Stephan Said

Not to be confused with American musician, instrument-builder, and printmaker Steven R. Smith.

Stephan Othman Said (Arabic: ستيفن سعيد) (May 30, 1968) aka Stephan Smith is an American singer-songwriter, rapper, writer, and global activist of Iraqi and Austrian descent.[1]

Stephan Said

His musical style bridges pop, hip-hop, rock and world folk music in a border-breaking sound of unity.[2] His lyrics advocate global equality, social justice and reconciliation and he is often cited for having reinvented music for social change for the internet generation.[3] Stephan is fluent in English, French and German and also sings in Arabic, Spanish, Hebrew, Hungarian and other languages. He is also the founder of difrent: the one-stop platform for music for social change.[4]

Musical career and personal life

Beginnings

Stephan Said was born in Cleveland, Ohio to Mohammad Said, a Muslim Iraqi physicist and Monika Smith, a Christian pianist and women's rights organizer from Vienna, Austria. His name literally means Stephan: German for voice/Greek Honor/Crown, Othman: Arabic for Chosen One, and Said Arabic: happy or enlightened. He has three older siblings: Leila, Rob and Nadja. Shortly after his birth, the family moved to the Appalachian country of Western Pennsylvania. When Stephan was two years old, his parents divorced; his mother married Frank Gutowski, a former Jesuit priest, and Stephan grew up as Steve Gutowski. The children all studied music from early age; Stephan took up the piano at the age of three and the violin at the age of four. The family home was a meeting ground for people of all religions, ethnic, economic, and political backgrounds.

The family moved to Richmond, Virginia where he attended St. Christopher's School and also became an Eagle Scout. The summer of his junior year, he attended the Governor's School for the Gifted and received an invitation for early entry into the Jazz Program at Virginia Commonwealth University, where he briefly joined a quintet under the direction of Ellis Marsalis at age 17. After less than one semester he left to tour with Alternative/Punk bands Always August and The Office Ladies of SST Records, and played with groups including Firehose, Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., The Meat Puppets and other Alternative and Punk bands.

In 1993 at the invitation of the legendary Fugs, Stephan performed several Appalachian folk songs at the Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado where he came to the notice of beat poet Allen Ginsberg and producer Hal Wilner. Ginsberg urged Stephan to move to New York City, where he became his mentor.

Early career (1994–1997)

Stephan moved to New York City's Lower East Side where he built singing-songs of social change and helped start several old-time, bluegrass and Irish traditional music sessions. He recorded and appeared with the rock group Ween, Rufus Wainwright, played the fiddler in a video for Leonard Cohen's "Dance me to the end of love," and became a fixture at demonstrations for human rights, independent media, housing rights, and environmental issues, scoring underground hits with songs like "It Rose From The Dead" for the squatter and community garden movements. Allen Ginsberg and folk legend Pete Seeger became Stephan's mentors and The Village Voice called him "the heir apparent to Woody Guthrie."[5] As major label interest in his career grew, Stephan was told repeatedly by industry executives that he could "never have a career in the United States with an Arabic name." With great difficulty, and much to the dismay of colleagues like Jeff Buckley he stopped performing under his given name around 1997, and, started using his mother's maiden name and performed as "Stephan Smith.”

The Ballad of Abner Louima (1997)

Stephan first broke into national press in 1997 with the anti-police brutality single "The Ballad of Abner Louima" with Patti Smith on background vocals.[6] With less than 100 copies printed, the ballad charted in the CMJ Music charts, aired on the Howard Stern Show, and thrust Stephan into the folk music limelight. In a New York Times full-length feature article[7] folk legend Pete Seeger compared the rapid spread of Stephan's song, accomplished without the backing of any label, to that of the civil rights anthem "We shall overcome."

