bourguiba in tunis, you were surrounded by crowds who were all chanting and then this happened. she sings in arabic. we are seeing you there, singing, with a candle lit in front of you, and to the crowds. when you watch it, how do you feel about that moment now? i ve always felt, um, kind of distant because ijust.me, i just remember the tension, and ijust remember that it wasn t all friendly around

Music
Tunisia
Identity
Freedom
Influences
Justice
Themes
People
Musicians
Album
Responsibility
Producers

in my country, we don t really have the tradition to have music lead very important political and social movements. so it was kind of a beautiful, symbolic moment. so it was, what, a couple of days later, you realised that it was.it had gone viral? yeah. i mean, my sister, she texted me, she was like, oh, my god, you know, the video is going viral. the song is going viral. and i think i ve always. i ve secretly always hoped for that song. i mean, when i wrote it, ifelt that it was very powerful. it was a song that was supposed to draw crowds together. i ve always heard it with big choir, big orchestra. i ve always felt that this song was really big. i didn t know it was going to become an anthem, but i think. and we should

Kind
Country
Music-lead
Movements
Tradition
Wasn-t
Song
Video
Sister
Couple
God
Ifelt

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