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Zmeselo
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Music Videos in Eritrea on the Rise

Post by Zmeselo » 14 Jul 2020, 09:37



Music Videos in Eritrea on the Rise

Written by Billion Temesghen

http://www.shabait.com/articles/q-a-a/3 ... -the-rise-

Articles - Q & A



The production of music videos in Eritrea, is on the rise. Beyond their music and lyrics singers use music videos as an additional medium of expression, and directors, dancers and engineers involved in the endeavor make sure that they give people what they like to see. Today, the production of music videos requires big budget, advanced technology and imagination. Daniel Teame, a music video director, is tirelessly contributing to the growth and prosperity of music video making in Eritrea. He has so far directed 300 videos. Daniel shares his journey with Q&A.

Thank you for your time, Daniel. Producing 300 music videos is big; when did you start making videos?

I joined the College of Fine Arts, in 2008-2009. It is safe to say, that I started laying the ground for what I have specialized in since then. I kept pushing even after graduation until 2012, when I was assigned to do my national service as a teacher in Tseazega Junior School. Furthermore, in 2013, I took on a role as one of the characters in a famous sitcom entitled ‘Masker tat’. I mention these because my education, my service and my experience as an actor in a sitcom encouraged me to be the storyteller I am today. I love telling stories through music videos, and that is why I am persistent in my productions and that is the reason I will keep on learning and growing in the future.

You’ve worked with famous singers in the country, all of the big names that people love so much. How do you manage to attract singers to you?

They probably hear about me, before coming to me. I do my best, when making a video clip. I give it time and think of better ways to represent the song, through film. The power of a song and its theme are vital. Then we have the singer’s wish to analyze and, later, we, the directors, come forward with a final vision of what the work can be like after much consideration of the song. I do take my time, before I start working. I do research and take opinions of fellow crew members, before I present the options of what we can do.

What is so special about you that singers like? What makes you different?

I love symbolism. I hate banality. As a director, when I make video clips, I like giving just enough for the viewers to initiate their own imagination triggered by the symbols they see in the clips. And I am sure that, for the audience, it is more interesting and amusing to lose themselves in the wanders of what they perceive rather than having their mind led from point ‘A’ to point ‘B’, in order to get to point ‘C’. I can say that this is what makes my works stand out.

There’s a clear difference between how music videos were made ten years ago and how they are being made now. Can you tell us about the transition?

First and foremost, Eritrea is producing a lot of good music videos, and that just makes me proud. It is not my field of specialization, but it is clear that art, especially theatre and film, is not like what it used to be. Things started changing only recently, leaving us in a race that we really need to catch on fast. The same was true for video clips. Music videos were always made but there was a pattern, a style, which was the same to all music videos being made.

Most of the music videos were predictable and so people didn’t care much. Only few, of good quality, have lived through the transitional period. Luckily, now, things are different. Out of all fields of art, more than films and theater, in Eritrea, video clip is rising incredibly. I joined the industry at a transitional point. When I first started making videos the standards were in an era of transition and now they have completely evolved to a pint that we can say there is no pattern of similarity amongst music videos anymore. Talents are being exhibited; the imagination and creativity of directors, choreographers and all professionals involved are clearly stirring the whole motion of music video-making. Music videos made in Eritrea have a lot of viewership and they are just so good, that most of the artists and producers consider music videos a necessary finishing touch in the production of music.

What was the main agent of change?

Now we have a standard in the industry. People know what kind of video clip to expect, and there are professionals that can guarantee the making of good music videos. Above all, there is a huge competition amongst producers and directors of video clips. Presently, there are few video makers that have controlled the market. From my point of view, this needed to happen for a standard to be introduced and also to encourage competition. This took away the opportunity of making video clips from many, just because they own a camera or because they think they are good. A work of art needs to speak for itself and that happens only when you have artists who can guarantee the production of quality work, that took a lot of time and imagination in the making. Now, if one video maker wants to make it, he or she needs to come up with a brand new product and hold himself or herself and fellow video makers up to a high standard.

The production of music videos, requires a lot of money and professionalism. What is the business of music videos like in Eritrea?

It’s tough. We have serious issues of budgeting. Normally, we, as video makers, should not be just thinking of YouTube when making a video. But that’s what we’re doing, because that is the only source of income we have right now. We need a real flow of distribution online as it is the trend nowadays, where videos can be streamed and generate income for bigger budgets and enhanced professionalism.

So, if the business is so tough, why do you keep on making videos?

It is my passion. I believe the hardships, will one day pay off.

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Pleased to announce that the 2nd edition of my book with my late father ‘ያታውን ዘመናውን ምስላታት ትግርኛ' - ‘Modern and Traditional Tigrinya Proverbs’ is in production and hope to release it in October 2020.
(Ermias Kebreab: @ErmiasKebreab)


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Zmeselo
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Re: Music Videos in Eritrea on the Rise

Post by Zmeselo » 14 Jul 2020, 09:47








ናይ ሎሚ ስእልታት- ጽርግያ ኣብ መስርሕ ጽገናን ምሕዳስን
Photo: Mezekr Tarik

Zmeselo
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Re: Music Videos in Eritrea on the Rise

Post by Zmeselo » 14 Jul 2020, 09:57



(Sesin Seyoum: @SesinSeyoum)









Madote Island, Eritrea
(HermonYemaneሄርሞን: @HermonE_J)



The Asmara-Massawa Cableway (Teleferica in italian), was built in 1937 & ran for 71.8 km frm south end of Asmara till the port-city of Massawa. Unfortunately, It was also one the many infrastructures dismantled by the British, who came to Eritrea as "liberators"


ወለት ሓጸይ - ገለብ (Eritrea)
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Zmeselo
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Re: Music Videos in Eritrea on the Rise

Post by Zmeselo » 14 Jul 2020, 10:08





More than 850 species of birds, have been recorded in Eritrea. This high number of diversity is largely due to Eritrea's location b/n a popular bird migratory path, that links the Mid-East & Africa. Big concentrations are usually in Semienawi Bahri, Asmara Plateu, Dahlak Islands & the coast.