Now's the Time (Rounder, 1999)

Stephan's solo acoustic debut album, Now's The Time was released on Rounder records in June 1999, and Stephan intended it as a call to action for the 1999 Seattle demonstrations against the WTO, which he helped organize, and where he performed, appearing in Deep Dish TV's documentary Showdown in Seattle. Stephan toured extensively in support of "Now's the Time," opening for Bob Dylan, Paul Simon, and fellow Virginian Dave Matthews. Though the album draws equally on folk, rap, r&b and rock, the music industry received it mainly as folk, often with specific reference to Woody Guthrie.[8]

Proclaiming Jubilee, Universal Hobo (2000–2001)

Produced by Grammy winning producer John Alagia, Dave Matthews, John Mayer and Jason Mraz, Proclaiming Jubilee was a genre-crossing pop album aimed at bringing an urgent call for a more just and equal global economy directly to a wide audience on the new millennium. The album met with opposition at record labels for its lyrics about social change, and was never released. In response, on April 16, 2000, the date of the Washington A16 protests against the IMF and World Bank, Stephan released A16, a 2 -song EP from the album with artwork by friend, award winning graphic artist Eric Drooker, as free mp3's on his web site and on the Independent Media Center; the label responded by dropping his contract. The album Proclaiming Jubilee is scheduled to be released at last in May 2011.

The Bell (2002)

With the support of friends, Stephan founded his own record label, Universal Hobo, in 2002 and had another major hit: The Bell. An update of the old folk ballad The False Knight Upon the Road,” it was recorded with members of Spearhead and Ween, and Pete Seeger on spoken vocals.Accompanied by a video[9] from filmmaker Kurt St. Thomas featuring live footage of anti-war demonstrations around the world, it was released publicly as an mp3 on Stephan's web site on September 11, 2002, the first anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center. The song rapidly went viral on the pre-YouTube web. At home, the New York Times called it "one of the first major songs to oppose the war in Iraq."[10] Guerilla News Network called it the "anti-war anthem of our generation.[11] The song enhanced Smith's reputation as one of the most outspoken American musicians.[12] Re-released in February 2003 as an EP with liner notes by historian Howard Zinn and cover versions of the song by DJ Spooky and others, it was covered by Dave Matthews during his 2003 solo tour and topped the NPR All Songs Considered list of songs on the war.[13] Following a performance at Joe's Pub in New York City, Billboard Magazine wrote "With his rough-hewn good looks and mythic songwriting, Smith is the closest thing to this generation's Woody Guthie."[14]

Touring to build global movement

The Bell pioneered the use of mp3's and online music videos for social change. But, in the context of the war on terror and following the infamous radio ban and CD burning of the Dixie Chicks surrounding their anti-war stance artists and managers could not afford the risk of having Stephan, outspoken Iraqi/Arab American with the biggest antiwar hit, open for them. Nearly impossible to get gigs and or retain a booking agent, Stephan started the non-profit Universal Hobo Touring, with the help of non-profit education professional Amy Hufnagel. Universal Hobo Touring organized tours of performances at benefits and conferences for peace and justice groups and student organizations helping to build the global justice movement.[3]

New World Worder, Protest Records (2003)

In April 2003 Stephan released a full-length solo album, New World Worder.[15] He also collaborated with Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth and Zach de la Rocha of Rage Against the Machine to launch Protest Records, a web archive of contemporary protest songs, for which one of the album's songs, Business, was released on opening day.

Slash and Burn (Artemis, 2004)

Stephan then signed with industry legend Danny Goldberg at Artemis Records. His first album backed by a full band, Slash and Burn (2004) merged pop, rock, country, and rap, combining love songs with political poetry, which garnered critical acclaim.[16] Several songs, such as the singles "Taking Aim," and "In The Air" criticize not only war and inequality but the role of the music industry in censoring protest and playing culprit to global inequality. The single "You Ain't A Cowboy," a send up of President Bush, was released to with TrueMajority as an MP3. Billboard Magazine called it the first MP3 ever released for a political action committee – resulting in hundreds of thousands of downloads in the first two weeks.[17] The album also includes a ballad in the name of Lee Kyung Hae, the South Korean farmer and organizer who died at the 2003 World Trade Organization demonstrations in Cancun. Mexico. The lyrics to this song were used as the prologue to the Peter Rosset book Food Is Different: Why the WTO Should Get out of Agriculture.[18]

During this time, Smith earned his Masters in International Affairs at The New School and began publishing opinion articles in the media on globalization, social change, protest music, and censorship. When Neil Young said that he felt compelled to release his 2006 album Living with War because young protest singers weren't picking up the torch, Smith published articles on the censorship of socially engaged music in mainstream music in the San Francisco Chronicle[19] and in The Progressive, stating "Where's the voice of protest? It's in MTV's trash can. Where are today's protest singers? They're on the "don't add" list at corporate radio stations, where they've increasingly been placed since FCC deregulation paved the way for the monopolization of the industry."[20] He also became a spokesperson for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and Freemuse, the World Forum on Music and Censorship, and attended the Third Freemuse Conference in Istanbul in 2008.[21]

difrent (2007–2010)

difrent the album In 2007 Stephan returned to the studio to begin work on a new album, and social change initiative, difrent. Produced by Grammy winner Hal Willner, the album brings together an all-star cast of musicians in support of Stephan's message of global equality and peace,including jazz horn legends Lenny Pickett, Howard Johnson, Art Baron and Earl Gardner as well as Cindy Blackman, Rob Clores, Jane Scarpantoni, Kevin Hunter, George Mitchell, and Yousif Sheronick, He formally announced his plans to release the album under his given name, Stephan Said.[22]

difrent: the organization difrent is a “broadcast platform and network for music for social change,” which “brings numerous organizations working for equality, peace, and environmental sustainability together with artists for releases that support initiatives having a direct impact on communities worldwide.” difrent: launched in September 2010 at the United Nations Millennium Development Goals Awards.[23]