More than 280 of species of birds are not migratory & 13 are endemic to Eritrea. More than 320 species of the birds migrate to Eritrea, fleeing the cold seasons in Europe & make their homes in the Green Belt & coastal area.

Pic Credit: @TravelinEritrea & Eritrea Profile

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Organic and delicious !
It's Beles (በለስ) season in Eritrea
(Ghideon Musa: @GhideonMusa)
Last edited by Zmeselo on 14 Jul 2020, 14:00, edited 2 times in total.

Zmeselo
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Re: Music Videos in Eritrea on the Rise

Post by Zmeselo » 14 Jul 2020, 10:19


ብዙሕ ተዘኻኽረኒ፥ ኣዝየ ዝፈትዋ ስእሊ።
Photo @yoftahemusa

Sometimes it just feels so good to just sit by yourself, relax and not talk to anyone.
Kristen Butler
Sitting and relaxing in Asmara!

ጭራ ዋጣ ፥ ክዕቀብን ዘለዎ ባህላዊ ጥበብ
(Ghideon Musa: @GhideonMusa)

________





መደበር : እንዳ መጥሓን በርበረ
(Ghideon Musa: @GhideonMusa)
Last edited by Zmeselo on 14 Jul 2020, 13:58, edited 1 time in total.

Zmeselo
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Re: Music Videos in Eritrea on the Rise

Post by Zmeselo » 14 Jul 2020, 13:21









ከም ኩሎም ቃልስታትና ሳቮያዊ ቃልሲ ኤርትራ ኣንጻር Covid19 ብዓወት ይቕጽል ኣሎ። ምእዙን ምኽፋት ክንዮ ቁጠባዊ ሕውየት ልምዓትን ብልጽግናን ብዘረጋግጽ መንገዲ ክኸይድ ግድን’ዩ።
(SAMSOM BERHANE: @samsom_berhane)

Zmeselo
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Re: Music Videos in Eritrea on the Rise

Post by Zmeselo » 14 Jul 2020, 14:22

Asmara: Home of Antique Cinemas

Written by Sirak Habtemichael

http://www.shabait.com/about-eritrea/ar ... e-cinemas-

About Eritrea - Art & Sport



The history of cinemas in Eritrea dates back to 1920s during the Italian colonial period, when the Eritrean people were familiarized with the culture of cinemas. But not all the Eritrean citizens had the opportunity to watch movies in the cinemas which were abundant even back then. The only few privileged citizens who were allowed to watch cinemas were the ones who worked with the Italians and only with their bosses were they allowed to get in. Almost all the movies back then were in Italian, especially until early 1940s.

The construction of cinemas began in 1920s, where the first one to be constructed was Cinema Emberto and Eritro. Also among the first cinemas constructed in early 1920 and still standing as one of the finest ones architecturally is Cinema Asmara, (Theatro Azmara). The cinema has a monumental architectural style with a three story classic podium. During the first decades after its construction, the cinema was used for stage drama performances and ballet shows only to be watched by the Italian ‘first class’ families.



At present, Asmara Theatre is used for rehearsals of stage dramas and other related cultural shows, but it is not functioning as cinema now. The structure of the cinema and the area it is seated on is in the main streets of Asmara, which gives a scenic vintage beauty of art deco to the city.




The Italians then constructed Cinema Hamassen for the local residents. It was among the first cinemas to be constructed around the area where there was a dense population of locals. This was around 14 years after the Asmara Theatre was constructed. To this very day Cinema Hamassen provides services for theatrical shows and movies.

Around 1940s, over 10 cinemas were constructed all over Eritrea, which makes it among the first, if not the first one to own grand theatres in Africa. The construction work, the sophistication of the engineering as well as the interior design of each cinema, especially the big ones captivated the eyes of a number of tourists over the years.



Cinema Roma, Cinema Impero, Cinema Capitol as well as the Odeon Theatre are four of the biggest cinemas in Eritrea. Located in the downtown streets of Asmara, the cinemas have magnificent outer view and a state of the art interior design. The first three were constructed in 1937, while Odeon Theatre followed a year after.



Records from the Eritrean Cinema Administration indicate that each and every single one of the cinemas was constructed for different purposes. The only people that were allowed to watch movies at cinema Impero and Capitol were among the first class from the colonizers, the Odeon Theatre was for the officers’ class and others.



The infrastructure, electrical installation and sound system posses a world class standard to this day. Although only a few of the cinemas underwent renovation, most of them still posses the genuine beauty and system from the time of the construction. Among the few that underwent extensive renovation is Cinema Roma, but the renovators applied great ingenuity to maintain the classic and original features of the cinema.



Back during the days, of course the cinemas were using old equipments which still remain as monuments of antiquity in some of the cinemas. The 88 millimeter projectors and the fade cinema system which used real players are abundant in all the cinemas. The engraved wall sculptures, the monumental architectural design, the stairways to the first class VIP boxes and the red carpet hallways especially at Cinema Roma are indeed a sight to see. After all these years, the cinemas inside Asmara and some other cities of Eritrea still maintaining the original designs and of course providing public services to this day.


Zmeselo
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Re: Music Videos in Eritrea on the Rise

Post by Zmeselo » 14 Jul 2020, 14:36






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