Discography

Albums

EPs

Singles

Various appearances

Film/video

See also

Notes

  1. "Stephan Said". Stephan Said. February 3, 2011. Retrieved February 16, 2011.
  2. "Stephan Said Monthly Residency". dromNYC.com. Retrieved February 16, 2011.
  3. 1 2 Bessman, Jim (May 10, 2003). “Servicing Global Justice”. Billboard Magazine p. 66.
  4. "Who We Are". Difrent.org. Retrieved February 16, 2011.
  5. "Stephan Smith – Slash & Burn" Artemis Records CD release flyer KochB2B.com. April 12, 2004. "The heir apparent to Woody Guthrie, this southern boy-street mechanic writes songs 'to change the world,' mixing Appalachian folk and bluegrass fiddle with a healthy dose of hutzpa…his foot stomping singalongs have amassed a steady following of believers, from indie-folkers Ween to Pete Seeger." – Ferguson, Sarah, The Village Voice (undated.)
  6. McKinley, Jesse (October 12, 1997). "Making it work, Abner Louima meets Joe Hill". New York Times. "The timing turned out to be impeccable. The song quickly found a home on pirate radio in the East Village, and within a week had made its way onto the national airwaves via the left-leaning Pacifica Radio Network and its 25 affiliates, including WBAI-FM in New York. ... In fact, so strong is the buzz on Mr. Smith that last week he was asked by the grandfather of American folk music, Pete Seeger, to update perhaps the nation's most famous protest anthem, We Shall Overcome."
  7. Pareles, John (April 16, 1999). “Stephan Smith ...recalls Bob Dylan in his early days as a Woody Guthrie acolyte”. Pop and Jazz Guide. New York Times (pg. 7/7).
  8. Fink, Mark “Now’s The Time”. Folk and Acoustic Music Exchange, 2000 "On the opening track of Steve Earle's classic El Corazon ... Earle makes a plea for Woody Guthrie to "come back to us now." And though there haven't been any Woody Guthrie sightings in recent years, it seems that Earle just might have a kindred spirit in a young folk singer named Stephan Smith."
  9. "The Bell, Stephan Said" (video). YouTube. Archived June 30, 2014, at the Wayback Machine.
  10. Straus, Neill (September 12, 2002). “Giving Peace a Chance Again”. The Pop Life, New York Times. ".. on Monday, one of the first major songs to directly address the nation's stance toward Iraq was released. It is "The Bell," by Stephan Smith, a folk singer whose songs echo Bob Dylan and Woody Guthrie."
  11. Bessman, Jim, (May 10, 2003). “Servicing Global Justice”. Words&Music, Billboard. "His single "The Bell," recorded with Pete Seeger, Ween's Dean Ween, and hip-hop-artist Mary Harris, was hailed by the Guerilla News Network at the "anti-war anthem for our generation."
  12. Saulnier, Natasha (December 16, 2002). "Stephan Smith: Troubadour of the "Not in Our Name" Movement”. L'Humanite. “A ringleader of the American activist community, [Smith] is one of the few American singers who's speaking out strongly against the war in Iraq. His lyrics criticize equally ferociously globalization and the war against terrorism."
  13. “All Songs Considered: Inspired Music |Stephan Smith interview" (RealMedia, Windows Media). All Things Considered, NPR Music. April 2, 2003. "I wrote "The Bell" in response to the current push for war in Iraq, but had all war in mind, in which a few wealthy individuals lead whole nations of honest people into violence for gains that remain only in the hands of those few."
  14. "Show Press". The Vietnam Song Book. "The Bell" ... addresses U.S. policy towards Iraq through allegory, with a child figure who stands firm, rejecting the successive war cries of a "man at his desk," until the song finally culminates with the boy's assertion that a bell they hear is calling the bureaucrat to hell. With his rough-hewn good looks and mythic songwriting, Smith is the closest thing to this generation's Woody Guthrie."
  15. Keller, Tom (October 2003). “Stephan Smith, "New World Worder". Folkworld, Issue 26. "Stephen is almost single-handedly taking the protest song into the 21st century"
  16. Mason, Stewart (April 23, 2004). “Slash and Burn – Stephan Smith”. AMG, Billboard Bits, Billboard. "Opening your album with a title track decrying the consolidation of power in the music industry, naming names in the process, is a moderately impressive act, but making the song sound like Phil Ochs as backed by the Roots is a conceit of enjoyably perverse genius."
  17. Carpenter, Troy (March 23, 2004). “The Tangled Web”. AllBusiness.com. (from Billboard). "The politically charged "You Ain't a Cowboy" is being offered through Smith's official web site, political action organization TrueMajority.org, and legitimate music download service Audio Lunchbox."
  18. Rosset, Peter M. (2006). "Food Is Different: Why the WTO Should Get out of Agriculture (Global Issues)". Zed Books. ISBN 978-1-84277-755-8. Retrieved February 16, 2011.
  19. Smith, Stephan (May 14, 2006). “Hey, Neil Young: We young singers are hog-tied, too”. Sunday Insight, San Francisco Chronicle. "While established artists like yourself may have felt your hands tied, the truth is far worse for upcoming artists: Even booking agents and managers won't touch us for fear that we will offend their audiences in a country where consumerism and patriotism stand united, as your song "Restless Consumer" makes clear.”
  20. Smith-Said, Stephan (July 2006). “Why Neil Young is Wrong”. The Progressive.
  21. “Stephan Smith-Said” (interview video). Third Freemuse World Conference, Istanbul, NME, November 2006. Also Freemuse, December 6, 2006
  22. McQuiston, James (September 14, 2008). “Stephan Smith Reclaims Stephan Said as Real Name”. NeuFuture Magazine.
  23. Stephan Said "Speech". 2010 Millennium Development Goals.
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